471 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
471 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
|
||
Negation and Consumption in the Cultural Sphere
|
||
|
||
Do you seriously think we shall live long enough to see a political
|
||
revolution? -- we, the contemporaries of these Germans? My friend, you
|
||
believe what you want to believe.... Let us judge Germany on the basis of
|
||
its present history -- and surely you are not going to object that all its
|
||
history is falsified, or that all its present public life does not reflect
|
||
the actual state of the people? Read whatever papers you please, and you
|
||
cannot fail to be convinced that we never stop (and you must concede that
|
||
the censorship prevents no one from stopping) celebrating the freedom and
|
||
national happiness that we enjoy....
|
||
|
||
Ruge to Marx, March 1843
|
||
|
||
|
||
180
|
||
Culture is the general sphere of knowledge, and of representations of lived
|
||
experience, within a historical society divided into classes; what this
|
||
amounts to is that culture is the power to generalize, existing apart, as an
|
||
intellectual division of labor and as the intellectual labor of division.
|
||
Culture detached itself from the unity of myth-based society, according to
|
||
Hegel, "when the power to unify disappeared from the life of man, and
|
||
opposites lost their connection and living interaction, and became
|
||
autonomous" ("The Difference between the Philosophical Systems of Fichte and
|
||
Schelling"). In thus gaining its independence, culture was embarked on an
|
||
imperialistic career of self-enrichment that was at the same time the
|
||
beginning of the decline of its independence. The history that brought
|
||
culture's relative autonomy into being, along with ideological illusions
|
||
concerning that autonomy, is also expressed as the history of culture. And
|
||
the whole triumphant history of culture can be understood as the history of
|
||
the revelation of culture's insufficiency, as a march toward culture's
|
||
self-abolition. Culture is the locus of the search for lost unity. In the
|
||
course of this search, culture as a separate sphere is obliged to negate
|
||
itself.
|
||
|
||
181
|
||
The struggle between tradition and innovation, which is the basic principle
|
||
of the internal development of the culture of historical societies, is
|
||
predicated entirely on the permanent victory of innovation. Cultural
|
||
innovation is impelled solely, however, by that total historical movement
|
||
which, by becoming conscious of its totality, tends toward the transcendence
|
||
of its own cultural presuppositions -- and hence toward the suppression of
|
||
all separations.
|
||
|
||
182
|
||
The sudden expansion of society s knowledge, including -- as the heart of
|
||
culture -- an understanding of history, brought about the irreversible
|
||
self-knowledge that found expression in the abolition of God. This
|
||
"prerequisite of every critique," however, was also the first task of a
|
||
critique without end. In a situation where there are no longer any tenable
|
||
rules of action, culture's every result propels it toward its own
|
||
dissolution. Just like philosophy the moment it achieved its full
|
||
independence, every discipline, once it becomes autonomous, is bound to
|
||
collapse -- in the first place as an attempt to offer a coherent account of
|
||
the social totality, and eventually even as a partial methodology viable
|
||
within its own domain. The lack of rationality in a separated culture is what
|
||
dooms it to disappear, for that culture itself embodies a call for the
|
||
victory of the rational.
|
||
|
||
183
|
||
Culture issued from a history that had dissolved the way of life of the old
|
||
world, yet culture as a separate sphere is as yet no more than an
|
||
intelligence and a sensory communication which, in a partially historical
|
||
society, must themselves remain partial. Culture is the meaning of an
|
||
insufficiently meaningful world.
|
||
|
||
184
|
||
The end of the history of culture manifests itself under two antagonistic
|
||
aspects: the project of culture's self-transcendence as part of total
|
||
history, and its management as a dead thing to be contemplated in the
|
||
spectacle. The first tendency has cast its lot with the critique of society,
|
||
the second with the defense of class power.
|
||
|
||
185
|
||
Each of the two aspects of the end of culture has a unitary existence, as
|
||
much in all spheres of knowledge as in all spheres of sensory representation
|
||
-- that is, in all spheres of what was formerly understood as art in the most
|
||
general sense. The first aspect enshrines an opposition between, on the one
|
||
hand, the accumulation of a fragmentary knowledge which becomes useless in
|
||
that any endorsement of existing conditions must eventually entail a
|
||
rejection of that knowledge itself, and, on the other hand, the theory of
|
||
practice, which alone has access, not only to the truth of all the knowledge
|
||
in question, but also to the secret of its use. The second aspect enshrines
|
||
an opposition between the critical self-destruction of society's old common
|
||
language and its artificial reconstruction, within the commodity spectacle,
|
||
as the illusory representation of non-life.
