obsolete capitalism
Acceleration,
Revolution
and Money
in Deleuze and Guattari’s
Anti-OEdipus
series of books
THE
strong
OF THE FUTURE
2
THE
strong
OF THE
FUTURE
2 2
SF002 eng
The book series entitled «The Strong of the Future» deals with
accelerationist philosophy, in particular with the thought based on
Nietzsche, Klossowski and Acéphale magazine, Deleuze and Guattari,
Foucault and Lyotard.
Issues:
SF001 :: OBSOLETE CAPITALISM, The Strong of the Future (July 2016)
SF002 :: OBSOLETE CAPITALISM, Acceleration, Revolution and Money in
Deleuze and Guattari’s Anti-Oedipus (August 2016)
Next issue:
SF003 :: EDMUND BERGER, Grungy Accelerationism (September 2016)
SF004 :: OBSOLETE CAPITALISM, Deleuze and the Algorithm of the
Revolution (October 2016)
SF005 :: SIMON REYNOLDS - KATJA DIEFENBACH, Technodeleuze and Mille
Plateaux. Achim Szepanki’s interviews (1994-1996)(November 2016)
SF006 :: SARA BARANZONI - PAOLO VIGNOLA, Bifurcating at the root. About
some inconveniences of acceleration (January 2017)
Translated by Letizia Rustichelli and Ettore Lancellotti
Revised by Edmund Berger
Anti-copyright, August 2016 Obsolete Capitalism
Creative Commons 4.0 :: The licensor cannot revoke these freedoms as long as you follow the license terms under the
following terms:
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You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. You may do so in any
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http://obsoletecapitalism.blogspot.it
ISBN 9788875591007- 2
Acceleration,
Revolution and Money
in Deleuze and Guattari’s
Anti-OEdipus
by Obsolete Capitalism
Index
Acronyms bibliography
10
Chapter I
11
The Locus classicus of the contemporary accelerationist
movement: Deleuze and Guattari’s Anti-OEdipus
Chapter II
21
The morning acceleration: a headless revolution
Chapter III
55
For an Erotica of the Revolution
Chapter IV
81
The infinite money: desire, value and simulacrum
Biography
144
Acronyms bibliography
Acronym Title
Author
Year
Edition
#A
#Accelerate
MacKay & Avanessian
2014
Urbanomic
AC
The Antichrist
Nietzsche
2006
Borzoi Pocket Books
AME
Aesthetic, Method and Epistemology
Foucault
1998
The New Press
AO
Anti-Œdipus
Deleuze & Guattari
1983
U. Minnesota Press
C
Capital: a critique
of political economy
Marx
CM
The Creative Mind:
An Introduction to Metaphysics
Bergson
1946
Wisdom Library
CSVAI
Code Surplus Value and
the Augmented Intellect
Pasquinelli
2014
Personal blog
libcom.org
CV
Circulus Vitiosus
Klossowski
2009
The Agonist (journal)
CWN
Complete Works
Nietzsche
1967
Gallimard
Semiotext(e)
DI
Desert Islands
Deleuze
2002
INFL
Introduction to the non fascist life
Foucault
2012
LC
Living Currency
Klossowski
Maldoror
monoskop.org
LWK
Lectures on the Will to Know
Foucault
2013
Palgrave MacMillan
MMDG
Marxism and Money in D&G’s
Capitalism and Schizophrenia
Kerslake
2015
Parrhesia #22
N
Negotiations
Deleuze
1995
Columbia U.P.
NPP
Nietzsche, Polytheism and Parody
Klossowski
2004
Bulletin S:A:P:
NT
Nomad Thought
Deleuze
1977
Delta Books
NVC
Nietzsche and the vicious circle
Klossowski
1997
University Of Chicago
PK
Power, Knowledge and
Other Writings 1972-77
Foucault
1980
Pantheon Books
Z
Thus Spoke Zarathustra
Nietzsche
2010
feedboks. com
Chapter I
The Locus classicus
of the contemporary
accelerationist movement:
Deleuze and Guattari’s
Anti-OEdipus
Do you want a name for this universe,
a solution for all its enigmas?
—Nietzsche, Posthumous Notes
11
We continue the exploration of the sources behind the
contemporary accelerationist movement, which lie at the end
of the paragraph entitled «The Civilized Capitalist Machine».
(AE 239-240) By «contemporary» we mean the period from
the 90’s to today, thus including Nick Land and the Ccru collective’s reflections on the first «accelerationist» wave. The simultaneous reading of Christian Kerslake’s Marxism and Money in Deleuze and Guattari’s Capitalism and Schizofrenia (2015)
and Matteo Pasquinelli’s notes in Code Surplus Value and the
Augmented Intellect (2014) has highlighted the persistence of
a troubled interpretation of one of the most significant and
pivotal passages of Deleuze and Guattari’s Anti-OEdipus. Moreover an unfair and blind conventio ad excludendum on Nietzsche
from the accelerationist side, is remarkably present. In #Accelerate, the constitutive anthology of accelerationism, we immediately detect a noisy silence about Nietzsche. While the opening documents and extracts on accelerationism are pertinent
— Marx, Butler, Fedorov and Veblen (#A, 8-11) — nothing
is mentioned of a post-Zarathustra Nietzsche: The Will of Power, Beyond Good and Evil or On the Genealogy of Morality. In the
chronology (#A, 3) in between Marx’s Fragment on Machines
(1858) and Firestone’s The two modes of cultural history (1970),
12
Nietzsche’s accelerationist fragment known as The Strong of the
Future (1887) is clearly lacking. One of the aims of this essay is
to identify the correct allocation of Nietzsche’s thought with
reference to the accelerationist movement, to the Anti-OEdipus and to Deleuze and Guattari’s thought. The philosopher
from Röcken has been the first to speak correctly about the
overall machinery, solidarity of all gears, and about accelerating the
process. (NCV 161- 162).
Matteo Pasquinelli properly points out the final part of the
The Civilized Capitalist Machine as locus classicus of the contemporary accelerationist movement, thanks to the deep queries
Deleuze and Guattari placed. However these questions remain
unanswered and therefore still open; they deal with revolutionary strategies, positions of nihilist capitalism and potential
escape routes from a political and economic situation that recalls the image of a cul-de-sac. The text to analyze follows:
It is at the level of flows, the monetary flows included, and not
at the level of ideology, that the integration of desire is achieved. So
what is the solution? Which is the revolutionary path? Psychoanalysis
is of little help, entertaining as it does the most intimate of relations
with money, and recording—while refusing to recognize it— an entire
system of economic-monetary dependences at the heart of the desire of
13
every subject it treats. Psychoanalysis constitutes for its part a gigantic enterprise of absorption of surplus value. But which is the revolutionary path? Is there one?—To withdraw from the world market, as
Samir Amin advises Third World countries to do, in a curious revival
of the fascist “economic solution”? Or might it be to go in the opposite
direction? To go still further, that is, in the movement of the market,
of decoding and deterritorialization? For perhaps the flows are not
yet deterritorialized enough, not decoded enough, from the viewpoint
of a theory and a practice of a highly schizophrenic character. Not to
withdraw from the process, but to go further, to “accelerate the process,”
as Nietzsche put it: in this matter, the truth is that we haven’t seen
anything yet. (AO, 238-239)
The plane of consistency and the unfulfilled questions
The questions we can pose to the chapter The Civilized Capitalist Machine may be divided in «molar» and «molecular». As
Felix Guattari says, it is necessary to establish an appropriate
«plane of consistency» where everything holds: the molar order and the molecular machines (AOE 287-291). Before listing
the molecular questions it may be useful to clarify the concept
of «philosophical problem» - which we derive from Bergson in order to formulate our answers. The French theorist said
14
that in philosophy, as anywhere else “it is matter of question of
finding the problem and consequently of positioning it, even more that
of solving it. For a speculative problem is solved as soon as it is properly stated. By that I mean that its solution exists then, although it may
remain hidden and so to speak covered up and the only thing left do
is to uncover it. But stating the problem is not simply uncovering, it
is inventing. Discovery, or uncovering, has to do with what already
exists actually or virtually; it is therefore certain to happen sooner or
later.” (CM, 51)
Molar question
The meaning of the accelerationist passage is overall difficult to comprehend and the various commentators have not
submitted satisfactory answers until now (Kerslake, MMDG 6163).
Molecular questions
1) The problem of the margin-notes in Deleuze and Guattari’s The Civilized Capitalist Machine with reference to the accelerationist passage by Nietzsche and the «good reasons» not
to quote the «sinister» fragment (Pasquinelli, CSVAI).
2) Nietzsche’s supposedly «misquoted» fragment, recalled
15
by Deleuze and Guattari in their passage about the «revolutionary path» and «accelerating the process» (Pasquinelli, CSVAI).
3) The enigmatic meaning of the last sentence of the chapter The Civilized Capitalist Machine: «in this matter, the truth is that
we haven’t seen anything yet.» (AO, 239). This last sentence together with the last lines of the passage, undermines the whole
logical meaning of the paragraph and creates the «enigmatic
block» as shown by Kerslake’s analysis (Kerslake, MMDG 6163).
4) The evident contradiction to combine the capitalist
monetary flux (the «surplus value of code» for Pasquinelli and
«Bernard Schmitt’s economic theory» for Kerslake) with the
acceleration of decoded and deterritorialized flux conceived
by the «capital» for revolutionary outcomes (as suggested by
Pasquinelli and Kerslake) in the chapter The Civilized Capitalist
Machine.
5) The political and philosophical issue that is concealed
behind the “hidden” meaning of the «accelerationist» passage
that Deleuze and Guattari try to clarify through the experimental theory of decoded and deterritorialized flows.
The above-mentioned molecular unanswered questions
16
gather in a homogeneous combination of micro and macro
queries which need to be accurately answered given the reliability of the proponents and the importance these questions
raise in today’s political and social research fields as well as in
speculative-philosophical ones.
Four identification points in Anti-OEdipus
How to read Anti-OEdipus? We have identified four main
prominent characteristics in the volume. The first one is its
hypertextuality: we have considered Deleuze and Guattari’s
book as a broad-viewed designed hypertext, long before the
hypertext was framed. Both the volumes Capitalism and Schizophrenia - Anti-OEdipus and A Thousand Plateaus display and
«machinate» a philosophical complexity composed by knots
enucleated as «simple steps or hyperlinks» unwinding further
problems, queries and narrations present in other intellectual
objects, which altogether form a proper network of senses.
Deleuze himself defined Anti-OEdipus a flow-book (DI,
218). The two philosophers never wanted in fact to “write a
madman’s book [the schizophrenic], but a book in which you no longer
know who is speaking: there is no basis for knowing whether it’s a doctor, a patient, or some present, past, or future madman speaking” (DI,
17
218). At the same time it was also important that these clinical subjectivities, these conceptual tags, could interchangeably speak as “mental patients or doctors of civilization” (DI, 218).
Three other characteristics are important to understand this
strange attractor-book: the first one regards politics, the second Nietzsche (the work needs to be analyzed as a Nietzschean
organon) and the last one is about style: Anti-OEdipus in fact
employs the “style as a concept” (N, 140-147).
In a conversation with Antonio Negri published in the magazine Futur Anterior (1990) Deleuze defines his Anti-OEdipus
as a “political book from top to bottom”. We firmly believe that the
book is pure dynamite, able to extend from the ‘70s, in which
it has ensued, to any present time: a book capable of expanding the limits of thought and to produce positive effects for
both the individual and the community. The book offers the
visions of the two drafters who originate from left wing communities of different backgrounds: Guattari followed Lacan
in his seminaries, he worked at the psychiatric hospital La Borde, he cooperated with the magazine «La voie communiste»,
whereas Deleuze was less politically characterized and was not
particularly linked to any political association except for his
militancy in Foucault GIP (Group d’information sur les pris18
ons). His biggest influence had been Pierre Klossowski who
- Deleuze will say in his Nomad Thought - may have represented
the torch-bearer between the latest group of Nietzschean philosophers and the first ones who gathered around Bataille’s
magazine «Acéphale» in the 30’s. Klossowski defines Deleuze’s
approach, when playing Nietzsche’s card of the de-subjectivation of the author, as the one who introduced the «unteachable» in the teaching method because, he says, the most important mission of philosophy is to invent concepts: ”Philosophy’s
job has always been to create new concepts, with their own necessity.
(...) Philosophy’s no more communicative than it’s contemplative or
reflective: it is by nature creative or even revolutionary, because it’s
always creating new concepts. The only constraint is that these should
have a necessity, as well as an unfamiliarity, and they have both to
the extent they’re a response to real problems. Concepts are what stops
thought being a mere opinion, a view, an exchange of views, gossip.
Any concept is bound to be a paradox” (N, 136).
19
20
Chapter II
The morning
acceleration:
a headless revolution
Thinking about it today it seems to me obvious
that for years, especially in the 70’s, nomads
were the image of Good. Nomadic was what
wriggled out of tangled malicious control.
Nomadic was what escaped from the persecution of the New Man, who was - in the best case
- a screw and most frequently a mole.
Roberto Calasso, L’Occhio Assoluto (1993)
To Lenin, who asserted that Socialism was the
Soviet power plus the electrification, Kronstadt
answered: it is the Party plus the executions.
Jean-Francois Lyotard, Energumen Capitalism
(1972)
21
On the missing notes
In 1966, Foucault and Deleuze became editors of the French
edition of Colli and Montinari’s Complete Works of F. Nietzsche.
Their coauthored General Introduction published in 1967 as
part of volume V which included Klossowki’s translation of The
Gay Science and the Unpublished Fragments (1881-1882); in this
edition they expressed the hope that the publication could
open to a total “return to Nietzsche” thanks to Colli and Montinari’s work, which they defined as crucial. The main problem
around Nietzsche in the 60’s was the issue of the Nachlass “...
before accurate and credible scholars started collecting and reordering
Nietzsche’s Nachlass, we only knew that a certain book called The
Will of Power existed and that it was an arbitrary cut of Nietzsche’s
posthumous writings and notes of various times and origins” (CWN,
General Introduction). The major problem was not only the
«fictional» book but the introduction of a rigorous and scientific criterion to definitively order the big amount of posthumous written texts left by Nietzsche; “the handwritten notebooks
are at least three times the size of Nietzsche’s publication during his lifetime. The unpublished fragments already distributed are many fewer
than those still to be put in print” (CWN, General Introduction).
Montinari and his team of researchers carefully searched in
22
Weimar’s archives and decided, together with Colli and the
Italian publisher Adelphi, “to publish Nietzsche’s notebooks following a chronological order in accordance with the corresponding periods
of Nietzsche’s published works”. Deleuze and Foucault immediately understood the importance of such an immense work: “It is
at least on three main points that the reading of Nietzsche’s work has
radically changed after Colli and Montinari’s work: one, it is now possible to notice distortions due to Elisabeth Nietzsche and Peter Gast’s
edition, two, we may trace mistakes in dates, misinterpretation of the
texts and numerous omissions in the previous editions of the Nachlass
and three, it is now possible to know the big amount of the unpublished
texts” (CWN, General Introduction). The expectation was palpable in the 60’s: it was finally possible not only to get a wider and more complete idea on how Nietzsche elaborated his
concepts, transforming, enriching and deforming them in his
«mental laboratory» but also to detect various undiscovered
and unknown meanings of his philosophy among the huge
amount of the Nachlass. This to explain and clarify that the
missing footnote in the chapter The Civilized Capitalist Machine
is neither a lack of attention nor carelessness of the authors
or the publisher, and not even an attempt to keep enigmatic a
paragraph that dealt with a «somber and reactionary» writer as
23
Nietzsche. As already mentioned in our article, The Strong of the
Future - the final passage of the chapter The Civilized Capitalist
Machine and locus classicus of the accelerationist movement is numbered 9 [153] as established by Colli and Montinari’s
critical edition.
The sunset of Unpolitical Nietzsche
Deleuze wrote two Nietzsche’s monographs, one entitled
Nietzsche and Philosophy (1962) and the other simply Nietzsche
(1965). The first monograph opens the «golden decade»
about Nietzsche - which culminated with Anti-OEdipus in 1972
and with the Cerisy-la-Salle conference of July 1972 entitled
«Nietzsche aujourd’hui?» - and is considered the most complete and detailed analysis of Nietzsche’s philosophy. In chapters II, III and IV the French philosopher analyzes the «infamous» text The Will of Power and other writings of the same
years: Beyond Good and Evil and On the Genealogy of Morals. In
the 1962 book we have no reference of the accelerationist
fragment (here numbered 898 as per Nietzsche’s sister and
Peter Gast’s notation). As a reference for his first monograph,
Deleuze considered Gallimard La Volonté de Puissance edition
(1947-48) that, according to the Italian curator Fabio Polidori,
24
“is an edition based on the order previously given by Friederich Wuerzbach in his Das Vermächtnis Friedrich Nietzsches (Salzburg-Leipzig,
1940) and that lists a completely new and enriched order of texts if
compared to the second edition of the famous Der Will zur Macht”.
Despite the presence of the fragment The Strong of the Future
in Wuerzbach’s anthology, Deleuze does not mention any
«acceleration» or «future forces» even in his second monograph Nietzsche (1965). It is with Pierre Klossowski’s analysis
in 1969 (Nietzsche and the Vicious Circle) that the accelerationist
fragment becomes central, creating a resolutive axis Deleuze
- Klossowski responsible for a new account of Nietzsche’s authentic thought. It is while talking about Nietzsche’s text in
an interview with Jean Noel Vuarnet in February 1968 that we
may understand the reason of the «missing notes» about the
accelerationist fragment in Anti-Oedipus. Here’s an abstract
of the interview: “Jean- Noel Vuarnet: Gallimard’s re-edition of
Nietzsche’s complete works has started to appear on the shelves. You
and Foucault have been credited with “responsibility” for the first volume. What exactly was your role? Gilles Deleuze: We played a small
role. You are no doubt well aware that the whole point of this edition
is to publish all posthumous notes, many of which have never seen the
light of day, by distributing them chronologically in the order of the
25
books that Nietzsche himself published. Accordingly, The Gay Science,
translated by Klossowski, includes the posthumous notes of 18811882. The authors of this edition are, on the one hand, Colli and
Montinari, to whom we are indebted for the texts, and on the other, the
translators, for whom Nietzsche’s style and techniques have posed enormous problems. We were responsible only for grouping the texts in order. (DI, 135). As per Deleuze and Foucault’s explicit request,
the first volume of Nietzsche’s OEuvres philosophiques complètes
(Gallimard, Paris 1967) is translated by Klossowski as well as
Fragments posthumes 1887-88 (1976). At the same time Klossowski’s book Nietzsche and the Vicious Circle (1969) introduces the accelerationist fragment, a fragment that he received
together with the «rough material» delivered from Colli and
Montinari even before they enumerated the fragments with
the order we know today. A further confirmation comes from
the notes of the edition of his book: “Klossowski himself provides
no references for the sources of his citations from Nietzsche’s notebooks.
