On
Immanence and Occupations
by
Ian Alan Paul, 10//20//11
"At stake here is the
formation of a group or collectivity, or simply a practice, that does not
become merely a smaller state machine, but also that does not dissipate (become
chaotic). This is the production of a machine that can follow the vectors of deterritorialisation, can operate on the line of flight,
but does not become a line of abolition or disappear into a black hole … In
each case it is the production of an assemblage, a practice, or simply a life,
that operates with different spatial and temporal coordination points to the
state, we might even say operates in a different reality" (Art Encounters Deleuze and Guattari, Simon
O'Sullivan, p. 90)
As
I write this text, 231 public spaces are currently being occupied across the
globe as part of the #Occupy movement. It was only a few weeks ago that
capitalism as a world system paradoxically appeared both obsolete and irreplaceable, as markets
tumbled and yet no viable alternatives were being articulated by the global
left. In this ground, the occupations took root and thoroughly deterritorialized[1] this geography, changing our
perspective of the world while reminding us of what in a way was always
collectively possible. Inspired by the uprisings
in Egypt and North Africa, and then again by the revolts in Greece, France,
Spain, and the U.K., a few hundred people occupied the heart of financial
capital in New York and began the process that is now actively setting roots
across the globe.
Now that a month has passed and the
occupations have established a homeostasis to some degree, this text is an
attempt to both describe the work taking place within the occupations and also
to propose ways of thinking which I hope will aid in their elaboration and
growth. The occupations have emerged as an imaginative experiment in
collectivity, solidarity, and horizontality, and the
multiplicity of possible futures for the occupations remain beautifully
undetermined and open (one of the movement's many strengths). However, if the
occupations are to perpetuate themselves and collectively move to challenge
power, a thin route must be traversed between dissipation and cooptation,
between collapse and capture. The struggle will be to keep these liberatory practices
alive in the face of repression and recuperation.
Lines
of Flight
The occupations' power has largely
rested in their newness. This is not
to say that the occupation-form is new itself, or that the current struggle is
not entangled with the many struggles for liberation that have come before it.
Indeed, many have already pointed out and examined the histories of
"occupation" in North America, radical at some moments and devastating at
others.[2] Rather,
it is as if the emergence of the occupations has made the current historical
moment seem open and flowering with possibility. The entire situation became new in the moment that the enclosure of what
was imagined as possible expanded and unfolded.
What has been made abundantly clear is how
contained our imaginations were before this moment, and how many of us had come
to expect nothing more than the status quo of crisis and austerity. Indeed, the
occupations have provided the world with a moment of defamiliarization. The limited horizons of our imaginations before the
#Occupy movement have been ruptured by the continued life of the occupations
themselves, and as a result we are able to collectively say and dream much more
- the discourse has opened up. This process of sending things into motion and
opening pathways to new potentialities can be described as taking the form of a
line of flight.[3] The
lines of flight present in the
occupations should not be thought of as acts of fleeing or deserting from the
current system, but rather as a process of collectively remapping our shared realities,
lives and futurities. By conceptualizing the occupations as being potentially composed
of many lines of flight flowing in common
directions, we can begin to think through how to magnify and multiply their potential
to set in motion further deterritorialization.
Binaries
and Multiplicities
Following these lines of flight, we must be careful to not be captured in the binary
logics of the current structures of power. The dangerous temptation is to be
either for or against a political party, to be a part of this group or another,
to be for or against an initiative. As soon as the occupation movement becomes
fixed within a binary logic (us/them, for/against, inside/outside), the horizon
of that movement and line of flight becomes
fixed. One of the main strengths of this current movement is that it remains
radically undetermined while simultaneously increasing its potential for
horizontal collectivity and action. It is generative
rather than oppositional. In order to avoid capture, participants should aim to
escalate the generative capacities of the occupations while avoiding binary
oppositions until binary conflict becomes unavoidable or forced.[4]
The urgency declared by the
mainstream media for clear and quantifiable demands from the occupations
persists because those in power wish to make the occupations rational and
legible. As soon as the movement becomes about this single
issue or that single demand, the occupations position themselves only to negotiate,
and the possibilities and potentialities of the occupations collapse into this
single plane. Similarly, it is likely that the full range of political parties
will attempt to capture the momentum of the occupations by provoking them into
solidarity or conflict. Such provocations aim to recuperate the occupations and
must be resisted. It is obvious to those of us in the 99% what the movement is
about, and it need not be parsed in simple demands for the occupations to
continue to proliferate.
The
occupations have provided a space for us to find each other and to have the
conversations necessary for dynamic and mobile political forms to emerge. They
are as much a process of deterritorializing public space as they are a process of
becoming-collective. They are not a
space of representation in the sense of the political, but are rather a space of production in which people from
diverse contexts and situations can both articulate their desires and produce
the collectivities necessary for struggle. In this way, the occupations have
been successful thus far in transmitting their collective desire for transformation
without having to narrow the scope of or flatten that desire. We should ensure
that the complex multiplicity of our desires and needs remain intact, and if
any demands are to be made that they reflect the impossibility of the current
structure's ability to remedy our grievances.
Images
of Thought
The
occupations should be thought of not as a thing
that we inhabit, but rather should be understood as a set of practices and relationships that we decide to engage in. When the police sweep away,
attack and even dismantle the encampments, the collective behaviors of the
occupation have the potential to persist in the everyday lives of the
participants. This is illustrative of how the occupations are radically
centered on questions of immanence,
or in other words are concerned with what they do in the world rather than what they are. The occupations are defined not by their qualities but rather
by their capacities, and as such the practices
of the occupations have the potential to expand beyond the physical spaces of
the encampments.