|
||
|
||
186
|
||
Once society has lost the community that myth was formerly able to ensure, it
|
||
must inevitably lose all the reference points of a truly common language
|
||
until such time as the divided character of an inactive community is
|
||
superseded by the inauguration of a real historical community. As soon as art
|
||
-- which constituted that former common language of social inaction --
|
||
establishes itself as independent in the modern sense, emerging from its
|
||
first, religious universe to become the individual production of separate
|
||
works, it becomes subject, as one instance among others, to the movement
|
||
governing the history of the whole of culture as a separated realm. Art's
|
||
declaration of independence is thus the beginning of the end of art.
|
||
|
||
187
|
||
The fact that the language of real communication has been lost is what the
|
||
modern movement of art's decay, and ultimately of its formal annihilation,
|
||
expresses positively. What it expresses negatively is that a new common
|
||
language has yet to be found -- not, this time, in the form of unilaterally
|
||
arrived-at conclusions like those which, from the viewpoint of historical
|
||
art, always came on the scene too late, speaking to others of what had been
|
||
experienced without any real dialogue, and accepting this shortfall of life
|
||
as inevitable -- but rather in a praxis embodying both an unmediated activity
|
||
and a language commensurate with it. The point is to take effective
|
||
possession of the community of dialogue, and the playful relationship to
|
||
time, which the works of the poets and artists have heretofore merely
|
||
represented.
|
||
|
||
188
|
||
When a newly independent art paints its world in brilliant colors, then a
|
||
moment of life has grown old. By art's brilliant colors it cannot be
|
||
rejuvenated but only recalled to mind. The greatness of art makes its
|
||
appearance only as dusk begins to fall over life.
|
||
|
||
189
|
||
The historical time that invaded art in fact found its first expression in
|
||
the artistic sphere, beginning with the baroque. Baroque was the art of a
|
||
world that had lost its center with the demise of the last mythic order
|
||
recognized by the Middle Ages, an order founded, both cosmically and from the
|
||
point of view of earthly government, on the unity between Christianity and
|
||
the ghost of an Empire. An art of change was obliged to embody the principle
|
||
of the ephemeral that it recognized in the world. In the words of Eugenio
|
||
d'Ors, it chose "life as opposed to eternity." Theater and festival, or
|
||
theatrical festival -- these were the essential moments of the baroque,
|
||
moments wherein all specific artistic expression derived its meaning from its
|
||
reference to the decor of a constructed space, to a construction that had to
|
||
constitute its own unifying center; and that center was passage, inscribed as
|
||
a vulnerable equilibrium on an overall dynamic disorder. The sometimes
|
||
excessive importance taken on in modern discussions of aesthetics by the
|
||
concept of the baroque reflects a growing awareness of the impossibility of
|
||
classicism in art: for three centuries all efforts to create a normative
|
||
classicism or neoclassicism have never been more than brief, artificial
|
||
projects giving voice to the official discourse of the State -- whether the
|
||
State of the absolute monarchy or that of the revolutionary bourgeoisie
|
||
draped in Roman togas. What eventually followed the baroque, once it had run
|
||
its course, was an ever more individualistic art of negation which, from
|
||
romanticism to cubism, renewed its assault time after time until the
|
||
fragmentation and destruction of the artistic sphere were complete. The
|
||
disappearance of a historical art, which was tied to the internal
|
||
communications of an elite whose semi-independent social basis lay in the
|
||
relatively playful conditions still directly experienced by the last
|
||
aristocracies, also testified to the fact that capitalism had thrown up the
|
||
first class power self-admittedly bereft of any ontological quality; a power
|
||
whose foundation in the mere running of the economy bespoke the loss of all
|
||
human mastery. The baroque ensemble, a unity itself long lost to the world of
|
||
artistic creation, recurs in a certain sense in today's consumption of the
|
||
entirety of the art of the past. The historical knowledge and recognition of
|
||
all past art, along with its retrospective promotion to the rank of world
|
||
art, serve to relativize it within the context of a global disorder which in
|
||
turn constitutes a baroque edifice at a higher level, an edifice into which
|
||
even the production of a baroque art, and all its possible revivals, is bound
|
||
to be melded. The very fact that such "recollections" of the history of art
|
||
should have become possible amounts to the end of the world of art. Only in
|
||
this era of museums, when no artistic communication remains possible, can
|
||
each and every earlier moment of art be accepted -- and accepted as equal in
|
||
value -- for none, in view of the disappearance of the prerequisites of
|
||
communication in general, suffers any longer from the disappearance of its
|
||
own particular ability to communicate.