At the conclusion of the French text of the book, he simply appends the
following note: ‘All the citations from Nietzsche are taken from the posthumous fragments - and in particular, from those of his final decade
1880-1888.” (NVC, 262). As shown in our previous essay The
strong of the future: Nietzsche’s accelerationist fragment in Deleuze
26
and Guattari’s Anti-OEdipus the two French philosophers used
the expression «accelerate the process» in their Anti-OEdipus
(1972) as correctly introduced by Klossowski’s Nietzsche and the
Vicious Circle and thus they did not quote any specific reference because at the time being Klossowski was working on the
edition of the Unpublished Fragments and Deleuze was himself
responsible for the French edition.
The system of economic dependency on desire
Here comes the chapter The Civilized Capitalist Machine
where the difficult passage lies. All the aforementioned qualities in Anti-OEdipus - Nietzschean method, hypertextuality,
repetition as power, style as movement of concepts and so on
- reach a real klimax in this passage considered not only the
traditional cartographie for the accelerationist movement but
also the crux of the entire anti-oedipal book. As many have noticed there is no clear logical coherence between the sense of
the text and the authors’ political position. Something eludes,
slips away and it is plausible that a few Deleuze and Guattari’s
scholars wonder if the two French philosophers may have misquoted or misreported Nietzsche. A very detailed reading of
the passage - divided in parts - may serve the cause.
27
It is at the level of flows, the monetary flows included, and not
at the level of ideology, that the integration of desire is achieved. So
what is the solution? Which is the revolutionary path? Psychoanalysis
is of little help, entertaining as it does the most intimate of relations
with money, and recording—while refusing to recognize it— an entire
system of economic-monetary dependences at the heart of the desire of
every subject it treats. Psychoanalysis constitutes for its part a gigantic
enterprise of absorption of surplus value. But which is the revolutionary path? Is there one? (AO, 238)
If capitalism is immanent to society and desire for it permeates society, what possible solution may we find if the two
fluxes are so intrinsically integrated? If ideology is no longer
an answer, as masses are not captivated by ideology but by the
desire of monetary fluxes, what solution may we find? The
claustro-scenario is nightmarish: from the very first steps there
is no possibility of an alternative, of a revolutionary path - « is
there one? » the two philosophers ask. Even psychoanalysis is
of little help: part of the system, it is absorbed as anti-productive
practice which «ingests and achieves» the nomadic profitability and slips into the social body. Moreover it has created a circuit of absorption of surplus value thanks to the desire produced
28
by the cultural industry. Once Freud’s psychoanalysis has been
overtaken whom shall we pass the baton of revolution to?
The withdrawal of the left wing nationalism from the world
market
To withdraw from the world market, as Samir Amin advises Third
World countries to do, in a curious revival of the fascist “economic
solution”? Or might it be to go in the opposite direction? To go still further, that is, in the movement of the market, of decoding and deterritorialization? For perhaps the flows are not yet deterritorialized enough,
not decoded enough, from the viewpoint of a theory and a practice of a
highly schizophrenic character. (AO, 238)
Samir Amin, the exponent of the marxist, anti-capitalist,
unaligned «Third-World Left» with his nationalist and isolationist position, reminds Deleuze and Guattari of a revival of
the fascist “economic solution” of 20s and 30s of the XX century.
Therefore another revolutionary option is then discarded and
the two French philosophers paradoxically ask: what about going “towards the opposite direction?” A question which produces
a double effect: on one side it rejects some of the classical
hypothesis of the European «revolutionary humanism»: tra29
ditional left wing movements like socialism, communism or
social democracy are not even taken into consideration for
a revolutionary path. Not to mention the revolutionary trade
unionism, the radical reformism or the naive anarchic spontaneity, the new post ’68 political manifestations, the so-called
«little churches» by Guattari. (DI, 264).
Neither is the armed struggle, the nihilist frontal attack to
the system. So where is such a question taking us? It follows
that we must look towards the exact opposite of the «marxist
nationalism» that is to say a worldwide revolution against the
same global capitalism of the decoded and deterritorialized
monetary flux, mentioned by Deleuze and Guattari. The only
possible marxist or revolutionary global theory antagonistic of
capitalism is the one of Lev Trotsky, with whom Guattari sympathized in the 50’s but the idea of a «permanent revolution»
or of Fourth International never suited Deleuze and Guattari
who have never been nostalgic of soviet times. “Yet no revolutionary tendency was willing or able to assume the need for a Soviet organization that would have allowed the masses to take real charge of their
interests and desires. Machines called political organizations were put
in circulation, and they functioned according to the model Dimitrov
had developed at the Seventh International Congress — alternating
30
between popular fronts and sectarian retractions — and they always
lead to the same repressive results. (…) By their axiomatics, these mass
machines refuse to liberate revolutionary energy. Red flag in hand, this
politics in its underhanded way reminds one of the politics of the President or the clergy.” (DI, 268). Which chances may a turbo-trotskyist plan have when referred to «the civilized capitalist machine»? With regards to the economic aspect, can we find an
economic theory alternative to capitalism with the same global
tension and the same will of power? Neither Suzanne de Brunhoff’s neo-Marxism, nor Bernard Schmitt with his theory of
quantum fluxes, show the same strength. Without convincing
answers on the horizon and with all historical possibilities of
revolution set aside, which opposite direction is possible? At this
point Deleuze and Guattari reveal the second effect of their
statement: to push the revolutionary motion alongside with
the decodification and deterritorialization of the economic
market. Why doing so, we may ask, and what do revolutionary
anti-market forces share with the capitalistic ones? Which alliance could be established from a position of «withdrawal from
the market» to one of a wild laissez-faire economy? Moreover
what are the two French philosophers referring to when they
speak about «a theory and practice of a highly schizophrenic
31
character» that is supposed to further deterritorialize and decode the flows? Were Deleuze and Guattari really looking for
a compromise with the market, when questioning themselves
about the revolution of the future?
Accelerate the process
Not to withdraw from the process, but to go further, to “accelerate
the process,” as Nietzsche put it: in this matter, the truth is that we
haven’t seen anything yet. (AO, 239)
We may assume as a logical starting point that Deleuze and
Guattari are offering an apparent pro-market path, as highlighted in the previous paragraph; at the same time, we find
a contradiction with the opposite option of a worldwide anti-capitalist revolution able to go beyond localism to reach that
dimension which Srnicek and Williams call folk politics. Not
only one should go «backward» against the nationalist-marxist economy, or against those revolutionary ideals which overthrow established powers but - without withdrawing from the
market - one should even join those turbo-capitalist lawless
forces so as to push and «accelerate» the dangerous tendencies
32
moving the decodification and deterritorialization of society.
Why? If we take for granted that Deleuze and Guattari are not
sneaky infiltrators of the enemies we may see such «unity of
intentions» with the most extreme forces of the market economy as a «future benefit». Under the idea of instrumental exchange between immediate evil and future good, the statement
«we haven’t seen anything yet» sounds particularly sinister: the
more violent the repression and the homologation of the individual arises, the fastest the «explosion of the final Good» - as
a basis of a new revolution - will come. A second consideration
deals with the force. Which type of force is an «accelerated
revolutionary force»? The question is pertinent if we consider
that «going backward» against the marxist-nationalist protectionism represents the trait d’union among forces moved by an
active power that aims to destroy the countries (their territories) and their codes. Such forces are deregulated and mainly
characterised by speed, therefore they may be called «dromocratic forces». The powers that «stand still» and protect, are
against the «accelerating forces» that decodify and become
different from what they were. If the traditional market economy society yielded to the intrinsically capitalist and technologically developed dromology, society itself would be destined
33
to be dominated by a monoscopic turbo-capitalism: an infinitive
accumulation in a singular technological scenario. Similarly, if the
revolutionary forces that «stand still» were overperformed by
hidden dromocratic forces, what could a revolution be? “A desiring power accelerated to a point where it exploded all the splinter
groups” (DI, 265) as Guattari states? Can we conceive a machinic-dromocratic revolution and its consequent implications in
different apocalyptic antinomic forces?
Third consideration: the time and actions of the levelling
forces expressed by the «homo democraticus» have come to
the end of that enlightened path which made man first a progressive accelerationist and then a dull kathecon, a reactionary, a
preventer. Will a new «dromocratic community» offer a return
to the Great Politics as announced by Nietzsche?
Let’s drop all masks! Nietzsche galore!
To answer the molecular questions 2 and 3 - about a possible misquotation and about the meaning of the phrase “we
haven’t seen anything yet” - we need to explain the notion of
flow and clarify the relationship between desire, libido and
unconscious. With «flow» Deleuze and Guattari mean «process»: “This process is what we call a flow. But, again, flow is an
34
everyday, unqualified notion that we needed. It can be a flow of words,
a flow of ideas, a flow of shit, a flow of money. It can be a financial
mechanism or a schizophrenic machine: it surpasses all duality” (DI,
218). As far as the relationship between desire, libido and unconscious is concerned Deleuze describes their origin as such:
“Guattari early on had the intuition that the unconscious is directly
related to a whole social field, both economic and political, rather than
the mythical and familial grid traditionally deployed by psychoanalysis. It is indeed a question of libido as such, as the essence of desire
and sexuality: but now it invests and dis-invests flows of every kind
as they trickle through the social field, and it effects cuts in these flows,
stoppages, leaks, and retentions. To be sure, it does not operate in
a manifest way, as do the objective interests of consciousness or the
chains of historical causality. It deploys a latent desire coextensive with
the social field, entailing ruptures in causality and the emergence of
singularities, sticking points as well as leaks” (DI, 193).
Deleuze consciously chooses to side with Nietzsche and uses
that position against Marx and Freud. According to Deleuze,
capitalism is based on flows but “what really matter is the organization of power” which he defines as “the unity of desire and the
economic infrastructure” (DI, 262, 263). Here lies the essential
criticism to the orthodox marxism and its ideological preten35
sions to put the desire-phenomenon on the superstructure.
The Party itself is criticized by the two philosophers who see it
as the new organization for a repressive power (DI, 263) refusing its definition of an avant-garde external mechanism of synthesis classified as such since Lenin times. (ID, 266). There is a
double refusal of, on one hand, the traditional division between
infrastructure and superstructure as theorized by Marx, where
the economic structure expresses the relations of production;
and on the other, of the Leninist theory of the Party seen as
proletarian guide and political class consciousness which in
other words is the refusal of an analytic machine external to
the working class and the revolutionary process. This could be
the reason why it is exactly in the accelerationist passage that
we meet the «conceptual persona» of Nietzsche; according to
Deleuze and Guattari in fact Nietzsche may be seen as the master of the generalized disintegration of codes. Considering the
triad Marx, Freud and Nietzsche as the contemporary western
thought fathers, we can read a clear rejection of the first two
in Deleuze and Guattari’s words: “... for our part, we prefer not to
participate in any effort consistent with a Freudo-Marxist perspective.
And this for two reasons. The first is that, in the end, a Freudo-Marxist effort proceeds in general from a return to origins, or more specif36
ically to the sacred texts: the sacred texts of Freud, the sacred texts of
Marx. Our point of departure must be completely different: we refer not
to sacred texts that must be, to a greater or lesser extent, interpreted,
but to the situation as is, the situation of the bureaucratic apparatus
in psychoanalysis, which is an effort to subvert these apparatuses.(...)
Secondly, what separates us from any Freudo-Marxist effort is that
such projects seek primarily to reconcile two economies: political economy and libidinal or desiring economy. (...) Our point of view is on the
contrary that there is but one economy and that the problem of a real
anti-psychoanalytical analysis [a synonym of schizoanalysis that
Deleuze and Guattari started using after the Anti-OEdipus] is
to show how unconscious desire invests the forms of this economy. It is
economy itself that is political economy and desiring economy.” (ID,
275) After a few months from the release of the volume Anti-OEdipus, at the conference in Cerisy-la-Salle (July 1972), entitled «Nietzsche aujourd’hui?» in his speech Nomadic Thought
Deleuze asserts that “faced with the way in which our societies come
uncoded, codes leaking away on every side, Nietzsche does not try to
perform a re-coding.” (ID, 253) and clearly explains his siding
with Nietzsche: “(...) if one examines not the letter of Marx or Freud,
but the becoming of Marxism and the becoming of Freudianism, we
see, paradoxically, Marxists and Freudians engaged in an attempt to
37
recode Marx and Freud: in the case of Marxism, you have a re-coding
by the State (“the State has made you ill, the State will cure you” —
this cannot be the same State); and in the case of Freudianism, you
have a re-coding by the family (you fall ill from the family and recover
through the family — this is not the same family). What at the horizon
of our culture in fact constitutes Marxism and psychoanalysis as those
two fundamental bureaucracies, the one public, the other private, is
their effort to recode as best they can precisely that which on the horizon
ceaselessly tends to come uncoded. This is not at all what Nietzsche is
about. His problem is elsewhere. For Nietzsche, it is about getting something through in every past, present, and future code, something which
does not and will not let itself be re-coded.” (ID, 252). This «something» that is about getting something but will not let itself be
re-coded is the expression of the unconscious produced by the
primary pulsion of the individual.
Codebreakers
«Codes» are, according to Deleuze, laws, contracts, institutions. According to the French philosopher, Marx and Freud,
due to their «school of thought», remain enchained to the
old [renewed] codes: a new State, a new family, a new relation
of production. Nietzsche is, on the contrary, completely out-
side this set of codes: he is the «codebreaker» of philosophy,
the anti-philosopher who disowns laws, contracts and institutions. (NT,143) He gave thought a dimension of war-machine,
a nomadic unit. (NT,149) Such Deleuzian interpretation of
Nietzsche’s philosophy marks a total break with the previous
political and philosophical thought and takes the fracture into
the revolutionary decoding scenario. In The Civilized Capitalist
Machine three decoding actions take place: we may call the
first one Schizophrenia of the Capital and it is minutely analyzed
in the book Anti-OEdipus, the second one is the above mentioned action of the codebreaker, a useless position in terms
of insurrection as it does not provide any pragmatic or epistemological indication for a potential revolution. It’s none of
Nietzsche’s intention to create movements nor to establish
parties and new states, because he serves both as the agent and object of decodification (NT, 146). That is the reason why Nietzsche
is a powerful ally to the third decoding action expressed by
Deleuze and Guattari in the Anti-OEdipus and by the revolutionary movement born on the barricades of May 1968 - which
refused the old ways to act and think, looking for innovative
theoretical paths as well as efficient subversive practice. Klossowski and Foucault are two other relevant allies: this close39
knit community will be able to answer which revolutionary
path and accelerationist process The Civilized Capitalist Machine
passage refers to.
Going further in the movement of decoding and deterritorialization
Let us better analyse the proposal of going further. To go
against Samir Amin’s left wing nationalism means, for Deleuze
and Guattari, to go further in the movement of decoding and
deterritorialization of the market, where the movement does
not solely apply to the market but to the revolutionary realm,
too. The expression to go further can be read as a prolongation
not only of the capital itself - as it may seem under an «economical» reading of the passage - but as a movement to take
the process as far as possible, overturning the initial meaning.
Deleuze reports in his Nietzsche (1965) that the same expression had already been used by Nietzsche in a passage from The
Antichrist: “Mankind has ventured to call pity a virtue (--in every
superior moral system it appears as a weakness--); going still further, it has been called the virtue, the source and foundation of all
other virtues--but let us always bear in mind that this was from the
standpoint of a philosophy that was nihilistic, and upon whose shield
40
the denial of life was inscribed. Schopenhauer was right in this: that
by means of pity life is denied, and made worthy of denial--pity is
the technic of nihilism” (AC, 11). The phrase «to go [still] further» is repeated twice in the passage The Civilized Capitalist
Machine. If we follow Nietzsche’s interpretation of the nomadic deterritorialization and the lawless destruction - the decoding - we understand that the «process» to accelerate is quite
the opposite of the one proper to the market. In Nietzsche’s
thought the market movement implies a nihilist praxis, a double negative movement, a «saying “no” to life», in Nietzschean
words. The first movement represses any impulse and destroys
any difference, any self-organized network, being its only goal
the constant flow of goods to create and distribute richness
through the remuneration of the capital. The second movement, immanent to the first one, produces a process of levelling and compliance as necessary condition to the survival of
humanity at such level of artificiality. In Nietzsche’s fragment
entitled The Strong of the Future the same process is highlighted
and the two positive movements of liberation and differentiation - Nietzsche’s «saying yes to life» - represent, in Deleuze
and Guattari’s words, a way to “free[ing] flows, going further and
further into contrivance: a schizophrenic is someone who’s been decod41
ed, deterritorialized” especially when considering the process as
a theory and a praxis of fluxes with high schizophrenic content. “We make a distinction between schizophrenia as a process and
the way schizophrenics are produced as clinical cases that need hospitalizing: it’s almost the same thing in reverse. The schizophrenics in
hospitals are people who’ve tried to do something and failed, cracked
up. We’re not saying revolutionaries are schizophrenics. We’re saying
there’s a schizoid process, of decoding and deterritorializing, which
only revolutionary activity can stop turning into the production of
schizophrenia.” (N, 23) At this point their question is: what is
schizoanalysis if not a militant libidino-economic, libidino-political
analysis? (N, 19) Moreover, assuming that the subconscious
produces desire through a schizophrenic process, which goal
does schizoanalysis have? Deleuze stunning definition follows:
“Schizoanalysis has one single aim - to get revolutionary, artistic, and
analytic machines working as parts, cogs, of one another. Again, if
you take delire, we see it as having two poles, a fascist paranoid pole
and a schizo-revolutionary pole. That’s what we’re interested in: revolutionary schisis as opposed to the despotic signifier.” (N, 24) Our
task is now to identify whether Nietzsche’s strong of the future
exponents, and anticapitalist parasitic bohemians, introduced
by the accelerationist fragment in the Anti-OEdipus, may corre42
spond to Deleuze and Guattari’s anti-oedipal desiring machines
and anti-fascist nomadic singularities.
