There is no longer any possibility for the proletariat to become conscious of itself as an agent of universal human liberation. The window of opportunity for the workers of the world to unite and free themselves, along with all the rest of humanity, from their chains has been closed.
Read moreEntering the Promised Land--or, Retrieving Archaic Modernity
The system cannot propose a place for novelty, So we must create something outside the system as it is.
--Alain Badiou
In our contemporary, modern modernity everything is already obsolete before it is even born. While still gestating in the womb, it has already lost its currency and, like a worn-out coin, is ready to be withdrawn from circulation.
That fits what an acquaintance of mine who worked in computer development for a high-tech firm with a branch near my home once said. He was part of a diverse group of us who got together at a local restaurant every so often to have breakfast. One morning he was talking a bit about his work. At one point he remarked in passing that he and the other developers he worked with knew that what they were presently designing would already be obsolete--that was the very word he used himself--by the time their programs were complete and actually available for marketing.
That is what's modern in the modern sense: what is always already obsolete. What's modern in the modern sense, what's up to date, the current "thing," the cutting edge of the new, is in truth what is already fit for the trash-can even before it has been brought forth. In that sense, we might say that the new in modernity is never new enough. It is always old before its time, ready for the grave--not merely from infancy, but from the moment of conception. Even before it is first delivered, the news in modernity is always already yesterday's news.
As Alain Badiou's remark above suggests, in modern modernity there really is no room at all for genuine novelty--for anything truly new and, therefore, capable of renewing.
In modern modernity what's truly new is never here now, today. It's always at most on the way, just over the horizon into a perpetual tomorrow that has not ever even been imagined yet. Whatever already "is" in modern modernity, is always already old, retreating before the ever-heralded new-yet-to-come, tomorrow's very newest new. What's modern in modern modernity is always already being run over by an ever yet newer new, a new, not yet current new heading straight for the old, current new like a runaway locomotive--to use a metaphor that lost all its currency long ago, when it first starting making its rounds, in common with all modern-day metaphors.
The day of modern-day modernity leaves no room at all for what's truly novel. All it permits is the perpetual updating of what's already obsolete from the very moment it's conceived--what's never good for anything but the trash dump.
* * *
In contrast, in archaic modernity that which is now, today, never loses its currency. In archaic modernity, what is new always lasts.
Archaic modernity is not only ever new, it is also always ever renewing. One need only be given the eyes to see it a-new, to "retrieve" it--which, heard with an ear tuned to the etymology of words, means "to find it again." Since what is archaically modern, archaically "new," never loses its newness, whenever we find it again, it is always brand new yet again: We find it again for the very first time, in what Kierkegaard give us to understand as a genuine repetition. And in finding it again anew, we are always re-newed ourselves
In its ever-newness, archaic modernity is always here already. Yet as ever new and ever renewing, it is always still coming, still on the way toward us--never just lying around waiting for us to put it in the trash can, as is everything new in modern modernity.
* * *
The sun is new every day.
--Heraclitus
Since the beginning of the 19th century, modern has had the meaning of "not antiquated or obsolete, in harmony with present ways, with present usage'." The word ultimately derives, by way of Latin modo ("just now, in the current manner"), from the Presumed Indo-European root *med-, which meant "take appropriate measure."
The "modern" is thus what is appropriate to the day, what takes each day's proper measure.
In its daily circulation, its daily coming and going, the sun takes the measure of each day anew. It is always fitting to the day, "appropriate" to it. It is thus always new each day, renewing itself and whatever it touches each time it comes again. The sun was yesterday, is today, and will be tomorrow, ever new. It is always "fitting," always "to the measure."
* * *
The time is beginning already in which having the courage to be old and human is going to be the most modern thing of all.
--Karl Rahner
In its ever recurrent, ever renewing newness, archaic modernity is not just always modern, but also always archaic. That is, it is always of the nature of a true "beginning"--the meaning of the Greek arkhe. It is always of a "beginning," not in the sense of a mere starting or setting underway, and then vanishing, as turning the key starts an automobile engine. What is a beginning in the sense of an arkhe is not just what comes first, to set a process of events underway, and then vanishes into the past as that process of event continues thereafter to unfold. It is, rather, a beginning in the sense of a wellspring, such as the spring from which the water of a mountain brook springs forth.
The mountain wellspring from which the brook springs forth is indeed the beginning of that brook. But it is not a beginning that passes away once the brook starts flowing. Instead, it is a beginning that is always continuing to begin the brook that flows forth from it, beginning that brook again and again moment by moment, feeding it with its constant flow. If the wellspring stops springing forth water, then the brook itself dries up. The wellspring is always still springing water forth, so long as the brook keeps flowing at all. The brook itself is ever renewed from that wellspring.
What is not already there from and as the very beginning cannot ever be truly new and renewing, current and recurrent, in its constant circulation. Only what is as old as the beginning can truly be new every day, like Heraclitus's sun.
What is truly new and renewing must, like the wellspring of the mountain brook, have the courage to be old--as old as the very beginning itself.
To go back to such a source is to share in that courage, and in so sharing to keep springing forth as the truly new, with a modernity that never becomes obsolete.
Announcing My Summer Blogging Break
I am taking a summer break from my blog, and will post again after Labor Day.
Read moreAutonomous Anarchies
Anarchy is not the lack of order. It is the lack of any ruler. That is the original, which is to say the archaic, sense of the term anarchy, from the ancient Greek prefix an-, "without," plus arkhon, "ruler." We need to reclaim that archaic sense of anarchy: to bring it back to the original, fecundating well of meaning from which the word itself first sprang. Such verbal reclamation would serve all of us. It would serve us all both distributively and compositely, as itself befits anarchy.
Read moreLaws and the Law
To "live by the Law" is to subordinate ourselves to that which by nature is subordinate to us, the community of all the unique, irreplaceable individuals we all are. It is to distort the Law, which is meant to serve life itself, into something that serves death instead.
Read moreTwo Bonds
Some bonds constrain us, and confine us to isolation one from another. Others release us from our confinement and our isolation, letting us loose and inviting us to enter into community with one another. The former bonds cage and enslave us, whereas the latter ones open our cage-doors and set us free. The former constipate us, tightening us up and closing us down. The latter act laxatively, as it were. They open us out like blossoms, loosening us up and relaxing us.
Read moreWhat Are Riots For?
Nuit Debout, Paris, 2016
Riots are exuberant demonstrations in celebration of community, and celebrations have nothing to do with counting costs or reckoning profits and losses. Whoever must count costs and keep a balance sheet has no idea how to celebrate. By performing his calculations, he excludes himself from the common party.
Read moreWhat Is a Riot?
Occupy Wall Street, Washington Square Park, October 8, 2011
Let us loudly and proudly proclaim it a "riot," whenever and wherever the spirit moves us to come together in celebration of our very being together.
Read moreExiting Egypt--or, Leaving Servitude to Modern Modernity
Egypt today is the Internet. Or at least the Internet can be used to signify today what Egypt once signified in the Biblical account of the Exodus. The Internet can serve as a synecdoche in one of its forms: a part standing for the whole to which it belongs.
Read moreDeliverance Now
The end-time does not come at the end of time. The end-time is now, just as it always has been and always will be. Our role is to enjoy it, as it carries us on its ever-rolling wave.
Read more