|
||
|
||
190
|
||
Art in the period of its dissolution, as a movement of negation in pursuit of
|
||
its own transcendence in a historical society where history is not yet
|
||
directly lived, is at once an art of change and a pure expression of the
|
||
impossibility of change. The more grandiose its demands, the further from its
|
||
grasp is true self-realization. This is an art that is necessarily
|
||
avant-garde; and it is an art that is not. Its vanguard is its own
|
||
disappearance.
|
||
|
||
191
|
||
The two currents that marked the end of modern art were dadaism and
|
||
surrealism. Though they were only partially conscious of it, they paralleled
|
||
the proletarian revolutionary movement's last great offensive; and the
|
||
halting of that movement, which left them trapped within the very artistic
|
||
sphere that they had declared dead and buried, was the fundamental cause of
|
||
their own immobilization. Historically, dadaism and surrealism are at once
|
||
bound up with one another and at odds with one another. This antagonism,
|
||
involvement in which constituted for each of these movements the most
|
||
consistent and radical aspect of its contribution, also attested to the
|
||
internal deficiency in each's critique -- namely, in both cases, a fatal
|
||
one-sidedness. For dadaism sought to abolish art without realizing it, and
|
||
surrealism sought to realize art without abolishing it. The critical position
|
||
since worked out by the situationists demonstrates that the abolition and the
|
||
realization of art are inseparable aspects of a single transcendence of art.
|
||
|
||
192
|
||
Spectacular consumption preserves the old culture in congealed form, going so
|
||
far as to recuperate and rediffuse even its negative manifestations; in this
|
||
way, the spectacle's cultural sector gives overt expression to what the
|
||
spectacle is implicitly in its totality -- the communication of the
|
||
incommunicable. Thoroughgoing attacks on language are liable to emerge in
|
||
this context coolly invested with positive value by the official world, for
|
||
the aim is to promote reconciliation with a dominant state of things from
|
||
which all communication has been triumphantly declared absent. Naturally, the
|
||
critical truth of such attacks, as utterances of the real life of modern
|
||
poetry and art, is concealed. The spectacle, whose function it is to bury
|
||
history in culture, presses the pseudo-novelty of its modernist means into
|
||
the service of a strategy that defines it in the profoundest sense. Thus a
|
||
school of neo-literature baldly admitting that it merely contemplates the
|
||
written word for its own sake can pass itself off as something truly new.
|
||
Meanwhile, beyond the unadorned claim that the dissolution of the
|
||
communicable has a beauty all its own, one encounters the most modern
|
||
tendency of spectacular culture -- and the one most closely bound up with the
|
||
repressive practice of the general social organization -- seeking by means of
|
||
a "global approach" to reconstruct a complex neo-artistic environment out of
|
||
flotsam and jetsam; a good example of this is urbanism's striving to
|
||
incorporate old scraps of art or hybrid aesthetico-technological forms. All
|
||
of which shows how a general project of advanced capitalism is translated
|
||
onto the plane of spectacular pseudo-culture -- that project being the
|
||
remolding of the fragmented worker into "a personality well integrated into
|
||
the group" (cf. recent American sociology -- Riesman, Whyte, et al.).
|
||
Wherever one looks, one encounters this same intent: to restructure society
|
||
without community.
|
||
|
||
193
|
||
A culture now wholly commodity was bound to become the star commodity of the
|
||
society of the spectacle. Clark Kerr, an ideologue at the cutting edge of
|
||
this trend, reckons that the whole complex system of production, distribution
|
||
and consumption of knowledge is already equivalent to 29 percent of the
|
||
annual gross national product of the United States, and he predicts that in
|
||
the second half of this century culture will become the driving force of the
|
||
American economy, so assuming the role of the automobile industry in the
|
||
first half, or that of the railroads in the late nineteenth century.
|
||
|
||
194
|
||
The task of the complex of claims still evolving as spectacular thought is to
|
||
justify a society with no justification, and ultimately to establish itself
|
||
as a general science of false consciousness. This thought is entirely
|
||
determined by the fact that it cannot and does not wish to apprehend its own
|
||
material foundation in the spectacular system.
|
||
|
||
195
|
||
The official thought of the social organization of appearances is itself
|
||
obscured by the generalized subcommunication that it has to defend. It does
|
||
not see that conflict is at the root of every feature of its universe.