The heart of the plot
Nietzsche’s phrase “accelerate the process” is essential in shaping the concept of a «headless revolution» that Deleuze, Guattari and the revolutionary Nietzschean community were elaborating in the years 1968 - 1977. To fully understand the meaning
of The Strong of the Future we need a hypertextual reading of
the content because as Deleuze said “a text is nothing but a cog
in a larger extra-textual practice” (DI, 259) to prolong and make
it fruitful. An alliance with Klossowskì’s exegesis of the fragment The Strong of the Future and his masterful book Nietzsche
and the Vicious Circle is necessary. Klossowski defines The Strong
of the future as the fragment at the «heart of the plot», Deleuze
and Guattari understanding the powerful message of anti-capitalist conspiracy, transfer it into the «heart» of their accelerationist passage known as The Civilized Capitalist Machine, essential core of the entire book Anti-OEdipus. Theirs is an indirect
and updated reply to Nietzsche’s sovereign anti-gregarious
cast theory and a direct and affirmative reply to Klossowski’s
revolutionary query of an anti-establishment and anti-market
43
conspiracy. Foucault will share the same impressive newness
as expressed in his Introduction to the American edition of Anti-OEdipus: “Anti-OEdipus shows first of all how much ground has
been covered. But it does much more than that. It wastes no time in
discrediting the old idols, even though it does have a great deal of fun
with Freud. Most important, it motivates us to go further.” (INFL,
5) and about Klossowski he defines his Nietzsche and the Vicious
Circle as the best book of philosophy ever read. What is then
so precious and at the same time so subversive in Klossowski’s
book about Nietzsche that makes the two French philosophers
completely side with him?
The plot: origin and future
It is possible that Klossowski had been waiting thirty years
to be able to find in Nietzsche’s Nachlass a confirmation to his
and Bataille’s thesis about a possible post- Zarathustra «plotting theory» against the economic system of society. Thanks
to the dual alliance with Colli and Montinari on one side and
with the two French philosophers on the other (a relationship
solidified during the Royaumont Conference in July 1964),
Klossowski may develop and elaborate an analysis on some specific Nietzschean themes, that will be completed with both his
44
masterpiece Nietzsche and the Vicious Circle (1969) and his next
reprise entitled Circulus Vitiosus, displayed at the Cerisy-la-Salle
Convention in 1972. Circulus Vitiosus marks the «passing of the
torch» from the generation of Nietzschean philosophers of
the ‘30s to the new anti-philosophers of the ‘50s and ‘60s, independent from Marxist and structuralist schemes, like Foucault, Deleuze, Lyotard, Derrida to name a few.
Klossowski’s advice in reading some of Nietzsche’s fragments, namely The Strong of the Future, is “[to] overcome the feeling
of strangeness that, prima facie, Nietzsche’s affirmations inspire” (CV,
33). In this fragment Nietzsche asserts that the emancipation
of European man will produce a new type of «excessive» man,
the strong of the future, whose aim will not be the needs of society but the needs of the future. Klossowski clarifies that “The
thought that a setting apart or isolation of a human group could be
used as a method for creating a series of ‘rare and singular plants’ (a
‘race’ having ‘its own sphere of life, freed from any virtue-imperative):
- this experimental character of the project - impracticable - if it were
not the object of a vast conspiracy - because no amount of ‘planning’
could ever foresee ‘hothouses’ of this kind - would in some manner have
to be inscribed in and produced by the very process of the economy.”
(NVC, 166) But the economy of any society would prefer de45
stroying such «rare and singular plants», as the costs of their
elimination would be less than those spent for their growth
and their probable consequent eradication, once these plants
would represent unrelated communities, whose political goal
would be the overturning of any future representative deemed
to have power. Thanks to this fragment the philosopher Klossowski finds an ethical opportunity to show a straightforward
anti-system plot in Nietzsche’s words: “This challenge is anticipated by every industrial morality, whose laws of production create a bad
conscience in anyone who lives within the unexchangeable, and which
can tolerate no culture or sphere of life that is not in some manner
integrated into or subjected to general productivity. It is against this
vast enterprise of intimidating the affects, whose amplitude measures,
that Nietzsche proposes his own projects of selection, as so many menaces. These projects must provide for the propitious moment when these
rare, singular and, to be sure, poisonous plants can be clandestinely
cultivated - and then can blossom forth like an insurrection of the affects against every virtue-imperative.” (NVC, 167) The ethical and
moral fronts of the counterposing forces are on display here:
on one side we have the productive gregarious constantly
spurred on producing goods, each gaining his daily sovereign
portion, following established and controlled codes, figures,
46
rules, and behaviours, while on the other side the non-assimilated men that Klossowski defines as a “... some secret, elusive community, whose actions would resist suppression by any regime. Only
such a community would have the ability to disperse itself through its
action whilst maintaining a certain efficacy, at least until the inevitable moment when gregarious reality appropriates the community’s secret in some institutional capacity.” (CV, 34) Deleuze and Guattari
replay the aforementioned «unproductive species» in the late
XX century as insurrectionary force in the accelerated processes of desiring-production. We have evidence of this idea in
Deleuze’s Nomad Thought (written four months after Anti-OEdipus): “Confronted with the ways in which our societies become progressively decodified and unregulated, in which our codes break down
at every point, Nietzsche is the only thinker who makes no attempt at
recodification. He says: the process still has not gone far too enough, we
are still only children (“The emancipation of the European man is the
great irreversible process of the present day; and the tendency should
even be accelerated.”). In his own writing and thought Nietzsche assists in the attempt at decodification - not in the relative sense, but
expressing something that can not be codified, confounding all codes.
But to confound all codes is not easy, even on the simplest level of
writing and thought.” (NT, 143) At this point a discrepancy be47
tween the interpretation of the quote «accelerate the process»
in Nietzsche and in Deleuze is to be noted and explained. A
political Nietzsche thinks - according to Klossowski’s reading
- that a possible ”secret society comprised of experimenters, scholars
and artists, in other words creators …. will know how to act according
to the doctrine of the vicious circle and …. will make it the sine qua
non of universal existence. (CV, 34) This community of singularities have at their back a society that follows an incessant
economic growth for a «total management of the world» and
a «planetary planning of the existence»; whereas in Anti-OEdipus there is no hint of such plans. Theirs (Deleuze and Guattari’s) is a message of hope through the conflict. The century
of revolutions has occurred, maybe even ahead of Nietzsche’s
imagination, and it is exactly from the extraordinary load of
energy/desire coming out from such breaking events, that
Nietzsche’s hothouses-differentiations - as well as Deleuze and
Guattari’s revolutionary events - rise. The affirmative delirium
of the nomadic codebreakers that accelerate the process of
destitution of codes and spaces through a schizo-desiring production, corresponds and substitutes in Deleuze and Guattari’s anti-philosophy, the figure of the strong-of-the-future-plotter.
As far as the “we are still only children” is concerned, Deleuze in
48
his Anti-OEdipus hints at a parodistic reprimand towards «the
poisonous childhood charm» in the process of acceleration
of delirious behaviours of the mutinous ones to come. But we
need Klossowski to fully understand the meaning of it: “The
power of the propagation of the species is already turned against the
instrument that multiplied it: the industrial spirit, which raised gregariousness to the rank of the sole agent of existence, will have thus
carried the seeds of its own destruction with itself. Despite appearances, the new species, ‘strong enough to have no need of the tyranny of
the virtue-imperative’, does not yet reign; and unless it is already preparing for it on the backs of the classes, what it will ultimately bring
about - the most fearful thing of its kind - is perhaps still sleeping
in the cradle.” (NCV, 167,168) What a terrible joke and dread
for the gregarious of any time to breed vipers in their bosom!
Nietzsche may laugh in the end, with his Dionysian laugh: “It
often happens that Nietzsche comes face to face with something sickening, ignoble, disgusting. Well, Nietzsche thinks it’s funny, and he
would add fuel to the fire if he could. He says: keep going, it’s still
not disgusting enough. Or he says: excellent, how disgusting, what a
marvel, what a masterpiece, a poisonous flower, finally the “human
species is getting interesting.” (DI, 257). Deleuze is right here in
affirming: “It is perhaps in this sense that Nietzsche announces the
49
advent of a new politics ... which Klossowski calls a plot against his
own class.” (NT, 149)
The truth is that we haven’t seen anything yet
Let us now analyse the last phrase of the accelerationist
passage of the The Civilized Capitalist Machine: “in this matter,
the truth is that we haven’t seen anything yet.” (AO, 239) It is
necessary to go back to Michel Foucault’s speech in Royaumont in 1964 during one of the first seminaries organized on
Nietzsche, entitled: Nietzsche, Freud, Marx. Foucault’s speech is
about the techniques of interpretations in the three philosophers who - according to him - have “put us back into the presence of a new possibility of interpretation (...), into an uncomfortable
position, since these techniques of interpretation concern us ourselves,
since we, the interpreters, have begun to interpret ourselves by these
techniques. (AME, 272) The works of these three authors have
inflicted a heavy blow to the western thought, but these techniques are necessary especially because, Foucault continues,
the language is suspicious. “Suspecting language” signifies “that
it means something other than what it says” (AME, 270). According to Foucault there are four characteristics of the new hermeneutic as a basis of an interpretative system that we still ap50
ply today: depth meant as exteriority, incompleteness, primacy
of interpretation with respect to signs and finally an infinite
self-interpretation. Deleuze will draw from Foucault’s words
for his Conclusion of the Royaumont seminar: “The reason why
we still think there are many hidden aspects in Nietzsche and his work
is due to methodological reasons. Each single fact can not have a single meaning. Each fact/thing displays many level of meaning which
express the forces and the becoming of such forces in it. (...) Foucault
showed it to us: Nietzsche invented new ways of interpretation … so
that the interpretations themselves denounce the «type» that is he who
is interpreting, renouncing to the question «what?» in favour of the
question «who?»”. Deleuze is clearly taking distance from the intellectuals of his time that combine these three philosophers,
saying in his Nomad Thought: “Probably most of us fix the dawn of
our modern culture in the trinity Nietzsche-Freud-Marx. Never mind
that by doing so you defuse the explosiveness of each from the start.”
(NT, 142) Who wanted to do so? He continues: “But the fact
that modern philosophy has found the source of its renewal in the
Nietzsche-Marx-Freud trinity is indeed rather ambiguous and equivocal. Because it can be interpreted positively as well as negatively. For
example, after the war, philosophies of value were in vogue. Everyone
was talking about values, and they wanted “axiology” to replace both
51
ontology and the theory of knowledge… But it wasn’t the least bit
Nietzschean or Marxist in inspiration. On the contrary, no one talked
about Nietzsche or Marx at all, no one knew them, and they didn’t
want to know them. What they made of “value” was a place to resurrect the most traditional, abstract spiritualism imaginable: they called
on values in order to inspire a new conformity which they believed was
better suited to the modern world, you know, the respect for values, etc.
For Nietzsche, as well as for Marx, the notion of value is strictly inseparable 1) from a radical and total critique of society and the world
(look at the theme of the “fetish” in Marx, or the theme of “idols” in
Nietzsche), and 2) from a creation no less radical: Nietzsche’s transvaluation, and Marx’s revolutionary action. So, in the post-war context,
everyone was all for using a concept of value, but they had completely
neutralized it; they had subtracted all critical or creative sense from it.
What they made of it was an instrument of established values. It was
pure anti-Nietzsche — even worse, it was Nietzsche hijacked, annihilated, suppressed, it was Nietzsche brought back to Sunday mass. “
(DI, 135). To explain why “we haven’t seen anything yet” Deleuze
says: “Now, Marx and Freud, perhaps, do represent the dawn of our
culture, but Nietzsche is something entirely different: the dawn of counterculture.” (NT 142). In the year 1972 this counterculture has
just started and therefore Deleuze and Guattari state that such
52
revolution is in itinere and it will probably be well-combative
and well-aware. We, readers of today, do know that such destabilizing omen has not occurred [yet] but maybe The Strong of
the Future generation is among us, embodied by silicon men
and nomadic plotters.
53
54
Chapter III
For an Erotica
of the Revolution
Solution to the molecular questions 4 and 5
“We realized that we couldn’t just hook a Freudian engine up to the Marxist-Leninist train”
(DI, 216).
55
The Freudian engine and the Marxist-Leninist train
Guattari’s jokes positions the authors of the Anti-OEdipus
in between the Freudian theory of desire and Marxist political theory. Desire for Deleuze and Guattari cannot be simply
the sum of Marxism and Freudism: “The relations of production
and those of reproduction participate in the same pairing of productive forces and anti-productive structures. We wanted to move desire
into the infrastructure, on the side of production, while we moved the
family, the ego, and the individual on the side of anti-production.
This is the only way to ensure that sexuality is not completely cut off
from the economy.” (DI, 216-7) In response to the fourth molecular question on how a politico-philosophical reflection on the
real can conjugate in a coherent design with both economic
and revolutionary dimension, it is important to isolate a few
concepts expressed in the accelerationist passage of the Civilized Capitalist Machine. What meaning do «economy», «value»,
«money» and «revolutionary subject» hold in Deleuze and
Guattari? And in Nietzsche and Klossowski? To describe the
discouragement of the human being in the process of normalisation in XIX century society, Nietzsche uses economical
categories like «exploitation», «luxury», «management» to testify that his thoughts overstep both the traditional concept of
56
liberal economy (Smith, Ricardo, Mill) and their political expression, which is to say the Marxist concept of economics. In
his view, the economy leads to a levelling of man and demands
a reaction in the form of a counter-movement “aimed to bring
to light a stronger species, a higher type of overman”. (NVC, 160-1).
In Circulus Vitiosus Klossowski analyses Nietzsche’s vision of excess, otherwise known as plus value: “What Nietzsche discerns in
the actual state of affairs is that men of excess, those who create, now
and from the outset, the meaning of the values of existence (a very
paradoxical configuration for Nietzsche) form, so to speak, an occult
hierarchy for which the supposed hierarchy of current labourers does all
the work. They are precisely the real slaves, the ones who do the greatest
labour.” (CV, 36) There is another important consequence resulting from the comparison between gregariousness and singularity in the economic movement of «incorrect Darwinian
selection», that Klossowski argues and comments with the following words: “From this point of view, the singular case represents
a forgetting of previous experiences, which are either assimilated to the
gregarious impulses by being relegated to the unconscious, and thus
reprimanded by the reigning censure; or on the contrary, are rejected
as being unassimilable to the conditions required for the existence of
both the species and the individual within the species. For Nietzsche,
57
the singular case rediscovers, in an ‘anachronistic’ manner, an ancient way of existing - whose reawakening in itself presupposes that
present conditions do not correspond to the impulsive state which is
in some manner being affirmed through it. Depending on the strength
of its intensity, however, this singular state, though anachronistic in
relation to the institutional level of gregariousness, can bring about
a de-actualization of that institution itself and denounce it in turn
as anachronistic. That every reality as such comes to be de-actualized
in relation to the singular case, that the resulting emotion seizes the
subject’s behaviour and forces it into action - this is an adventure
that can modify the course of events, following a circuit of chance that
Nietzsche will make the dimension of his thought. To the extent that
he isolates its periodicity in history, the plan for a conspiracy appears
under the sign of the vicious Circle.” (NVC, 80) The comment is
explosive: it implies an irreconcilable fracture between singularity on an institutional level. He is saying that the communities of non-assimilated human beings will form new institutions
with new forms: non-institutions or post-institutions rather than
reformed institutions. Nietzsche assumes that dark forces operate
on human nature thanks to the theory of will to power and with
the help of a selective doctrine: he calls it Eternal Return; Klossowski calls it the Vicious Circle. In this context, the same doc58
trine becomes a tool for conspiracy. Nietzsche’s anti-darwinian
attitude is here very clear inasmuch the implications brought
about by the selective doctrines or the instinctual impulses are antithetical to Darwin’s theory of evolution. Deleuze and Guattari
are absorbed by the implications developed by Klossowski’s
post-institutional gregarious scenario. The communities of singularities may use the liberation of impulse to make mortal what
seems immortal: the gregarious society and its institutions. In
the Anti-OEdipus the two philosophers state: “The revolutionary
pole of group fantasy becomes visible, on the contrary, in the power to
experience institutions themselves as mortal, to destroy them or change
them according to the articulations of desire and the social field, by
making the death instinct into a veritable institutional creativity.
For that is precisely the criterion—at least the formal criterion— that
distinguishes the revolutionary institution from the enormous inertia
which the law communicates to institutions in an established order. As
Nietzsche says; churches, armies, States—which of all these dogs wants
to die?” (AO, 62-3).