The current occupations have been so
incredibly inspiring not only because of their resounding yell of 'No!' in
rejection of the current political and economic structures, but also because of
their clear cry of 'Yes!', expressed in
the collectivity and horizontality of the practices of the occupations
themselves. These cries have obviously resonated with a multitude of people of
across the globe, and we must continue to look to ways of amplifying and
transmitting them. The democratic form of the occupations speaks more loudly
against the systems of oppression than any single demand ever could, and we
should organize to allow these forms to permeate more and more of society. Furthermore,
the occupations continue to develop practices of thinking the world differently, and finding ways of spreading these
modes of thought is of great importance.
The
lifespan of the occupation movement is wonderfully unpredictable, but we should
not make the mistake of assuming that they will perpetuate themselves
indefinitely. Forms of organization must emerge which are capable of outlasting
the initial cycle of uprising if any of the gains are to be held. What is
learned and experienced in the occupations must have mechanisms for
transmitting these new forms of knowledge to people who did not participate
directly. Similarly, participants of the occupations must develop structures
for continuing the logics of the occupations after the encampments themselves
have ended. Whether this means attempting to federate the occupations,
establishing larger democratic structures for planning future #Occupy actions,
or even constructing yet to be imagined models of organization remains unclear.
With this being said, the form that the #Occupy movement must inevitably
stratify itself into must be decided and articulated from within the general
assemblies of the occupations themselves. If this fails to happen before the initial
wave of struggle subsides, all that will remain after the dissolution of the encampments
is recuperation.
The
Questions of Collectivity
If the occupations are to become
more than an action and instead a prolonged collective struggle, we must
question what collectivity can mean to us in the imagination of the
occupations. How are we to account for the very real differences within the 99%
while also affirming the shared experiences and collectivity of the struggle? [5] Where
do we as occupiers come from and what histories do we bring along with us? How
do we envision solidarity amongst the 99%? The current participatory and open
form of the occupations both make these questions unanswerable but also
necessitates that we continually ask them.
As
groups such as "Occupy the Hood" have made more than clear, the occupations
exist in a history of exploitation and violence and need to respond to these
histories in their actions and analysis.[6] It
is important to first acknowledge that the struggle of the occupations cannot
remain a struggle against a single
hierarchy (namely, a struggle against capitalism or a class-based
struggle), but rather must begin thinking about how they are situated in a heterarchy (a system of many overlapping
and at times contradictory power systems). This will mean taking into account
not just the global economic powers, but also the racist, patriarchal,
heterosexist and colonial systems which are also present both within the
occupations and outside of them.
We
must develop ways of aligning the trajectories and velocities of the many
potential lines of flight present in
each of these structures of power if we don't want to simply escape one system
to find ourselves trapped in a multiplicity of others. The struggle to
overthrow just a single manifestation of oppression will always keep the others
intact. Furthermore, we should conceptualize power as something that is
simultaneously above us and between us. Irreconcilable differences exist
between the participants of the occupations, and the productive activity of the
occupations must reflect and address these differences in the way they choose
to organize, dream and act.
And
perhaps most importantly, we must ask the hardest questions that we can ask of
ourselves, namely what would have to pass for us to overcome the current
structural forms of oppression and violence. Not only are there systems to be
dismantled outside of the occupations, but we must also deeply question our own
behaviors, assumptions and ideals within the occupations themselves. The
predominant discourse has seemed to center on the structural inequality
generated by financial capital. Other voices within the occupation movement
have declared that police are the primary obstacle to overcome. What I hope
that I have made clear is that the movement must be much larger and more ambitious
than either of these single trajectories. If the movement becomes captured in
just these smaller fights, they will have lost much of what was so promising
about the occupations – their unboundedness. We must
develop new theories and ideas concerning the material, ideological and social
systems that oppress us and imagine new compositions and formations which can
combat these systems. The movement of the occupations must be keenly aware of
the necessity of generating new concepts which we can use to dismantle systems
of power.
The
struggle for liberation will be a much longer fight than any of us can
anticipate and is likely a project without end. Fortunately for us, the
horizontal and directly democratic forms of the occupations provide us with the
tools to generate liberatory forms of knowledge and experience that have the
potential to transform not only the participants of the occupations but also all
of society. Let us count this first month of the occupations as simply the
beginning of something much larger – something unpredictable and undetermined
and with unknown potentials and capacities. The occupations, in all of their
immanence and uncertainty, offer us a moment of rupture – let's follow it and
see how far the tear will go.
[1] "Deterritorialization" was a term used by
Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari
to describe the process in which things become undone and decontextualized,
allowing for new meanings and desires to be generated in the place of old ones.
[2] Letter
to Occupy Together Movement, by Harsha Walia,
[3] Michel Foucault describes
lines of flight in his introduction to Anti-Oedipus,:
"Withdraw allegiance from the old
categories of the Negative (law, limit, castration, lack, lacuna), which the
Western thought has so long held sacred as a form of power and an access to
reality. Prefer what is positive and multiple, difference over uniformity,
flows over unities, mobile arrangements over systems.
Believe that what is productive is not sedentary but nomadic."
[4] In Of
Stones and Flowers by John Holloway and Vittorio Sergi,
they explore how events such as attacks from police on demonstrations often
results in binary encounters, where the protestors and police become mirror
images reflecting each other's actions and shutting out other possibilities.
[5] Whiteness and the
99%, By Joel Olson
[6] 'Occupy
the Hood': Including all of the 99%, by Jesse Strauss, Al Jazeera
English