|
||
Spectacular power, which is absolute within the unchallengeable internal
|
||
logic of the spectacle's language, corrupts its specialists absolutely. They
|
||
are corrupted by their experience of contempt, and by the success of that
|
||
contempt, for the contempt they feel is confirmed by their acquaintanceship
|
||
with that genuinely contemptible individual -- the spectator.
|
||
|
||
196
|
||
A new division of tasks occurs within the specialized thought of the
|
||
spectacular system in response to the new problems presented by the
|
||
perfecting of this system itself: in the first place modern sociology
|
||
undertakes a spectacular critique of the spectacle, studying separation with
|
||
the sole aid of separation's own conceptual and material tools; meanwhile,
|
||
from within the various disciplines in which structuralism has taken root, an
|
||
apologetics of the spectacle is disseminated as the thought of non-thought,
|
||
as an authorized amnesia with respect to historical practice. As forms of
|
||
enslaved thought, however, there is nothing to choose between the fake
|
||
despair of a nondialectical critique on the one hand and the fake optimism of
|
||
a plain and simple boosting of the system on the other.
|
||
|
||
197
|
||
There is a school of sociology, originating in the United States, which has
|
||
begun to raise questions about the conditions of existence created by modern
|
||
social development. But while this approach has been able to gather much
|
||
empirical data, it is quite unable to grasp the true nature of its chosen
|
||
object, because it cannot recognize the critique immanent to that object. The
|
||
sincerely reformist orientation of this sociology has no criteria aside from
|
||
morality, common sense and other such yardsticks -- all utterly inadequate
|
||
for dealing with the matter at hand. Because it is unaware of the negativity
|
||
at the heart of its world, this mode of criticism is obliged to concentrate
|
||
on describing a sort of surplus negativity that it views as a regrettable
|
||
irritation, or an irrational parasitic infestation, affecting the surface of
|
||
that world. An outraged goodwill of this kind, which even on its own terms
|
||
can do nothing except put all the blame on the system's external
|
||
consequences, can see itself as critical only by ignoring the essentially
|
||
apologetic character of its assumptions and method.
|
||
|
||
198
|
||
People who denounce incitements to wastefulness as absurd or dangerous in a
|
||
society of economic abundance do not understand the purpose of waste. It is
|
||
distinctly ungrateful of them to condemn, in the name of economic
|
||
rationality, those faithful (albeit irrational) guardians without whom the
|
||
power of that same economic rationality would collapse. Daniel Boorstin, for
|
||
example, whose book The Image describes the spectacular consumption of
|
||
commodities in America, never arrives at a concept of the spectacle because
|
||
he mistakenly feels able to treat private life, like something he calls an
|
||
"honest product," as quite independent of what he sees as a disastrous
|
||
distortion or "exaggeration." What he fails to grasp is that the commodity
|
||
form itself lays down laws whose "honest" application gives rise not only to
|
||
private life as a distinct reality but also to that reality's subsequent
|
||
conquest by the social consumption of images.
|
||
|
||
199
|
||
Boorstin treats the excesses of a world that has become alien to us as
|
||
excesses alien to our world. The "normal" basis of social life to which he
|
||
refers implicitly when he describes the superficial reign of images, in terms
|
||
of psychological and moral judgments, as the product of "our ever more
|
||
extravagant expectations," has no reality at all, however, either in his book
|
||
or in the historical period in which he lives. Because the real human life
|
||
that Boorstin evokes is located for him in the past -- even in a past of
|
||
religious passivity -- he has no way of comprehending the true depth of
|
||
society's dependence on images. The truth of that society is nothing less
|
||
than its negation.
|
||
|
||
200
|
||
A sociology that believes it possible to isolate an industrial rationality,
|
||
functioning on its own, from social life as a whole, is liable likewise to
|
||
view the technology of reproduction and communication as independent of
|
||
overall industrial development. Thus Boorstin accounts for the situation he
|
||
portrays in terms of an unfortunate and quasi-serendipitous coming together
|
||
of too vast a technology of image-diffusion on the one hand, and, on the
|
||
other, too great an appetite for sensationalism on the part of today's
|
||
public. The spectacle, in this view, would have to be attributed to man's
|
||
"spectatorial" inclinations. Boorstin cannot see that the proliferation of
|
||
prefabricated "pseudo-events" -- which he deplores -- flows from the simple
|
||
fact that, in face of the massive realities of present-day social existence,
|
||
individuals do not actually experience events. Because history itself is the
|
||
specter haunting modern society, pseudo-history has to be fabricated at every
|
||
level of the consumption of life; otherwise, the equilibrium of the frozen
|
||
time that presently holds sway could not be preserved.