The universal delirium and the parody
The issue about the relevance of revolutionary actions appeared in Cerisy-la-Salle conference in July of 1972 and gave
59
Klossowski the opportunity to talk about “parody” in Nietzsche’s
philosophy as previously highlighted in his Nietzsche, Polytheism
and Parody (1957). Reading Nietzsche vs. Marx as a key to interpret the riots of the turbulent 1972 enables Klossowski to
sustain that: “under the sign of the vicious circle, anti-Darwinian
conspiracy entails the coming to autonomy of productions that are primarily pathological as the very condition of monumental upheaval in
the relation between the social forces present.”(CV, 39) Nietzsche’s
proposed insubordination therefore has dueling delirious
outcomes: 1) if the thought of the eternal return is nothing
other than a parody of a doctrine, even its result, the revolt of
the strong of the future, will be a manifestation of some collective delirium, 2) in a nihilist historical moment occurring a
hundred years after Nietzsche’s idea of plot, the blossoming of
a delusion [délire] when confronted with reality, can become
in any way efficacious, or, more generally, any deranged comportment might be said to constitute an efficient resistance in
the face of a determined adverse force. (CV, 38) During the
debate Klossowski asks Deleuze: the insubordination of the delusory ones can be read as an expression of a universal behaviour or is it simply linked to the capital? And again: does delirium transcend any historical time or is it strictly related to the
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schizophrenic behaviour generated by the capital? Is the appreciation of delirium generated only by the same subverting
process reproducing itself? Klossowski’s questions suggest that
the same valorisation of delirium outlines an empty subject
which frees itself from its identity and constantly moves into
a metamorphosis of singularities to reach a final acceptance
of the doctrine of Eternal Return. Klossowksi also indicates
the strategies and the new ways of fighting that we may infer
from Nietzsche’s accelerationist fragments: “Nietzsche’s position
draws us away, in any case, from all that which I have up to the
present called “political action”; it requires the creation of a new comportment with regards to conflict and strategising. It seems to me more
and more - and here I allude to Gilles Deleuze - that we move towards
a kind of anti-psychiatric insurrection (...), that is to say, the discovery of a species of pleasure (...), on the part of psychiatrists or doctors
in becoming the“object of investigation”- and moreover the pathological case will feel more and more comfortable if he lives, and imposes
himself, by subverting the institutional investigations which brand
him pathological.” (CV, 42) Derrida asks explanations about the
aforementioned declaration and the discussion becomes very
interesting to sketch the Nietzschean Rhizosphere with Klossowski, Deleuze, Lyotard on one side and a very concrete and
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alert Derrida on the other:
Derrida: “You suggested that parody could become political, and
that it was, ultimately, subversive….”
Klossowski: “To the extent that «politics» is taken to entail «strategy» or «comportment»”.
Derrida: “But how, in any case, does parody operate? Should one
distinguish between two kinds of parody: between the one, which, on
the pretext of being subversive, takes the risk of establishing a political
order (which very much likes a certain type of parody and finds its own
confirmation there) and, on the other hand, a parody which can really
deconstruct the political order? Is there a form of parody which actually marks the body politic, in contrast to a parody which would be a
parody of a parody, which would play upon the surface of the political
order, playfully teasing, rather than destroying it?”
Klossowski: “I think that «in the long run» nothing can resist such
a parody.”
Derrida: “But someone who wants to transform the political order can he really trust in the long run?”
Klossowski: “The time that is needed is a function of exercised pressure, and pressure depends, as a consequence, upon contagion.
Lyotard: “For Nietzsche the «parody of a parody» consists in a kind
of «ressentiment» against power, it goes no further, it is a condition of
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mediocrity or weakness in intensity. To differentiate it from the other
kind, I think the fundamental criterion is that of intensity. However, it
is impossible to determine beforehand what the effectiveness of a parody
will be, that’s why Nietzsche says it is necessary to be experimenters and
artists, not people who have a plan and try to realise it - that’s old politics. Nietzsche says it’s necessary to try things out and discover which
intensities produce which effects.” (CV, 43)
Here are two different revolutionary positions: Derrida’s
more traditionalist inclination towards socialism and the
more heterodox interpretation outlined by Nietzschean Rhizosphere members who support a free-from-ideologies and
non-top-down insurrectional action, conceiving revolution as
headless, that expresses itself through aimless emissions of energy. Klossowski reminds us in Nietzsche and the Vicious Circle
that “Nietzsche sought from the experience of the return of all things namely, to lead intention back to intensity” (NVC,112). The theme
of intensity is the real challenge, Deleuze and Guattari write:
“And then, above all, we are not looking for a way out when we say
that schizoanalysis as such has strictly no political program to propose.
If it did have one, it would be grotesque and disquieting at the same
time. It does not take itself for a party or even a group, and does not
claim to be speaking for the masses. No political program will be elabo63
rated within the framework of schizoanalysis. (AO, 380) They mean
that the next revolutionary ones may have to face up the effort to
occupy and consequently free the Anti-OEdipus «space» so that
its mechanic and energy may be of help for the future fights.
Chlebnikov docet.
Simulacrum, copy and model
Another example of Nietzschean double-parody that rises
from Deleuze’s words in a discussion in Cerisy-la-Salle, is about
the popular justice. At the time the positions on this issue
were very emphasized: Sartre and the Maoist representatives
of the Gauche Prolétarienne were in favour of revolutionary
courts, Deleuze and Foucault’s GIP plus the Nietzschean Rhizosphere members were against any USSR/Chinese-style countervailing-power. “(...) I think of the question posed by Derrida on
the kinds of parody. In some ways it evokes the two currents which
emerge in recent debates on what might be called “popular justice”.
One group says, roughly: the goal of popular justice is to make “good”
what bourgeois makes “evil”, consequently, they institute a parallel
court, then try the same case; it is a type of parody that defines itself
as a copy of an existent institution, with jurors, accusers, lawyers,
witnesses, but that considers itself better and more fair, more rigorous
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that the model. But another group might pose the problem in a very
different way, saying that a popular justice, if there were one, would
not proceed according to the formalism of courts because it would not
merely be a copy which claims superiority to that which models it - it
would be a parody of another type which would pretend, at once,
to overthrow the copy and the model. (...) It seems to me that this
is exactly the criterion of effective parody in the sense that Nietzsche
understands it.” (CV 43,44) As we can notice the resolution
of the Nietzschean Rhizosphere members is to be «part» of
the revolutionary moment adopting an «open mode», offering a dialogue but also they criticize monolithic mainstream
thought, if necessary. One of the central goal of the French
Nietzschean Rhizosphere in the ‘70s was to avoid the violent
outcome that partially occurred in those years. The big crisis
of the Maoist Gauche Prolétarienne will see its dissolution in
1973, for reasons mainly due to its internal maoist organization, but we like to think that a positive and anti-terrorist push
may have arrived from the philosophical community lead by
Deleuze and Foucault through the benefic role of Anti-OEdipus and in particular of the crucial accelerationist passage of
The Civilized Capitalist Machine.
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Drives and affects in favour of an insurrectionary erotica
At the end of the ‘60s the figures of Freud and Marx represented in France a conformist position that the two authors of
the Anti-OEdipus tried to overcome. Through Klossowski’s comment of the fragment nr. 10 [145] Deleuze and Guattari show
that the gregarious drives are so deeply introjected, - because
of the various waves of regularization - to become unconscious,
leaving no space to any trace of resistance or diversity. In case
this trace reveals itself, society - namely the human beings, the
species - will refuse it, but given the chance to affirm itself, a new
awakening, a «yes to life» will display. Thus - Klossowski continues - it is the drive state that enables the individual to rediscover
an anachronistic primordial condition of existence and the
emotion produced by the dis-alignment of two contrasting realities - the differentiated reality of the single and the gregarious
dimension of the larger group - influences the conduct and
promotes diverted actions. Deleuze and Guattari introduce
here the Freudian concept of «Oedipal group fantasy» and
echo it in the social body quoting a passage from Klossowski’s
Nietzsche and the Vicious Circle: “In this respect Klossowski has
convincingly shown the inverse relationship that pulls the fantasy in
two directions, as the economic law establishes perversion in the “psy66
chic exchanges,” - called drives by Nietzsche and Klossowski - or as the
psychic exchanges on the contrary promote a subversion of the law:
“Anachronistic, relative to the institutional level of gregariousness,
the singular state can, according to its more or less forceful intensity,
bring about a de-actualization of the institution itself and denounce
it in turn as anachronistic.” (AO, 63) Let us apply such divarication to the accelerationist fragment in Anti-OEdipus and see
the two possible directions, as the capitalism of the fluxes distorts the wage earner and grabs the capitalist through money
in a constant exchange where “profit will flow alongside wages,
side by side, reflux and afflux”, or as the drive state of the revolutionary singularities will subvert the codes of a controlled and
money-directed society, operating in a universal affects-driven
economy, as Deleuze and Guattari testify with the following
words “In a certain sense capitalist economists are not mistaken when
they present the economy as being perpetually “in need of monetarization,” as if it were always necessary to inject money into the economy
from the outside according to a supply and a demand. In this manner
the system indeed holds together and functions, and perpetually fulfills
its own immanence. In this manner it is indeed the global object of an
investment of desire. The wage earner’s desire, the capitalist’s desire,
everything moves to the rhythm of one and the same desire”. (AO, 239)
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The nomadic unity and the Guattarian schizophrenic man
The last molecular question inquires which hidden philosophical and political thought lies in the accelerationist
passage of The Civilized Capitalist Machine. Let us analyze the
historical and political background of those years in France.
Deleuze and Guattari spoke about the political issue in the
early 1970s on several occasions: “We also know that the problem
for revolutionaries today is to unite within the purpose of the particular struggle without falling into the despotic and bureaucratic organization of the party or status apparatus. We seek a kind of war machine
that will not re-create a status apparatus, a nomadic unit related to
the outside that will not revive an internal despotic unity.” (NT, 149)
These are Deleuze’s words at Cerisy-la-Salle, words that he will
reaffirm in an interview with Vittorio Marchetti for the Italian
philosophical magazine «Tempi Moderni»: “The problem is not
determining which science will be the human science par a certain
number of “machines” endowed with revolutionary potential are going
to fit together. For example, the literary machine, the psychoanalytic machine, and political machines: either they will find a unifying
point, as they have done so up to now, in a particular system of adaptation to capitalist regimes, or else they will find a shattering unity
in a revolutionary utilization.” (DI, 236) Guattari is on the same
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level of analysis when he answers to Michel Antoine Burnier
in an interview for the magazine «Actuel» published in 1973:
“The most important thing is not authoritarian unification, but a
kind of infinite swarming: desires in the neighborhood, the schools,
factories, prisons, nursery schools, etc. It’s not about a make-over, or
totalization, but hooking up on the same plane at its tipping point. As
long as we stick to the alternative between the impotent spontaneity of
anarchy and the hierarchical and bureaucratic encoding of a party-organization, there can be no liberation of desire.” (DI, 266)
He continues underlining the issue of «opponents» in the
revolutionary organization: “It’s always the same old trick: a big
ideological debate in the general assembly, and the questions of organization are reserved for special committees. These look secondary,
having been determined by political options. Whereas, in fact, the real
problems are precisely the problems of organization, never made explicit
or rationalized, but recast after the fact in ideological terms. The real
divisions emerge in organization: a particular way of treating desire
and power, investments, group- Oedipuses, group-super-egos, phenomena of perversion... Only then are the political oppositions built up:
an individual chooses one position over another, because in the scheme
of the organization of power, he has already chosen and hates his opponent.” (DI, 264)
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To overcome such political poverty Deleuze and Guattari
firmly believe that only a brand new type of revolution can produce a brand new type of politics: “... revolutionary organization
must be the organization of a war-machine and not of a State apparatus, the organization of an analyzer and not of an external synthesis”
(DI, 269). Guattari insists: “And in our view, this corresponds to
a certain position vis-a-vis desire, a profound way of envisioning the
ego, the individual, and the family. This raises a simple dilemma:
either we find some new type of structure to facilitate the fusion of
collective desire and revolutionary organization; or we continue on
the present course, heading from one repression to the next, toward a
fascism that will make Hitler and Mussolini look like a joke.” (DI,
269). Fascism then becomes the main strategic enemy of the
ethical-political option proposed by Deleuze and Guattari and
it will be the basis on which the two philosophers will develop
their theory of molar and molecular fascism in the second volume of Capitalism and Schizophrenia, A Thousand Plateaus in the
chapter entitled 1933 Micropolitics and Segmentarity. Foucault
himself will highlight this important non-fascist feature in his
Introduction to the American edition of Anti-OEdipus when he
defines the book as an “introduction to a non fascist life because
it tracks down all varieties of fascism, from the enormous ones that
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surround and crush us to the petty ones that constitute the tyrannical
bitterness of our everyday lives” (INFL, 13).
The Great Politics and the revolutionary
Another point we have to make is to identify the revolutionary type of the Anti-OEdipus. The physiognomy has been already outlined in two different forms in Anti-OEdipus. Guattari
in an interview for the magazine «Neue Zeitung» in 1972 with
regards to the identification among analyst, patient and activist says: “First of all no one has ever said that the analyst is the same
as the schizophrenic man but that the analyst, as well as the activist
or the writer or anybody else, is more or less engaged in a schizo process
and there is always a difference between the schizo process and the
schizophrenic man interned in an insane-asylum, as his schizo process
is blocked or goes uselessly around in circles. We are not saying that the
revolutionary need to identify with the madmen going uselessly round
in circles, but that they need to push their actions into a schizo-way process.” According to Guattari the schizophrenic man does not
coincide with the madman but becomes schizo when he clashes
with an individual or collective «desiring process» which holds
at its centre a «libidinal energy» able to drive him from an
assessed subject to a new open code subject, passing through
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a metamorphosis and a process of both de-subjectivation and
neo-subjectivation. In this transition we can identify parts of
former subjectivity - the doctor, the worker, the white man, the
human being - and some of the new one - the homosexual, the
trans-gender, the foolish man, the analyst. It is therefore not
possible to locate one single typical revolutionary man, but
multiple individual and/or group connections in schizo-revolutionary processes. What revolution really requires, according
to Guattari, is an experimental revolutionary process and not
revolutionary subjects tailored by ideology. “Repeated mistakes
and insignificant results are more necessary than a stupid passivity
and claw back mechanisms.”
To deeply understand the concept of the revolutionary man
as intended by Deleuze we need to look at Klossowski again
and in particular to his speech at the Collége de Philosophie
in Paris during a conference entitled Nietzsche, Polytheism and
Parody in 1957. Klossowski was considered one of the central
figures in French Nietzsche’s studies, especially after his masterful translation of Nietzsche’s The Gay Science in 1954. In this
speech Klossowski underlines the figure of the «actor as interpreter of a celestial revelation» able to contrast the catechontic institutions with artistic antinomic «accelerated» creations:
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“But art has a very wide meaning, and in Nietzsche, this category
includes institutions as much as works of free creation. For example
-and here we can see immediately what is at issue-how does Nietzsche
consider the Church? For him, the Church is constituted grosso modo
by a cast of profound impostors: the priests. The Church is a masterpiece of spiritual domination, and it required that impossible plebian
monk, Luther, to dream of ruining that masterpiece, the last edifice of
Roman civilization among us. The admiration Nietzsche always had
for the Church and the papacy rests precisely upon the idea that truth
is an error, and that art, as willed error, is higher than truth. This
is why Zarathustra confesses his affinity with the priest, and why, in
the Fourth Part, during that extraordinary gathering of the different
kinds of higher men in Zarathustra’s cave, the Pope -the Last Pope-is
one of the prophet’s guests of honor. This betrays, I think, Nietzsche’s
temptation to foresee a ruling class of great meta-psychologists who
would take charge of the destinies of future humanity, since they would
know perfectly both the different aspirations and the different resources
capable of satisfying them.” (NPP; 106, 107) What he is saying is
that Nietzsche at the end of the 80’s of the XIX century had
already understood that the Great Politics needed an entertainment sphere where institutions, dominating castes, gregarious masses could express a certain will to power. Deleuze
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admires Klossowski and his Nietzsche and the Vicious Circle (as
he will write in a letter sent to him on December 19th, 1969)
and will retrieve the concept of acceleration of processes of
a community of irregulars who confound all codes, thus entwining Klossowski and Nietzsche’s theory of conspiracy with
the political riots of the 70’s in France. Their alliance is clearly
detected in the talks at the famous meeting of Cerisy-la-Salle in
July 1972 where Klossowski defines the fragment entitled The
Strong of the Future - 9 [153] - as the «heart of conspiracy». After he has finished reading the fragment he poses a question
wondering what Nietzschean comportment we would adopt in
relation to the current upheavals - namely youth poverty, revolutionary riots, clashes between the adverse forces - “no longer
from the point of view of power, or potency, but from the perspective of
the vicious circle, which is a manifestation of the nihilist judgment
passed upon all acting.” (CV, 38)
Klossowski, choosing the comportment of the nihilist judgment, reaffirms Nietzsche’s parodistic behaviour on the economic planetary planning scenario and again he reminds an
attentive audience - Deleuze, Lyotard, Derrida, Calasso and
Nancy - the thought of eternal return: “As I have insisted, this
thought, as the theme of Nietzsche’s highest contemplation, becomes
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the instrument of a conspiracy. It is from this stage that the god of the
vicious circle can truly be considered the blossoming of a delusion. The
question that I now pose is whether delusory or deranged behaviour,
in this sense, when confronted with reality, can become in any way
efficacious, or if, more generally, any deranged comportment might be
said to constitute an efficient resistance in the face of a determined adverse force.” (CV, 38) According to Klossowski, Nietzsche moves
from the position of the biological contemplative observer of
the law of the Eternal Return to the one of the strong political
watcher, thus building - employing Deleuze and Guattari terminology - a real war machine so to be able to transform the
Eternal Return into a conspiracy which should subvert the current domination of the levelled industrialized man. But why
should such conspiracy be delirious? For at least two reasons:
the first one because the double parody of the current social
model and of its simulacrum subverts all codes, as a consequence of the nihilist judgment passed upon all acting. The
second reason is linked to Deleuze and Guattari’s interpretation of the post-68 revolutionary riots: “Delirium is the general
matrix of every unconscious social investment. Every unconscious investment mobilizes a delirious interplay of disinvestments, of counterinvestments, of overinvestments”. (AO, 277) Similarly Klossowski’s
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delirium - the radical departing from the established path coincides with the delirious polarity in Anti-OEdipus: if every
social investment is delirious, the same will be for a no longer
secret conspiracy plotted by idle urban dissidents whose aim
justifies and realizes itself through the same means of manifestation. The question at this stage is about fulfillment: can the
schizo-delirious approach be incisive both in the revolutionary
riots of the ‘70s and on any other future moment to come, as
the law of the Vicious Circle seems to suggest? In Klossowski
words the question is: does the schizo delirious process simply
represent the current version of the Vicious Circle or are we
in front of a general peremptory coherent identity between Process,
Circle and Return?
Second portrait of the revolutionary: the Deleuzian rhizomatic nomad
Following the words of Anti-Oedipus we portray a quite canonical image of the schizo-delirious revolutionary man: “... a
schizo-revolutionary type or pole that follows the lines of escape of desire;
breaches the wall and causes flows to move; assembles its machines and
its groups-in-fusion in the enclaves or at the periphery—proceeding in
an inverse fashion from that of the other pole: I am not your kind, I
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belong eternally to the inferior race, I am a beast, a black.” (AO, 277)
But in other writings Deleuze’s position is less reassuring: “Militant revolutionaries cannot be concerned with delinquency, deviance,
and madness — not as educators or reformers, but as those who can
read the face of their proper difference only in such mirrors.” (DI, 201)
The subversive is then a prismatic simulacrum who collects various points of view: the criminal’s or the diverse and fool man’s
and is forced to elaborate the different aspects in which he
mirrors his diversity: himself, his marginality, the phantasmal
world he belongs to and the rest of the social body, reaching a
deformed singularity which self-affirms differently from what the
false counter-identity of a presumed antagonistic vocation would
do, once compared to «respectable people». Differently from
Nietzsche the rhizomatic is not nihilist, he appreciates the revolution as an accelerated event of transvaluation of all values,
and provided that he accepts the register of Nietzsche’s corrosive parody, he will revolve it in positive looking for «new ways».
This new rhizomatic politics is very different from the more
traditional one of the communist and socialist movements in
the XIX and XX century. To evaluate such difference let us
read the conspiracy notion as interpreted by Klossowski and
Deleuze: “There is a topic which Klossowski addressed, I believe, at
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the same time that he was addressing the loss of identity, namely, the
topic of singularity, by which he means the “non-identical”. A conspiracy, if one understands Klossowski’s thinking, is a community
of singularities. The question, then, configured in term of the political (understood either in its contemporary or ancient sense) is this:
how are we to conceive of a community of singularities?” (CV, 46).
Here, for the first time in history, one could locate a new way
of being revolutionary, a strategy of ways, of non-identities: an
overturning of the basic concepts of revolution as an expression of organization of a social group, in favour of a heuristic
insurrectional. A revolution which does not recognize useful
any of the previous revolutionary models, and whose final aim
is not gaining power. As Deleuze said, “the so-called society is a
community of regularities or more precisely, a certain selective process
which retains select singularities and regularises them. In order to
maintain the proper functioning of society it selects for regularisation,
to use the language of psychoanalysis, what might be called paranoiac
singularities. But a conspiracy - this would be a community of singularities of another type, which would not be regularised, but which
would enter into new connections, and in this sense, would be revolutionary.” (CV 46, 47) Here lies the real “heart” of the fragment
The Strong of the Future and of Deleuze’s Nomad Thought. With
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the eyes of the book Anti-OEdipus the great process of regularization is the same great process of the Western oikonomia
which allows the rational functioning of a highly numbered
community of market-subjugated singularities: “... the human
species… articulates itself, through production, in order to maintain
itself at the level of humanity, [and] can only do so through the absurdity of a total reduction of its moral resources achieved through
work itself.” (CV,37) What remains open is the way singularities
can be linked among them, we mean «connections» and not
«institutions». The selective criterion of the Eternal Return - if
the perspective is the extreme bifurcation of discrete productions of non-identities from macro-repetitions of homogenous
identities - is possible only on the basis of a double selection
of human types: the essential - seen as «mass-value» in relation to
the mercantile society, and the surplus - seen as «waste-value»,
an impersonal and singularized-plusvalue apt to form societies
and groups (CV, 47). According to Deleuze the «surplus men»
“are motionless, and the nomadic adventure begins when they seek
to stay in the same place by escaping the codes.” (DI, 259) The nomad is defined by Deleuze as a mobile centre of resistance, an
enchanted traveller with inconceivable horizons, a motionless
traveller on collective bodies. The last big problem to face now
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is the following: both gregarious and unassimilated ones live
and fight in a demoralizing unjust macro-scenario. How is it
possible to weave the net of light self-organized bounds in the
existing massive-unifying social structure? Will such a net be
able to support the various connections among diversities in
future times?
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Chapter IV
The infinite money:
desire, value
and simulacrum
Truths are coins which have lost their pictures
and now matter only as metal, no longer as
coins.
—Friedrich Nietzsche, On truth and lies in a
non-moral sense
We need units in order to count, but it may not
be assumed that such units [of measure] exist.
—Friedrich Nietzsche, fr. 14 [79]
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To subvert the braking effect of totality
If we examine the main works of Deleuze, Foucault and
Klossowski published between 1968 and 1972, we can observe that the courses of these texts objectively bear enigmatic
and common features that could allow us to regard them as
«fragmentary research projects»; these are investigations that
could hardly be conceived and envisaged if we evaluate them
from a ‘revolutionary’ perspective with the aim of identifying
on which common battleground and common agenda these
three intellectuals act. They swing with remarkable aplomb
from far-sighted and vibrant essays with an academic flavour,
such as Difference and Repetition or The Archaeology of Knowledge,
to hermeneutic works on Nietzsche – which include both anthologies of fragments like Nietzsche and the Vicious Circle, and
of first editions of his OEuvres Complètes published by Gallimard – continuing with literary criticism or tout-court literature works such as The Logic of Sense or The Women of Rome, and
finishing with cryptic economical essays, La monnaie vivante,
or aggressively political pamphlets, The Anti-OEdipus; not to
mention, then, their academic lectures ranging from Freud
to Marx, from Aristotle to Nietzsche, from Greek currency to
the Medieval Inquisition or history of sexuality, without any
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interruption. Foucault himself, with a certain irony, in his first
lecture on 7th January 1976 part of a course titled Society Must
Be Defended, wanted to terminate a line of research that he
himself defines incoherent and discontinuous. Foucault feels
the need to end and systematise, in some way, the several lines
of research, insight and analysis that he had been carrying
on since he started his lectures at the Collège de France (1970).
From a certain point of view, Foucault does not mention only
his research, but alludes also to a common path of the French
revolutionary Rhizosphere when he lists among the relevant,
or at least interesting, elements of the previous fifteen years
“I am thinking of the efficacy of a book such as L’Anti-OEdipe, which
really has no other source of reference than its own prodigious theoretical inventiveness: a book, or rather a thing, an event, which has
managed, even at the most mundane level of psychoanalytic practice,
to introduce a note of shrillness into that murmured exchange that has
for so long continued uninterrupted between couch and armchair”
(PK, 80). This is an important indication to his students since
the philosophical work of Deleuze has always been a crucial
point of reference for Foucault, because it had openly established itself as an “ally” of his theories since the early sixties,
or at least from the beginning of the Nietzsche Renaissance and,
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thus, from the publication of Nietzsche and Philosophy (1962)
and the Royaumont conference (1964). What is most surprising is the importance that Foucault confers to the anti-oedipic
text, because his analysis takes into account “the last ten, fifteen,
twenty years at most”, hence the timeframe that goes, approximately, from 1956 and 1976: not only The Anti-OEdipus is the
only book to be referenced, but its position in Foucault’s argument surprises us the most. The volume, indeed, is referred to
in the context of “this amazing efficacy of discontinuous, particular
and local criticism” and its efficacy is compared to that of entire
movements such as anti-psychiatry, existential analysis, and attacks upon the legal and penal system. Foucault concludes:
“I would say, then, that what has emerged in the course of the last
ten or fifteen years is a sense of the increasing vulnerability to criticism of things, institutions, practices, discourses. A certain fragility
has been discovered in the very bedrock of existence-even, and perhaps
above all, in those aspects of it that are most familiar, most solid and
most intimately related to our bodies and to our everyday behaviour.
But together with this sense of instability and this amazing efficacy of
discontinuous, particular and local criticism, one in fact also discovers something that perhaps was not initially foreseen, something one
might describe as precisely the inhibiting effect of global, totalitarian
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theories. It is not that these global theories have not provided nor continue to provide in a fairly consistent fashion useful tools for local
research: Marxism and psychoanalysis are proofs of this. […] In each
case, the attempt to think in terms of a totality has in fact proved a
hindrance to research.” (PK, 80-81) By following Foucault’s outline, we can identify two opposite fronts: on the one hand,
the «accelerationist» front, irregular, peculiar and local; on
the other hand, a front more “restraining”, “braking”, continuous, global, total, and openly totalitarian. Marxism and psychoanalysis can still be useful instruments at a local level, but,
according to Foucault, when confronted with facts, they have
had a «braking» thus negative function for the insurrectionary
front. The Anti-OEdipus, in Foucault’s opinion, fits perfectly in
the domain of those critical entities capable of causing landslides and provided with some peculiar characteristics that
could be summarised as follows: 1) autonomous – instead of
centralized – technical production 2) wisdom returns to scale
which descend from the insurrection of subjugated wisdoms.
The insurrection of subjugated knowledges
In the lecture he gave on 7th January 1976, Foucault focused his attention on the returns of forgotten knowledges
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that descend from what he calls “insurrection of subjugated knowledges”. With this expression he refers to two specific factors: 1)
the ‘knowledges’ that derive from historical contents, which
he deems buried, and thus adequate to be subjected to a rediscovery attributable, to a ‘sumptuous’ research linked, in a
way, to “typical secret societies of the West” since ancient times and
emerged at the time of early Christianity: the “great warm and
tender Freemasonry of useless erudition” – here, with his peculiar
and subtle humour, Foucault introduces his own analysis and
the one of his rhizospheric fellows just like modern variations
of the struggle and insurrection of Alexandrine gnosis related to the idea of salvation through knowledge. The French
Rhizosphere is, according to the malicious Foucaultian antichristian-Nietzschean-accelerationist interpretation, a sort of secular and revolutionary neo-gnosis which hands its wisdom and
research over from one generation to the next, following the
Hellenic-Alexandrine tradition.
2) those ‘knowledges’ that are assumed to lay on the opposite side of “dusty and useless” erudition, that is, those disqualified and inadequate knowledges – here, once again, presented
in an extraordinary way. In this category of “naïve knowledges located low down on the hierarchy” beneath the required academic
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and scientific levels, Foucault includes popular knowledge (“le
savoir des gens”) – which must not be confused with “general common sense” – like those of criminals, crazy people, ill persons,
psychiatric patients, detainees. The direct knowledge of these
subjects, merged with the specific knowledges of specialised
workers, like nurses, doctors and soldiers, will not result in a
“general common-sense knowledge”, but in a “a differential knowledge
incapable of unanimity and which owes its force only to the harshness
with which it is opposed by everything surrounding it.” (PK, 82)
Foucault does not miss the paradox of enclosing in the
same rhizomatic framework of subjugated knowledges both
«the academia and the street»: nonetheless he finds in this
well-marked disparity the essential leverage of the critique
promoted with those discontinuous discourses. According to
Foucault this is “historical knowledge of struggles”: “In the specialised areas of erudition as in the disqualified, popular knowledge there
lay the memory of hostile encounters which even up to this day have
been confined to the margins of knowledge. What emerges out of this is
something one might call a genealogy, or rather a multiplicity of genealogical researches, a painstaking rediscovery of struggles together with
the rude memory of their conflicts. And these genealogies, that are the
combined product of an erudite knowledge and a popular knowledge,
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were not possible and could not even have been attempted except on one
condition, namely that the tyranny of globalising discourses with their
hierarchy and all their privileges of a theoretical avant-garde was eliminated.” (PK, 83) In this passage, Foucault attempts an early
outline of his overall plan, where he generously includes and
aligns the French components of the rhizosphere and, above
all, the authors of The Anti-OEdipus, although the detailed description of the “returns of knowledge” fits perfectly his research style. That style which he adopted at the beginning of
his lectures at the Collège de France (1970) and carried on
until the end of that period, 1975-1976, the year before the
crucial 1977 when he entered a period of crisis and suspended
his course. It was Foucault’s annus horribilis, during which he
received attacks from multiple fronts – such as Baudrillard’s
Forget Foucault – and started a profound reformulation of his
thought, his analysis and his political approach, which in turn
would end his friendship with Deleuze and destroy the underground empathy within the French Nietzschean revolutionary
community. What seems extraordinary is the way in which
Foucault linked his research to the fight and critique of his
rhizospheric fellows, attributing the essential leverage of the
critique and of the “success” of those years precisely to the
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discontinuity and de-centralisation of practices and discourse
advocated by Klossowski, Deleuze and Guattari, Blanchot and
Lyotard, among others. In 1976, Foucault is able to advance
this critique: “Let us give the term genealogy to the union of erudite
knowledge and local memories which allows us to establish a historical
knowledge of struggles and to make use of this knowledge tactically
today.” (PK, 83) During the same lecture, Foucault links the
genealogy to the struggle against the alleged “scientificity” of
the new sciences, namely Marxism and Psychoanalysis, guilty
of bearing “power ambitions”, not even concealed, and thus of
pursuing those “effects of power” that usually institutions assign
to enthroned sciences. According to Foucault, “By comparison,
then, and in contrast to the various projects which aim to inscribe
knowledges in the hierarchical order of power associated with science, a
genealogy should be seen as a kind of attempt to emancipate historical
knowledges from that subjection, to render them, that is, capable of
opposition and of struggle against the coercion of a theoretical, unitary, formal and scientific discourse. It is based on a reactivation of
local knowledges – of minor knowledges, as Deleuze might call them
– in opposition to the scientific hierarchisation of knowledges and the
effects intrinsic to their power: this, then, is the project of these disordered and fragmentary genealogies. If we were to characterise it in two
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terms, then ‘archaeology’ would be the appropriate methodology of this
analysis of local discursivities, and ‘genealogy’ would be the tactics
whereby, on the basis of the descriptions of these local discursivities, the
subjected knowledges which were thus released would be brought into
play.” (PK, 85) In Foucault’s works, within the genealogy/archive relation mentioned above, special attention is reserved
to money, ever since the first lectures of his inaugural course
in 1970-71, directly after the re-emergence in Klossowski and
Deleuze of Nietzschean topics such as will to power, formations of sovereignty, impulse and value. Indeed, an early taste
of the strong and innovative critical capacity on this front –
which includes aspirations, will to power, universal rhizomatic
economy, physical and noologic subconscious – comes from
the debut of Deleuze and Guattari as authors, under the sign
of Klossowski. La synthèse disjunctive is the title of their first essay dedicated to Klossowski and published in the 43rd issue of
the journal «L’Arc», precisely in the third term of 1970. The
text is presented already as an essay of a book titled Capitalism
and schizophrenia. The writing style is already the imaginary,
transverse, aggressive, humoristic and “genealogic” one of the
Anti-OEdipus. La synthèse disjunctive is an incisive prelude to an
announced explosion: Foucault immediately grasps the collat90
eral effects that it would have on the style and content of his
own research.
The xeno-dollar and money as an instrument of hegemonic
power
At the beginning of the 70’s, the topic of money became
a primary concern in the rhizosphere. Thanks to differential-money, namely the main instrument used by liberal democratic systems to assault, restructure and regularise national
and international economic crises, the French Nietzschean
revolutionary community wanted to build a new analytic grid
that could overcome the «ideological morass» which still
clutches a significant portion of the traditional Left as well
as of the new antagonistic Left. Klossowski produced, as his
farewell to publishing and writing, a brief text, dense and enigmatic, titled La monnaie vivante (Living Currency, 1970), which
presented his peers with more than one critical interrogative
on the industrial and commercial world, and on money as an
instrument and simulacrum of the vital agent soothing human impulses. In a handwritten letter sent in autumn 1970,
Foucault greeted Klossowski’s volume as “the greatest book of our
times”. That was the same period in which, at the beginning
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of 1971, Deleuze and Guattari attended Foucault’s lectures
at the Collège, having just finished the in itinere draft of the
Anti-OEdipus. The role of the «imperial» currency – the US
dollar as hegemonic currency – within the Western economic system, as well as the Bretton Woods fixed exchange rates
regime, were at the centre of the tense international political debate. In December 1969 inflation in the United States
reached 6%. Nixon, as soon as he was elected president, was
struck by the prediction made by his own staff that the dollar had to be rescued in maximum two years. The world was
jammed by xeno-dollars and the US reserves could not compensate anymore the increase in the global amount of dollars
with the corresponding amount of gold as contemplated in
the agreement. In a few months, in 1971, violence in the Vietnam war reached its peak, and so did military expenses and
the related budget deficit. The United States had entered a
recession in 1970 and unemployment was at 6% and growing.
The issues presented by domestic economic circumstances
were unprecedented: inflation was high in a phase of recession, as opposed to the usual combination of recession and
deflation, as it had previously happened during the Great Depression in 1929. The situation was out of hand. There was
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no empirically tested academic theory which corresponded
to such an economic situation; there was no plan. Any technical decision could equally mean the salvation of global commercial leadership or its collapse, precisely at a time when
the international Communist movement was challenging Anglo-Saxon industrial capitalism the most. The sudden breakdown of the Bretton Woods system could cause a rapid downfall of the hegemony of American power, the winner of World
War II. Power can switch sign. Nixon’s staff was divided between
monetarists, namely the rising star Friedman and the Chicago
School, and orthodox mainstream economists, such as Burns
and the Federal Reserve. Friedman and those favouring the
free floating of exchange rates unpegged from the gold standard prevailed. Timing was crucial. In May 1971 West Germany
left the Bretton Woods system, instituted in 1944 on the ashes
of the Axis Powers, letting the German Mark free to float. The
situation deteriorated and Nixon’s economic staff had to hurry: it was time to take actions because the element of surprise
and the promptness of intervention were crucial. In August
1971, Nixon suddenly announced to the nation and to the
whole world that the US dollar was not convertible in gold anymore, leaving the American currency free to float too. After
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about 3,000 years from its invention, money lost its tie to an
objective and concrete value. It was the first time in Western
history, without considering the periods of war and brief experiments, always ended in failure: money completed its final
transformation, to which it was probably destined ever since
its invention, becoming a pure simulacrum of value in all its
forms, from the round-shaped metal piece to banknotes. The
question that economists asked themselves are several: Will
the “orphan money” be able to stand only based on its face
value? Will the hegemonic currency, i.e. the dollar, be able
to walk on an “empty space”? Has money grown enough to
demonstrate its maturity? The monetary de-aurification is the
temporary situation in which we are still today: a mixture of
sovereign, post-sovereign, xeno- and headless currencies that
float freely without any fixed exchange rate, victims of speculations and market imbalances. However, the monetary coordinates within which Foucault develops his analysis are not
simply related to the contingency of events, but rather to the
study of forces and their effects on the domain of sovereign
formations associated to the research and analyses conducted
within the Rhizosphere. The concept of money considered by
Foucault in the lectures that he gave between 10th February
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and 10th March 1971 is, surprisingly for most people but not
for the Rhizomatics, the Ancient Greek currency employed
between the seventh and fifth century B.C.; that is the historical, social, economic and institutional period when money,
conceived as Greek measurement, eventually becomes the
core of an “immense social and polymorphous practice of assessment, quantification, establishing equivalences, and the search for
appropriate proportions and distributions” (LWK, 134). According to Foucault, this analysis should approach the hypothesis
according to which money constitutes a political instrument
used to create and preserve new balances during profound
social transformations: thus, money does not preserve relations of sovereignty but relations of dominance. It is fascinating how Foucault introduces the concept of money towards
the end of the lecture he gave on 17th February 1971, as redistribution of relations between the discourse of justice and
the discourse of knowledge, and of the relations between the
just, measurement, order and truth: “The institution of money,
which is not just a measure of exchange, but which was established
mainly as an instrument of distribution, division, and social correction.” (LWK, 129)
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The birth of money-simulacrum
The approach described in Lectures of the Will to Know (1971)
is very distant from the traditional interpretation of money
imposed by mainstream economics, from which not even
Marx in The Capital nor Foucault in The Order of Things (1966)
could evade. On the one hand, mainstream nineteenth-century economists believed that the mature use of money as a
means of exchange started with the birth and development
of market economics. On the other hand, the Foucault of The
Order of Things argues that the analysis of wealth and money theory can be traced back to the classical era, that is, the
period between Cervantes’ Don Quixote and de Sade’s Justine.
Alternatively, in 1971 Foucault traces a conception of money
according to the eighteenth-century perspective of traditional political economy: “Commercial, international, market origin
of money. Mercantilist interpretation of money restricting it from the
start to function of representation and exposing it to that “fetishism”
which consists in taking the sign for the thing itself, through a sort of
primary and radical philosophical error. In fact, this interpretation
may account for some early uses of money in Lydia and Phoenicia.
But money was not adopted and used in Greece on the basis of this
model.” (LWK, 135) To support his argument, Foucault exam96
ines two opposite examples of the employment of money in
Ancient Greece in the seventh century B.C.: Corinth and Athens. What interests us is in which way the two cities and in
particular the two political protagonists, respectively Cypselus
and Solon, associate their politics to the introduction of a
currency. In both cases, the two options would contribute to
cause, and anticipate, relevant historical effects on Western
governance vicissitudes. For Corinth, and its tyrant Cypselus,
it was a political operation in which “the rich have been forced to
make an economic sacrifice [and] money comes to the fore enabling
the preservation of power through the intermediary of the tyrant”
(LWK, 159); for Athens, and the legislator Solon, the political choice has the opposite course of that of Corinth because
“the rich have been forced to a political sacrifice, [and] eumonia
enables them to preserve economic privileges.” (LWK,159) It is clear
that Foucault points at Solon’s way of managing the nomos as
the agenda for Western democracies in the nineteenth and
early twentieth century: faced with growing social demands,
the wealthiest classes chose to allow substantial power distributions in order to preserve their economic privileges. The
refined Corinthian economic choices, to which corresponds
a brutal tyrannical one, show an excellent example of mone97
tary measures – i.e. the systemic management of the nomisma
– which would be adopted throughout the twentieth century
and this first period of the twenty-first. In fact, contemporary
money intervenes at the core of an institutional operation in
which wealth is redistributed to an already wealthy minority without redistributing power to the majority of the social
body. This is because the social sharing of power has reached
its boundary – the maximum limit of feasibility for economic oligarchies – within which less wealthy classes participate
to liberal democracies. Foucault seems to suggest that there
has not been a time in Western history from the seventh
century in Greece in which our societies have not struggled
between the two poles of distribution, the economical and
the political one, with money playing the role of functional
membrane manageable between the two antipodes. Returning to the Greek cities: money became money-simulacrum
and, at the same time, money-metron, i.e. money as measure.
The Corinthian invented money as “the instrument of power
which is being shifted, and which, through an interplay of new
regulations, ensures the preservation of class domination. At this
point, money is no longer a symbol which effectuates and is not yet
a representative sign. It should be understood as a fixed series of su98
perimposed substitutions.” (LWK, 141) Foucault, indeed, looks
at Corinthian money as a series of substitutions: religious,
economic, political and social. The game of substitutions
and superimpositions between money and effectual reality
generates fixation and not representation: “whereas the sign
represents, the simulacrum replaces one substitution for another.
It is its reality as simulacrum that has enabled money to remain for
a long time not only an economic instrument but a thing issuing
from and returning to power, by a sort of inner intensity or force: a
religiously protected object it would be impious, sacrilegious to adulterate.” (LWK, 141) But, with even greater depth, Foucault
argues that money is “as simulacrum that is sign: getting it to
function as sign in a market economy is an avatar of its real history
as simulacrum.” (LWK, 142) For money, being a regulatory
simulacrum is primary, before entering history as a sign and
then as fetish. Actually, the sign is only a moment within the
duration of money-simulacrum: it is on such fine edge of
strategy, power and substitution that Klossowski’s living currency intervenes, description of that triangle that dominates
us: desire, value and simulacrum (Foucault, personal letter
sent to Klossowski, autumn 1970).
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The modes of expression of impulsive forces
There are only few pages, but they are dense and enigmatic
perhaps more than any book ever published: Living Currency is
the text through which Klossowski gives his farewell to writing
– from then on (1970) he would be involved in different projects, such as translations, art exhibitions: paintings and movies – and at the same time it constitutes a powerful introduction to the Anti-OEdipus, an anoedipic incipit from a different
author. Living Currency creates a philosophical space to decrypt, building an underground passage that connects all different publications and stations of thought constituting the
French revolutionary Rhizosphere: Nietzsche’s Notebook (18871888) by Nietzsche, Nietzsche and the Vicious Circle (1969), The
Anti-OEdipus (1972), Nomad Thought (1972), Circulus Vitiosus
(1972), Nietzsche, Genealogy, History (1971), Lectures on the Will to
Knowledge (1970- 1971), Libidinal Economy (1974). The Klossowskian volume breaks, breaches, overflows and distributes
with few incisive sentences large gashes of thought and possible research avenues that Deleuze, Guattari, Foucault and Lyotard will then walk wildly, rapidly and productively, as “young
wolves of future revolutions”. The context within which the paradox of Living Currency is articulated is one where industrial
100
civilisation – Klossowskian term which seems more accurate
than the general “capitalism” – has diffused its negative effects
by infecting the whole society through institutes of uprightness and conformity, which connotes the attribution to the
means of production of a powerful contamination – and, thus,
affective engraving – capacity on the individuals and the community. That is the same homogeneous, levelled, economized
and nihilistic society that Nietzsche described in the fragment
The Strong of the Future. The Nietzsche-Klossowski axis, then,
assigns to the levelled industrial civilisation a dangerous production capacity that is both affective and infective. Foucault, on
the same wavelength, would explain the «positivity» of power
with a similar argumentative leverage: “What makes power hold
good, what makes it accepted, is simply the fact that it doesn’t only
weigh on us as a force that says no, but that it traverses and produces
things, it induces pleasure, forms knowledge, produces discourse. It
needs to be considered as a productive network which runs through the
whole social body, much more than as a negative instance whose function is repression.” (PK, 119) Deleuze and Guattari hold a similar position and raise the level of analysis bypassing ideological
and psychoanalytical nuances: “[E]verything is objective or subjective, as one wishes. That is not the distinction: the distinction to be
101
made passes into the economic infrastructure itself and into its investments. Libidinal economy is no less objective than political economy, and the political no less subjective than the libidinal, even though
the two correspond to two modes of different investments of the same
reality as social reality” (AE, 345). If Marx believes that the structure is the economic skeleton of society and the superstructure is everything that derives from it, Klossowski reverses the
framework and sets as the «ultimate infrastructure» the “behavior of emotions and instincts.” (LC, 3) Consequently, it follows
that “economic standards form in turn a substructure of affect, not the
ultimate infrastructure” and that, more in depth, “economic norms
are, like the arts or the moral or religious institutions, or like all the
forms of knowledge, one mode of the expression and representation of
instinctive forces.” (LC, 3) As Foucault had already realized in
his letter to Klossowski, the triangle “desire, value, simulacrum”
that dominates us and has been characterising us for millennia, already existed ever since the invention of money in Asia
Minor in the VIII century B.C.; hence, the triangle must be
treated as something forged in the depths of times, because
the historical period of time in which reality gets «monetarized» is certainly the product of a slow centuries-long process
of transformation, before reaching its own metal round form
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that has been bequeathed until today. In Phrygia, where Greek
mythology locates the fundamental passage from pre-money to
actual money, the coining of the nomisma bore the effigy of the
goddess Money (Dea Moneta), the wife of King Midas, Demodice or Hermodice; according to Heraclides Lembus, on the
money of Cumae coined by queen Hermodice the Genius of
Money (Genio della moneta) holds the scale and the cornucopia
in his hands. Greek mythology suggests us that, ever since its
invention, the concept of money figures in popular wisdom as
a concatenation of sovereignty, sacredness, fertility and equity;
and already in ancient times there were people who used to
rise against the improper use of the circulation of the “metal
disks”: Julius Pollux, at the apex of Hellenism in the Roman
Empire, critiqued the obolastates, i.e. those who used to lend
and weight the oboli, and the obolastatein, the practice of lending oboli. The perverse intersection of simulacrum, value and
desire, presented by Foucault as the explanatory structure of
universal economy, is then absolutely coherent with the rhizospheric analysis of money. Klossowski of Living Currency suggests that monetary economics and theology are nothing but reciprocal disguises: money, from the beginning of Western
civilisation, has been regarded as the universal representative
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instrument of a generalized economy which already has an innate abstract potential for sacredness and sovereignty, and, in
turn, for desire-will to power at its highest level. According to
Klossowski, money is the universal simulacrum; in industrial
societies the domain of money, after centuries of adjustments,
has completely substituted the real world and misrepresents
its subjugated phantasm. Klossowski had already matured the
concept of a universal economy through the scrutinizer of
Chaos (Nietzsche) of the passages on energy in relation to
world structure: “At a given moment of the accumulated force of the
emotions, there is also the absolute condition of a new distribution,
and hence a disruption of equilibrium. Nietzsche conceives of a universal economy whose effects he experiences in his own moods.” (NVC,
110) The line that links Nietzsche and the vicious circle (1969)
and Living Currency (1970) is, thus, the analysis of impulsive
simulacra that act upon a generalized universal economy. We
have already entered the Anti-OEdipus, the Nietzsche of the
80’s of XIX century, and the Foucault of the 70’s of XX century. This represents the core of revolutionary Nietzscheism
which influenced the street struggle of 1968 and further on,
pure energy and dynamite ready for future struggles: Klossowski develops with great clarity the theoretical nucleus of
104
impulse, body, simulacrum, value, production, consumption,
arguing that “”The way they [instinctive forces] express themselves,
both in the economy and finally in our industrial world, is subject to
the way they have been handled by the economy of the reigning institutions.” That this preliminary and ultimate infrastructure is
more and more determined by its own reactions to the previously existing substructures is unquestionably true, but the
forces at play continue the struggle among infrastructures into
the substructures. So, though these forces initially express
themselves in a specific manner according to economic standards, they themselves create their own repression, as well as
the means of smashing that repression, which they experience
to different degrees: “and this goes on as long as does the battle
among the instincts, which is waged within a given organism for and
against the formation of the organism as their agent, for and against
psychic and bodily unity. Indeed, that is where the first ‘production’
and ‘consumption’ schemes come into being, the first signs of compensation and haggling.” (LC, 4) Thus is the key passage for the
whole Rhizomatic universe: Klossowski shows in this theoretical nucleus the hidden role of the sphere of instincts. Given its
concealment, or its secluded core due to a lack of visible external outlets, the sphere of instincts gets «economized» inside
105
the industrial world. What the industrial world consumes the
most is the instinct to procreate, which is a product of the voluptuousness of the instinctual body, labelling it as a good but
at the same time, and in the opposite direction, the body procures emotions, concealed and excessive, abstract substance
for a «phantasm» – the ghostly entity which recurs obsessively
in Klossowski’s thought – upon which instincts act again as
backward-action. “Nothing exists apart from impulses that are essentially generative of phantasms. The simulacrum [i.e. the Nietzschean Trugbild] is not the product of a phantasm, but its skilful
reproduction, by which humanity can produce itself, through forces
that are thereby exorcized and dominated by the impulse.” (NCV, 133)
This is the level at which the phantasm has been already created and instincts and passions are not available anymore to
consume and cede the phantasm itself – that is, the producer
of desire which reproduces itself. Additionally, this is the crucial point around which the emotional value, otherwise called
libidinal value, is formed – as Nietzsche points out, “in place of
moral values, purely naturalistic values” (Opere fr. 9 [8] vol. VIII,
section 2, p. 6, quoted in NVC, 106). The translation of impulsive forces, the instincts, in “economic representations” of the
emotional value – according to Nietzsche, the only being that
106
we know is a being that has representations (O, fr. 11 [33] vol.
V, section 2) – will then be a simulacrum: which simulacrum
could be better than the merge of money, simulacrum itself of
objective value, and a living body, simulacrum which incarnates the procreative phantasm? The synthesis of such double
simulacrum in the economy of industrial civilisation is the living currency, a simulacrum reinforced by emotion that it procures, hence the «living currency» is the expression of the libidinal value carved in bodies. What industrial civilisation
consumes through standardization – the various simulacra of
the phantasm: prostitution, sexual slavery, eroticism, assorted
industries of pleasure – the body produces through economization. Consumed good vs. libidinal value. This means that the
body “manifests itself” attributing value to the instincts but, in
order to defend it “impulsive phantasm” that is desire, opposes
the «mechanical simulacrisation» of industrial economy. The
body is the battlefield of the harsh clash between opposite
forces: social production against desiring production. Such
clash can yield two opposing outcomes: the first – and unfortunately the prevailing in both the industrial civilisation and
in the rising digital one – is the hyper-gregariousness of the
individual, who is reduced to a mere instrument to support
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tamed passions and desires captured by social standardization
whose objective is the unity reproducible in the production
line; the second is where instincts and affections prevail on the
repression of impulses and the “support” acquires its own sovereignty by degregarizing itself. In the stage that follows such rediscovered sovereignty - through the evident self-organisation
of behaviours - singularity itself gets desubjectivised overturning its own nature of stable subject, and opening itself to the industrious metamorphosis of desires, and, thus, to perpetual
transformation and to the extreme idleness of the nomads of the future.
Compliant supports and formations of sovereignty
The settlement and the coalition of instinctual forces in an
endless turmoil aimed at opposing the besieging social and
economic body provide us with the grid of the battle that happens inside and outside bodies. The “grim organisations” of social syntheses that surround bodies and impulsive forces are
nothing but Nietzsche Herrschaftsgebilde, the formations of sovereignty which we can trace in Nietzsche’s posthumous fragments of 1887 and 1888. Inside and outside the body, the battle
between impulsive forces infuriates. Sensuality, and its follow108
ing stage, sexuality, impede any perspective, even an economic
one, thus they must be repressed. The first wave of repression
is used by formations of sovereignty to structure a «compliant
whole», or, in Klossowski’s terms, an “organic and psychic unity”.
Although it is formed inside the shell of the whole as “completed essence”, the compliant support is always and anyway object
of the battle of impulses and instincts in the attempt to free
themselves from formations of sovereignty and from the forces
that constitute them. The expression outbursts of these struggles and counter-struggles, attacks and oppositions, manifest
themselves “through a hierarchy of values translated into a hierarchy
of needs.” (LC, 4) According to Klossowski “the hierarchy of needs
is the economic form of repression that the existing institutions impose
by and through the agent’s consciousness on the imponderable forces
of his psychic life.” (LC, 4) Klossowski’s condemnation of traditions – and his gregarious «translations» – which dominate society is rather incisive. He faces three contemporary interpretations which fight the liberation goals of the Rhizosphere and
attack the generalized economy in which the “libidinal values”
participate through “the new hierarchy of impulses”, which philosophers like Deleuze want to initiate: the laissez-faire attitude
that traverses the hierarchy of needs dictates a different hierar109
chy of values thanks to the exclusion of the sexual need from
primary needs, nullifying its emotional value; Marxism, which
enthrones industrial economy and commercialized values as
the primary structure, relegating the sexual sphere to the super-structure; psychoanalysis, which accepts to segregate the
libidinal economy to the family triangle, separating the social
aspect from the object of study, and suffering the same division
operated by Marxism – society will be the object of study of scientific socialism, while the subconscious and the family social
atom will be of interest to psychoanalysis. In Klossowski, the
authors that belong to the triad of dominance and subjection
are Raymond Aron, Karl Marx and Sigmund Freud. The purpose of the Rhizosphere will be to liberate the individual and
collective revolutionary potential by overturning and overcoming on this point Nietzsche, who, on the contrary, in The Strong
of the Future wished for a discrete community of irregular and
exchangeable seditious. Deleuze and Guattari in the Anti-OEdipus intervene on the topic of the opposition to the dominant
economic rules through secret impulsive production, and they
do so by linking their argument to this exact crucial passage
of Klossowski’s Living Currency. The two Parisian philosophers
point out that “[t]he two kinds of fantasy, or rather the two regimes,
110
are therefore distinguished according to whether the social production
of “goods” imposes its rule on desire through the intermediary of an ego
whose fictional unity is guaranteed by the goods themselves, or whether
the desiring-production of affects imposes its rule on institutions whose
elements are no longer anything but drives.” (AE, 63) We will have,
in the first regime, the subjugated, the gregarious-supports and
exchangeability, while in the second regime, the “desiring machines”, nomads and the schizo of the future who crave for commercial inconvertibility. In the history of utopian socialism, a
French philosopher, among the least current, worked on topics like community, affections, economy and social harmony:
Charles Fourier. Both Klossowski – in the Living Currency – and
Deleuze and Guattari – in the Anti-OEdipus – recall his work:
“If we must still speak of Utopia in this sense, à la Fourier, it is most
assuredly not as an ideal model, but as revolutionary action and passion. In his recent works Klossowski indicates to us the only means of
bypassing the sterile parallelism where we flounder between Freud and
Marx: by discovering how social production and relations of production are an institution of desire, and how affects or drives form part of
the infrastructure itself. For they are part of it, they are present in every
way while creating within the economic forms their own repression, as
well as the means for breaking this repression.” (AE, 63)
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Impulsive forces and the will to power
If, according to Deleuze and Guattari, “true is it that the
schizo practices political economy, and that all sexuality is a matter of
economy” (AE, 13), then, we can commence the final summary
of this essay by presenting schizophrenia in market societies.
The reason is that, if, on the one hand, “[c]ivilization is defined
by the decoding and the deterritorialization of flows in capitalist production”, on the other hand “[o]ur societies exhibit a marked taste
for all codes – codes foreign or exotic – but this taste is destructive and
morbid.” (AE, 245) The destruction of codes would represent
a result common to both entities, capitalism and revolution
– since the pure spirit of insurrection is in favour of the destruction of the “prominent taste for codes.” We ought to clarify
the differences of regime between the two accelerationist entities, given the identity of nature, otherwise we shall fall in great
misunderstandings. To this end, we summon «Nietzsche the
Destroyer» of autumn 1888: “the will to power is the primitive form
of affect, that all other affects are only developments of it; that it is
notably enlightening to posit power in place of individual ‘happiness’
(after which every living thing is supposed to be striving): ‘there is a
striving for power, for an increase of power’; - pleasure is only a symptom of the feeling of power attained, a consciousness of a difference.”
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(O, fr. 14, [121], vol. VIII, part 3, quoted in NVC 101) “There is
neither ‘mind’, nor reason, nor thought, nor consciousness, nor soul,
nor will, nor truth: so many useless fictions. It is not a matter of ‘subject’ or ‘object’, but of a certain animal species who thrives because of
a justice, and above all regularity relative to its perceptions (so that it
can capitalize on its own experience)…” (O, fr. 14, [122], vol. VIII,
part 3, quoted in NVC 102). And finally “there is no law: every
power draws its ultimate consequence at every moment. Calculability
exists precisely because things are unable to be other than they are.
A quantum of power is designated by the effect it produces and that
which it resists.” (O, fr. 14, [79], vol. VIII, part 3,quoted in NVC
108) Klossowski comments the three fragments as follows: “As
a primordial impulse – this is what must be emphasized – the will to
power is the term that expresses force itself. If the will to power appears
in the human species and the phenomenon of animality – that is to
say, in the phenomenon of the ‘living being’ – as a ‘special’ case, and
thus as an ‘accident’ of its essence, it will not be conserved in the species or the individual it acts upon, but by its very nature will disrupt
the conservation of an attained level, since by necessity it will always
exceed this level through its own increase. Thus, for everything that
might want to preserve itself at a certain degree, whether a society or
an individual, the will to power appears essentially as a principle of
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disequilibrium.” (NCV, 103) Deleuze and Guattari use in the
Anti-OEdipus the term “desire” as a substitute for the Nietzschean “will to power” (CO, 95) and, thus, for “primitive form of
affect”. Nietzsche himself asked “Is ‘will to power’ a kind of ‘will’
or identical with the concept ‘will’? Is it the same thing as desiring?”
(O, fr. 14, [121], vol. VIII, part 3, quoted in NVC 102). Such
conception of desire is the weapon that shakes – as an irresistible impulsive force – both the individual and society, transforming through a process of metamorphosis and instability
each individual in a potential nonconformist and each society in
a potential field of wild and energetic revolutionary intensity.
However, we ought to distinguish the two natural poles within
which the proactive, or affirmative, intensity field oscillates in
order to understand the risks hidden within the de-structuring
desire: for what concerns society, on one side we will have destructive and decoding capitalism, and on the other side the
“desiring and headless”, destructive and liberatory revolution,
as an accelerated moment of unburdening from accumulated power; instead, for what concerns the individual, on one
side we will have the paranoiac and reactionary pole, and on
the other side the schizophrenic and revolutionary one. However, it would be a serious mistake to generally confuse and
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identify the processes of destruction and liberation of capitalism and of paranoid man, with those of revolution and of the
schizophrenic man. Indeed, Deleuze and Guattari wrote that
“While decoding doubtless means understanding and translating a
code, it also means destroying the code as such, assigning it an archaic, folkloric, or residual function, which makes of psychoanalysis
and ethnology two disciplines highly regarded in our modern societies.
Yet it would be a serious error to consider the capitalist flows and
the schizophrenic flows as identical, under the general theme of a
decoding of the flows of desire. Their affinity is great, to be sure: everywhere capitalism sets in motion schizo-flows that animate “our” arts
and “our” sciences, just as they congeal into the production of “our
own” sick, the schizophrenics.” (AE, 245) As both Srnicek and
Williams, and Pasquinelli remind us, capitalism “axiomatises
with one hand what it decodes with the other.” (AE, 246; GADC, 20,
point 3) If, at the border of chaos, the function of axiomatisation bears signs of recovery and control, as well as of exploitation in order to maximise profits and collect new values from
“new lands”, the function of schizo-revolution bears the sign
of demolition and overcoming in order to evade from containment fields where the impulsive primordial force would
hover, neutralizing itself. In order to conquer new boundaries
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and spot “new lands” the energetics of desire does not accept
capitalisation, regularisation, and equilibrium. For contemporary capital, the anti-chaotic fastening agent and the Recovery
Teams are respectively money and unlimited abstract quantities, storage for accumulated money-risk, absolute liquidity
and the infinite repetition of credit and debit.
Incessant movement and the breaking of balance
Here Nietzsche’s Eternal Return comes into play. According
to Klossowski, the distinctive sign of the Vicious Circle – this is
the term he uses to define the Nitzschean Eternal Return – is
an incessant movement, “readying the individual to will its own
annihilation as an individual by teaching the individual to exceed
itself by re-willing itself, and to re-will itself only in the name of this
insatiable power. The Eternal Return would here from the counterpart
to knowledge, which, if it increases in proportion to power, nonetheless
has the conservation of the species as its major preoccupation. Now
the Eternal Return (as the expression of a becoming with neither
goal nor purpose) makes knowledge ‘impossible’, at least with regard to
ends, and always keeps knowledge at the level of means: the means of
conserving itself. This in turn is what determines the reality principle,
which therefore is always a variable principle. But not only does the
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Eternal Return not determine reality, it suspends the very principle of
reality, and in a certain manner leaves it to the discretion of the more
or less felt degree of power – or better, to its intensity.” (NCV, 104) The
essence of the Return, or the Phantasm, is, thus, the repetition
of the same Unequal, that is, the reiteration of random difference, the energetics of the fortuitous. Simulacra keep returning, and their unavoidability determines a series of disindividuations. The perpetual transformational power of schizo-nomad
singularity that embraces the doctrine of the eternal return is
certainly antithetical to the gregariousness deriving from the
Axiomatised Return of Capital and from the Return to the Identical
of the subjected individual: in fact, the doctrine of the Vicious
Circle elaborated by the axis Nietzsche-Klossowski foresees the
“return of power”, which is nothing but the “sequence of balance
breakings” and ultimately the destitution of the identity subject.
Deleuze and Guattari, indeed, fully understand this difference
between relative limits, always reconstituted, of the capitalist
process and the absolute limits of the revolutionary schizophrenic process. The schizo-revolutionary process interacts
with Chaos, seeks the creative dimension in order to interact
with chaotic forces, altering the existent; the capitalistic process stops at the boundary of Chaos, it does not remove the
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boundary, the wall that separate itself from the chaotic outside, but – rationally – it capitalises its steps, returns to virgin
spaces recently acquired and ploughs them in order to enrich
them with new axiomatics. The boundaries that capital assigns
to itself are determined by the network of centres of balance
and of monetary trans-valuation, which it plans and builds at
the limits of its delirium. If “schizophrenia pervades the entire capitalist field from one end to the other”, for Capitalism “it is a question
of binding the schizophrenic charges and energies into a world axiomatic that always opposes the revolutionary potential of decoded flows
with new interior limits.” (AE, 246) From these words it seems
that the barrier – the line that separates capitalism from the
boundary of Chaos – is the line of the monetarisable. The area
of creation, of experimentation, of implicit failure of the analysis and of research for its own sake, according to capitalism
cannot be irrigated with monetary flows: too many energetic
impulses with no sense nor purpose circulate: in fact, it lacks
the main purpose of capital, namely the profitability derived
from the “extraction of value”. Both sense and purpose are determinations of the principle of reality to which ultimately
market firms always refer. Indeed, Deleuze and Guattari write
that “[m]onetary flows are perfectly schizophrenic realities, but they
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exist and function only within the immanent axiomatic that exorcises and repels this reality.” (AE, 246) The equalising axiomatic
recovers what has been decoded and indirectly represses the
subversive charge released by the primitive affirmative force,
enclosing in the monetarisable space of the global circuit
what had just been dispensed by the code. Money controls,
through the blazes of flames and the fumes of combustion,
and distributes at a higher level, a global one. For such reason,
money does not evolve, but rather remains into the circuit, in
which arranges itself according to indigenous speeds. There,
in advanced circulation, money itself and, as Marx wrote, “[t]
he value originally advanced, therefore, not only remains intact while
in circulation, but adds to itself a surplus value or expands itself.
It is this movement that converts it into capital.” (C, vol. I, part 2,
ch. IV, p.79) However, the fracture happens exactly here, the
overcoming of the Marxian concepts of money, money-value,
money-good, money-fetish, by the new function attributed to
money by the political philosophy of Deleuze, Guattari and
the whole French revolutionary Rhizosphere. Money, in its unlimited abstract quantity is indifferent to the qualified nature of
flows; this means that money is trans-qualitative, as its process
of distribution and circulation; it has made itself independ119
ent and self-organised, both with respect to short cycles of exchange (money-commodity-money; M-C-M) as well as the circulating special nature (territory-exchange-territory; T-E-T),
that is, sovereignty. And if “the strength of capitalism indeed resides in the fact that its axiomatic is never saturated, that it is always
capable of adding a new axiom to the previous ones”, this would
mean that it is “monetarisation [which] everywhere comes to fill the
abyss of capitalist immanence, introducing there, as Schmitt says, “a
deformation, a convulsion, an explosion – in a word, a movement of
extreme violence.” (AE, 250) Control, power, desire, independence, self-organisation, indifference, violence, trans-quality:
these are the new characteristics of money at the time of the
Anti-OEdipus, that is, at the time of infinite and abstract monetary
economy, which add themselves to those classic determinations
already highlighted by critics of political economy. Nowadays,
money-liquidity accumulated, abstract, and digitalized – in
other words, dematerialized and financialised money which
preserves the characteristics of the seventies, accumulating
them – is the main instrument of capitalist accelerationism. It
develops itself through capitals’ restless nomadism in the quest
for punctual and planetary profit together with the monetary infinite as an effective anti-crisis instrument, generated by the
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increase in monetary mass and by the perpetual creation of
liquidity thanks to the wise dosage of vertical and horizontal
transactions of the public and private sector by Central Banks
across the world, coordinated among themselves. It is the system of Central Banks independent from political power that
ultimately determines the liquidity of the system and the injection of money in the traditional banking system and in the
network circling of capital markets. The crucial innovation of
the roles of circuits, platforms, markets, currencies and Central Banks, already in expansion and in phase of consolidation
during the years of the rhizospheric analysis, has been actively
registered in the accelerationist passage of The Civilised Capitalist Machine under the section of “Immanent Axiomatic of Capital.” (AE, 250)
The modern immanent machine
“The modern immanent machine, which consists in decoding the
flows on the full body of capital-money: it has realized the immanence,
it has rendered concrete the abstract as such and has naturalized the
artificial, replacing the territorial codes and the despotic overcoding
with an axiomatic of decoded flows, and a regulation of these flows; it
effects the second great movement of deterritorialization, but this time
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because it doesn’t allow any part of the codes and overcodes to subsist.”
(AE, 261)
If, at the time of the Anti-OEdipus, the two movements of
evasion from the territory and return to the territory could
express conformant powers or at most powers provided with
a temporary equilibrium, in the period of time that separates the present from the seventies we have assisted to the
hyper-performance of money and its evasion from the territory, creating a strong imbalance with respect to the return
to «dry land», which has manifested itself in a progressive
and advanced undermining of nations, of popular identities,
of local institutions and of the social sector ramified on the
surface of the Earth. Monetary abstraction, in symbiosis with
mathematics, cybernetics, computer science and logistics, has
acquired so much value in drawing itself closer to unlimited extensions and elastic chronoscopic speeds that the rapid
domination reached in these last few years of domestication has
no equals in history, accelerating that radical nihilism envisaged by Nietzsche in the second half of the XIX century. The
boundaries of monetary abstraction still have to be drawn,
especially now in a time of forced circulation determines by
negative interests, which is a signal of the approximation of
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the nummus to the «zero degree» of infinite monetary circulation. It is likely that formations of sovereignty have entered
a phase of metamatic constraint of the monetary instrument
in order to test the state of preservation of the force of imbalance of the whole system. The crisis of industrial capitalism
and the birth of a post-industrial capitalism triggered by credit
and monetarism surfaced and erupted - as recalled earlier –
in the renown “Nixon shock” of August 1971, when the US
dollar was unpegged from the gold standard, overturning the
millenary principle of sovereignty of the gold currency – nomisma Caesaris in auro est. The epochal passage from «geological» currency – the US dollar – to the abstract and «headless»
currency, unlimited because free from any fixed rate or concrete value, is certainly the product of circumstantial dynamics
and paroxysmal processes going back to Bretton Woods and
to the competition between nations and opposing geopolitical forces, but it also marks the moment of authenticity of
the statement of the economist de Brunhoff when she writes
that there is no contemporaneity between capital and credit:
“That is why in capitalism even credit, formed into a system, brings
together composite elements that are both ante-capitalist (money, money
commerce) and post-capitalist (the credit circuit being a higher circula123
tion…). Adapted to the needs of capitalism, credit is never really contemporary with capital. The system of financing born of the capitalist
mode of production remains a bastard.” (de Brunhoff, La monnaie
in Marx, p. 147, quoted in AE, 206) It is clear that the system
of credit financing will survive to the agony of industry and
to the disappearance of labour, because historically it existed
before capitalism, and in some of its aspects it has been anticipating the future override of the system. The self-organisation
in planetary platforms and the independence reached by the
political and institutional order has made credit – accumulated, distributed, rapid, liquid and abstract money – and finance –
fluxions, cybernetics, reticulated, dromological and metamatic money
– autonomous circulations, in great part estranged from the
circulation of capitals in the real economy. In the lecture he
gave on 16th November 1971 at Vincennes, Deleuze went beyond the elaboration that he would have soon presented in
the Anti-OEdipus (February 1972) and introduced a definition
of money – infinite reproduction of a flow of abstract quantities –
very relevant, even more today than at the time:
“With money which itself can no longer be coded, within a certain framework, we begin with money and we end with money.
M[oney]-C[ommodity]-M[oney], there is absolutely no means of cod124
ing this thing here because the qualified flows are replaced by a flow
of abstract quantity whose proper essence is the infinite reproduction
for which the formula is M-C-M. No code can support infinite reproduction. What is formidable in so-called primitive societies is how debt
exists, but exists in the form of a finite block, debt is finite.” (Webdeleuze, lecture of 16th November 1971).
Infinite reproduction of money and credit
If money is the infinite reproduction of a flow of abstract
quantities, we can then conceive it as a software related to a
hardware, i.e. the digital chrematistics, which has already introjected in our age the metamatic nature, and swiftly travels within digital networks, inside a superior, artificial and over-human
circulation. Money, in the Anti-OEdipus and even more today,
is a decoded abstraction that sums up value, order, number,
calculous, distribution and speed. For a Left, and a revolutionary movement, that, still in 1972, in disconnected and confused ways, take as reference the field of «Marxist humanism»,
the shift of the axis of critical theory from the world of production and industry to the domain of flows and of money-credit has been opposed for a long time, if not openly rejected.
The shift in paradigm, though, released certain effects and
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reached an unstoppable critical mass of its own. The infinite
reproduction of money in the global circuit has reached its
accelerated peak thanks to the role played by the global network of Central Banks of constant injection and coordinated
punctual inflating. Infinite money, thus, has circuits of commercial perpetual reproduction, which we will term ‘relative’,
and circuits of perpetual financial reproduction, which we will
term ‘absolute’, managed by supranational global institutional
networks. It will be necessary to restart from here, from this
Nietzsche-Klossowski-Deleuze axis and, generally, from the
French revolutionary Rhizosphere, in order to perfect the
tools and analyses capable of dig into real information of gregarious sovereignty formations. Certainly the aggressive and
polemical work of Deleuze and Guattari in the phase of the
Anti-OEdipus had the great merit of identifying the growing
systemic fault line that was about to shift, to deteriorate and
to rupture – the great historical asymmetry between infinite
and money, mobility and credit, stability and capital – which
brought market economies, with deep and abrupt transitional
crises, from the planned quantitative industrial world to the
post-productive cybernetic-credit-financial world. Additionally, one of the most relevant merits of the Anti-OEdipus is hav126
ing theorised, starting from the considerations of Nietzsche
and Foucault, the monetary and credit infinite. If the “infinite
creditor” was to be traced back “new collective memory” conceived
by Nietzsche in The Genealogy of Morals, and concerning “a debt
system: […] a voice that speaks or intones, a sign marked in bare
flesh, an eye that extracts enjoyment from the pain”, “infinite money”
is then to be related to Foucault’s Lectures on the Will to Know
that he gave in February 1971. The “infinite creditor” is certainly according to Nietzsche the Christian God, while the
debt, in ancient societies as well as in commercial ones, fulfils
the task “to breed man, […] to form him within the debtor-creditor
relation, which on both sides turns out to be a matter of memory – a
memory straining toward the future.” (AE, 180) “Infinite money”,
according to Foucault in 1971, is born instead from a chrematistics in the strict sense, artificial, “which seeks only the acquisition of money itself and consequently in unlimited quantities. This
rests on exchange.” (LKW, 145) Deleuze and Guattari return to
the topic of the infinite in the Anti-OEdipus, adopting the thesis of the philosopher of Poitiers: “The abolition of debts, when
it takes place – they refer to Solon, the Athenian legislator – is
a means of maintaining the distribution of land, and a means of
preventing the entry on stage of a new territorial machine, possibly
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revolutionary and capable of raising and dealing with the agrarian
problem in a comprehensive way.” (AE, 197)
Immediately after, they refer to Cypselus, tyrant of Korinthos: “in other cases where a redistribution occurs, the cycle of
credits is maintained, in the new form established by the State, money.” (AE, 196) However, in greater depth, Deleuze and Guattari, returning to Foucault’s studies on Greek tyrants, affirm
that “money – the circulation of money – is the means for rendering
the debt infinite. […] The infinite creditor and infinite credit have
replaced the blocks of mobile and finite debts. There is always a monotheism on the horizon of despotism: the debt becomes a debt of existence, a debt of the existence of the subjects themselves.” (AE, 197)
Money in the Anti-OEdipus is, thus, turned into THE “systemic
dispositif” of power aimed at perpetuating infinitely the credit cycle, similarly as the tyrant of Korinthos taught us; however, even more distinctively, contemporary money created
ex-nihilo by the coordinated action of central and commercial banks, and therefore infinite, is the prerequisite and the
supporting structure of more subjecting infinites, which, under
the double-face umbrella of credit/debit, result as refund/existence, duty/guilt, crisis/resource, catastrophe/bifurcation.
Money is, hence, the fulcrum and the pivot on which the
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contemporary power system rests for all its policies: money
is its main weapon, due to its synthetic credit-debit relation
which becomes the “transmission belt” of the commercial and
institutional credit world. This monetary paradigm of power
that Foucault traces back to the VII century B.C. in Ancient
Greece, has been overlooked by Marxists, but not by the intellectuals of the Rhizosphere. Until today, the demystifying
and incendiary work of anti-oedipic and rhizomatic authors
has not reached in our culture the «masterpiece» status that
it deserves, because obscure and gregarious forces – the braking powers – are still operating, with the aim of keeping society under the conforming and homogeneous pressure of
perpetual slavery, gregariousness that Nietzsche so appropriately defined in the accelerationist fragment on the strong of
the future. The Anti-OEdipus, far from resting on innocuous
‘irenisms’, continues to generate hybrid processes of affirmative and transforming energy thanks to its deep analytical
capacity. Everything is made clear: “There we no longer have any
secrets, we no longer have anything to hide. It is we who have become
a secret, it is we who are hidden, even though we do all openly, in
broad light.” (DI, 46)
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How to escape from axiomatics and make break the modern immanent machine?
Here we finally return to the plot of money and revolution,
under the sign of the oedipic contrast. If, in our modern empirical experience, our societies are pervaded with economic optimism – descending from the eighteenth-century positivism thoroughly analysed by Marx at the socio-productive
level and by Nietzsche at the impulsive-energetic level – and
with cybernetic processual evolution of monetary and credit
circuits far-sightedly described by Deleuze and Guattari, what
strategies could be adopted to escape from commercial axiomatics and to make the modern immanent machine break
down? Which relation exists between money and revolution?
Shall we switch to a detailed and bureaucratic plan descending from a totalising “keys-in-hand” theory that explains and
foresees everything, according to fixed relations between the
forms of the Earth and of human set theory, or shall we adopt
a plan of impulsive consistency corresponding to the always
productive swinging energy of desire, of the real and of imbalance? Between organisation-administration and chaos-creation, what levels of synthesis and innovation should we choose
in order to “search and destroy” and to then rebuild? Shall we
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build revolutionary subjects and identities within class or economic determinations, or shall we de-construct forms, to discover the “hollowness” of subjects and to increase the speed of
activation of the revolutionary “process” of the irregular idle,
of the non-exchangeable group and of the community of singularity? Nonetheless, from a different perspective, as Ewald
seemed to argue, if the seventies history has handed over to
us a “fact” in all its tragic evidence, that is the disappearance
of the social revolutionary horizon, that is, the sinking of the
concept of insurrection as magnet for political action from the
Enlightenment onwards. Are we assisting to the Death of Revolution as palingenetic event and qualified creative rupture,
mother of modern politics – as Foucault seems to foresee after
1978 and after the Rhizosphere period, or are we facing the
perpetual revolutionary becoming as human condition at the times
of post-revolution and post-capitalist control-based neo-societies – as Deleuze and Guattari argued in the multi-stratum
desert of A Thousand Plateaus? Something has changed after
1978, revolutionaries become spectres like beautiful losers, as
if the sedition and the overturning of desire on the carpet of
Reality were symmetrical to the decline of industry and to the
erosion of the historically fixed capital. The productive prac131
tices of industry and the concept of cathartic revolution decay
together with the West, in a miserable and stagnant dusk. To
us, authors of this volume, the intersection between “money
and revolution” suggested by Klossowski and Deleuze, and by
the whole anti-oedipic Rhizosphere, seems still profoundly relevant, no longer in the westerly vulgate but instead on a global
scale, the only possible one today. In the wildest present circumstances, the reproduction of money and liquidity has not
stopped, neither have the attempts to become revolutionaries
and pathologically seditious, in every single planetary background. Daily events speak for themselves. As Foucault consciously wrote, the triangle of “desire, value and simulacrum” still
dominates us, and we seem unable to grasp it nor to understand it in its horrific geometrical effectiveness. How to escape
from axiomatics and to make the modern immanent machine
break down: the question of the Anti-OEdipus is still relevant in
the present, as it has been in the past. Part of the answer, within the context of the evolution of the relation between technology and liberation, can certainly be generated and developed by
the conflation of three specific fields of our age: cypherpunk,
blockchain technology in its Ethereum variation, and the heterarchical P2P movement. The new alliance between peer to peer – a
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digital evolution of anarchic and self-organised reticular logics
of autonomist philosophy of existentialist punk dis-intermediation – and DIY – the do-it-yourself already post-capitalist in its
very own nature. The fourth pillar, which has to escort the
three fields indicated above, could be the philosophy of the
Rhizosphere, or philosophy of the future. The philosophy of the
future, in order to return joyful and dangerous, must abandon the collusive position that has occupied in the industry
of knowledge and of wisdom, and return to being an informal peripatetic wayfarer – a «gypsy scholarship». With great
awareness it must experiment, fail, create: study, deconstruct
and reconstruct, even itself. The gypsy scholarship, though,
conceived as pedagogy of freedom and insurrection, cannot
become science, absorbed by institutions: it is like a gust of The
Fixer, or the glow of a moment lasting for a century.
Desire with no aim, future with no purpose
As many have noted, perhaps, the renown passage on the
acceleration of the process and on the revolutionary path is
placed in the last part of the paragraph The Civilised Capitalist
Machine (AE, 222), but most importantly it returns persistently
in the Introduction to Schizoanalysis, conclusive chapter of the
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Anti-OEdipus, embellishing the final page of the volume. The
focus is always on the conflictual relation between desire, formations of sovereignty and the possibility of an overturning of
sovereignty by the power of singularity. Deleuze and Guattari
wrote: “only desire that lives from having no aim. Molecular desiring-production would regain its liberty to master in its turn the molar
aggregate under an overturned form of power or Sovereignty. That is
why Klossowski, who has taken the theory of the two poles of investment the furthest, but still within the category of an active Utopia, is
able to write: “Every sovereign formation would thus have to foresee
the destined moment of its disintegration… No formation of sovereignty, in order to crystalize, will ever endure this prise de conscience:
for as soon as this formation becomes conscious of its immanent disintegration in the individuals who compose it, these same individuals
decompose it.” (AE, 367- 368; LCV, [II], 162) What does it mean
that “desire lives from having no aim”? It means that desire is
without aim nor sense precisely because it is a natural force
always regenerating itself, energetic and wild, never quieted by
the achievement of an aim and, thus, never subjected to a goal
or to the accomplishment of a perpetual state of equilibrium.
Previously we have recalled that, for Deleuze and Guattari, the
primordial impulse is “desire”, while, for Nietzsche, is the “will
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to power.” (DI, 91) According to the German philosopher, “as
soon as we act practically, we have to follow the prejudices of our sentiments.” (NCV, 122) Klossowski maintains the same line: “nature
has no goal and realizes something. We others have a “goal” but obtain
something other than this goal.” (NCV, 122) If, thanks to his sharp
sarcasm, Nietzsche affirmed that “if no goal resides in the whole
history of human destinies, then one must be inserted into it” (quoted
in NCV, 123), Klossowski, then, can remark: “This means: we
are aware of our mechanism; we must dismantle it. But to dismantle
it is also to make use of its parts in order to reconstruct it, and thus to
lead ‘nature’ toward our own ‘goal’. But whenever we reason in this
manner, we are once again masking the impulse that is driving us: it
is true that we obtain something we have interpreted as willed, but this
is simply ‘nature’ which, without willing anything, has realized itself
for other ‘ends.’” (NCV, 123) It is, hence, the disguised action
of individuals to decompose the institutions of the formations
of sovereignty as soon as the conscience of the absurd lack of
end and sense of the society in which they live will be clear to
them. And it will exactly be the chaotic power of Nature to act
through them. In this “station of thought” it strongly emerges
the radical Spinozism of the Rhizosphere, or in the words of
Deleuze a “Spinozism of the subconscious”.
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Towards a new land: dismantling and reconstructing the
mechanism
It follows that the greatest mistake for a revolutionary is to
think that revolution will coincide with himself, with his own
name in History. Indeed, those who make revolution fail are
individuals that attribute ends to it, that perform sudden stops
or that allow it to continue in a vacuum – “betrayals don’t wait
their turn, but are there from the very start.” (AE, 379) Conversely,
the lucid revolutionaries, who notice the presence of groups
which overtake the goals chosen by their closed set, with that
level of awareness have either to prevent the formation of negative sovereignties – by creating a sort of new revolutionary anthropology – subtracting from developing sovereign nuclei the
stability and the point of equilibrium through the creation of
insurgent obliquely un-centred communities. This is the sense
of the “overturned sovereignty” claimed by Deleuze and Guattari.
Drift/bifurcation or subtraction/imbalance, these are the two
insurrectional tasks that have to be prepared for revolution,
rather than opposing and resisting to the point of equilibrium
of sedition, that is, a blind idea of return. Alternatively, if we
conceive the seditious as an individual that stands outside his
ego, we have to regard him as a hollow object, whose purpose
is to connect himself to revolutionary processes pre-existent
to his effort and his thought. As for other coeval behaviours,
this connection could function as a positive, accelerating and
non-inhibiting catalysation. The reaction and the subsequent
fusion, though, do not induce the individual to remain unaltered in his stability, but instead the accelerating catalytic
process radically transforms it. The accelerating factor of the
catalytic reaction, then, affects both fields: the collective revolutionary process and the individual de-subjecting process – in
this regard, Foucault remarks that “one has to dispense with the
constituent subject, to get rid of the subject itself.” (PK, 117) If desire
lives because it does not have an aim, returning to Deleuze
and Guattari, it generates effects of acceleration of the revolutionary process in a materialistic sense and not in an ideological one, where ‘ideology’ means the political process driven by
party officials who are revolution professionals. There cannot
be creation if we repeat the same ideological rituals of previous
revolutions, of which we still preserve the idle forms lacking
any propulsive dynamism. We ought to prevent the serialization of insurrection and its “mono and macro” form. Indeed,
as Klossowski writes, “if the meaning of all eminent creation is to
break the gregarious habits that always direct existing beings toward
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ends that are useful exclusively to the oppressive regime of mediocrity
- then in the experimental domain to create is to do violence to what
exists, and thus to the integrity of beings. Every creation of a new type
must provoke a state of insecurity: creation ceases to be a game at the
margins of reality; henceforth, the creator will not reproduce, but will
itself produce the real.” (NVC, 129) Deleuze and Guattari hold
a similar stance – “we are claiming the famous rights to laziness, to
non-productivity, to dream and fantasy production, once again we are
quite pleased, since we haven’t stopped saying the opposite, and that
desiring-production produces the real.” (AE, 380) Every production
of reality is in fact a crack, a breach into the social body, but
such fracture happens only “by means of a desire without aim or
cause that charted it and sided with it. While the schiz is possible without the order of causes, it becomes real only by means of something of
another order: Desire, the desert-desire, the revolutionary investment of
desire. And that is indeed what undermines capitalism: where will the
revolution come from, and in what form within the exploited masses?
It is like death—where, when? It will be a decoded flow, a de-territorialized flow that runs too far and cuts too sharply, thereby escaping from
the axiomatic of capitalism.” (AE, 378) Not only this production
of Reality in the desert of the sub-reality of monetary circuiting undermines capitalism, but it also nullifies, as a primary
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target, the theory of state or any theory of institutions deriving
from revolutionary struggles, because schizo-analysis – as the
thought of Nietzsche, Klossowski and Foucault – does not rigorously offer “any political programme”, not for a group, nor for
a party, nor for masses, because this would be all unfair and
irrational. (AE 437) The authors of the Anti-OEdipus, as well as
the sappers of the Rhizosphere are all aware of the negative,
violent and brutal of schizo-analysis – as they are aware of the
genealogy, of the archive, of the philosophy of the future and
of the Vicious Circle: “de-familiarizing, de-oedipalizing, de-castrating; undoing theater, dream, and fantasy; decoding, de-territorializing – a terrible curettage, a malevolent activity.” (AE, 381) All this
“Destroy, Destroy” primarily and essentially indicates to free from
any obstacle the process, to accelerate the process, to accelerate
and to destroy, since the process to be accelerated is, as we have
mentioned, “the process of desiring-production, following its molecular lines of escape.” (AE, 381) And we can overlook if someone
more or less recently has confused the “molecular escape” with
the “molar production”, or if he has interpreted going “[...] still
further, that is, in the movement of the market…” as following in a
conformist way the commercial strategy of disarticulation of
existing entities since the process is unique in nature, or if
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someone has believed that we ought to accelerate the rush of
turbo-capitalism so that it would crash at the first bifurcation,
or – even worse – if someone exchanged the desire for goods
consumption and for self-repression, with the impulsive desire
of production of Reality, aimed at modifying what exists and
at liberating the differences. Let us say it here, once and for all:
the capitalist process of decoding produces infinite abstract
quantities – money and its pair of repetitive and spectral syntheses, credit and debit, driven and controlled by the systemic
Axiomatics of immanence; the schizo-revolutionary process of
decoding produces, instead, particles of power that are non-evident, radiating and immeasurable – desire, manipulated by
impulses, that is, by desiring-machines. These are nothing but
differences in regime, not in nature: indeed the two aspects of
the process have contact but do not confuse one with the other. The schizo-nomad remains always at the boundary of capitalism: it represents “its inherent tendency brought to fulfillment
as well as its exterminating angel.” (AE, 35) However, desiring
production – impulsive or concealed – and social production
– monetarized and abstract – are the two differences that have
been the object of study of the materialist psychiatry of Deleuze
and Guattari. They represent the “way of life” or the “Reality” that
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we desire: Feasible Reality vs. Artificial Reality.
Against the Black Death: good health and new hope
All we have written is the result of a research project that
involved three main cores, heterogeneous but still tied and unified by a subversive thinking. The first core is represented by the
posthumous fragments on the will to power, where the heart of
this research lies, The Strong of the Future, that is, the Nietzsche
that wrote in 1887-1888; the second core can be identified in
the essay on conspiracy and the community of singularities generated by the Eternal Return, that is, the Klossowski of Nietzsche
and the Vicious Circle (1969); the third core is constituted by the
present accelerationist passage in The Civilised Capitalist Machine
where the nomad multiplicities appear, that is, the Anti-OEdipus
of Deleuze and Guattari (1972). Three cores for three books
of the Adversary – a lawless, anarchic and antichrist Adversary –
whose task is “completing the process and not arresting it, not making
it turn about in the void, not assigning it a goal.” (AO 382) If, for
what concerns industrial capital or digital post-capitalism, “we
really haven’t seen anything yet” because with its de-territorializations “it may dispatch us straight to the moon” (AE, 34) and conquer new planets or galaxies with its Black Deaths, according to
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Deleuze and Guattari the non-identitary nomad “will never go
too far with the deterritorialization, the decoding of flows.” (AE, 382)
Zarathustra, in one of its most visionary speeches, The Bestowing
Virtue, prophesied: “Truly, a place of healing shall the earth become!
And already is a new odor diffused around it, a salvation-bringing
odor - and a new hope!” (Z, 65) Thus, the masterpiece written by
Deleuze and Guattari – which, as we have demonstrated, is not
only an authorial work but a rhizomatic gem – finishes with a
morning song to accelerate the momentum of the Eternal Return: “For the new earth is not to be found in the neurotic or perverse
re-territorializations that arrest the process or assign it goals; it is no
more behind than ahead, it coincides with the completion of the process
of desiring-production, this process that is always and already complete
as it proceeds, and as long as it proceeds.” (AE, 382) The appearance
of those who walk the revolutionary path may change, whether
they be the strong of the future, or the non-homogeneous singularities, or the nomad multiplicities. The imperative of the
micro-communism of the unequal however remains the same: Accelerate and Destroy. The inhuman Kingdom is already among us.
December 2015
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Biography
Obsolete Capitalism is a collective for pure independent
research. Self-defined as “gypsy scholars”, the collective deals
with philosophy, art and politics. Obsolete Capitalism edited
and published «Moneta, rivoluzione e filosofia dell’avvenire. Deleuze, Foucault, Guattari, Klossowski e la politica accelerazionista di
Nietzsche» (OCFP, 2016), «Archeologia delle minoranze» (OCFP,
2015) and «Birth of Digital Populism» (OCFP, 2014). With Rizosfera edizioni, Obsolete Capitalism published «Deleuze and
the Algorithm of the Revolution» (Rhizosphere/SF004) and «Controllo, modulazione e algebra del male in Burroughs e Deleuze» (Rhizosphere/SF007). The collective also edits the online blogs
Obsolete Capitalism, Rizomatika and Variazioni foucaultiane.
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Editor’s Note
The present essay is part of the volume «Money, Revolution
and Philosophy of the Future» (Obsolete Capitalism Free Press,
December 2016, OCFP003). It entails Obsolete Capitalism’s
most important theoretical work up today.
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