|
||
|
||
201
|
||
The claim that a brief freeze in historical time is in fact a definitive
|
||
stability -- such is, both consciously and unconsciously expressed, the
|
||
undoubted basis of the current tendency toward "structuralist" system
|
||
building. The perspective adopted by the anti-historical thought of
|
||
structuralism is that of the eternal presence of a system that was never
|
||
created and that will never disappear. This fantasy of a preexisting
|
||
unconscious structure's hegemony over all social practice is illegitimately
|
||
derived from linguistic and anthropological structural models -- even from
|
||
models of the functioning of capitalism -- that are misapplied even in their
|
||
original contexts; and the only reason why this has occurred is that an
|
||
academic approach fit for complacent middle-range managers, a mode of thought
|
||
completely anchored in an awestruck celebration of the existing system,
|
||
crudely reduces all reality to the existence of that system.
|
||
|
||
202
|
||
In seeking to understand structuralist categories, it should always be borne
|
||
in mind, as in the case of any historical social science, that categories
|
||
express not only the forms but also the conditions of existence. Just as one
|
||
does not judge a man's value according to the conception he has of himself,
|
||
one cannot judge -- or admire -- this specific society by taking the
|
||
discourse it addresses to itself as necessarily true. "One cannot judge such
|
||
a period of transformation by its consciousness, but, on the contrary, this
|
||
consciousness must be explained from the contradictions of material life."
|
||
Structures are the progeny of the power that is in place. Structuralism is a
|
||
thought underwritten by the State, a thought that conceives of the present
|
||
conditions of spectacular "communication" as an absolute. Its fashion of
|
||
studying the code of messages in itself is merely the product, and the
|
||
acknowledgment, of a society where communication has the form of a cascade of
|
||
hierarchical signals. Thus it is not structuralism that serves to prove the
|
||
transhistorical validity of the society of the spectacle; but, on the
|
||
contrary, it is the society of the spectacle, imposing itself in its massive
|
||
reality, that validates the chill dream of structuralism.
|
||
|
||
203
|
||
Without a doubt, the critical concept of the spectacle is susceptible of
|
||
being turned into just another empty formula of sociologico-political
|
||
rhetoric designed to explain and denounce everything in the abstract -- so
|
||
serving to buttress the spectacular system itself. For obviously no idea
|
||
could transcend the spectacle that exists -- it could only transcend ideas
|
||
that exist about the spectacle. For the society of the spectacle to be
|
||
effectively destroyed, what is needed are people setting a practical force in
|
||
motion. A critical theory of the spectacle cannot be true unless it joins
|
||
forces with the practical movement of negation within society; and this
|
||
negation, which constitutes the resumption of revolutionary class struggle,
|
||
cannot for its part achieve self-consciousness unless it develops the
|
||
critique of the spectacle, a critique that embodies the theory of negation's
|
||
real conditions -- the practical conditions of present-day oppression -- and
|
||
that also, inversely, reveals the secret of negation's potential. Such a
|
||
theory expects no miracles from the working class. It views the reformulation
|
||
and satisfaction of proletarian demands as a long-term undertaking. To make
|
||
an artificial distinction between theoretical and practical struggle -- for,
|
||
on the basis here defined, the very constitution and communication of a
|
||
theory of this kind cannot be conceived independently of a rigorous practice
|
||
-- we may say with certainty that the obscure and difficult path of critical
|
||
theory must also be the path of the practical movement that occurs at the
|
||
level of society as a whole.
|
||
|
||
204
|
||
Critical theory has to be communicated in its own language -- the language of
|
||
contradiction, dialectical in form as well as in content: the language of the
|
||
critique of the totality, of the critique of history. Not some "writing
|
||
degree zero" -- just the opposite. Not a negation of style, but the style of
|
||
negation.
|
||
|
||
205
|
||
Even the style of exposition of dialectical theory is a scandal and an
|
||
abomination to the canons of the prevailing language, and to sensibilities
|
||
molded by those canons, because it includes in its positive use of existing
|
||
concepts a simultaneous recognition of their rediscovered fluidity, of their
|
||
inevitable destruction.
|
||
|
||
206
|
||
This style, which embodies its own critique, must express the mastery of the
|
||
critique in hand over all its predecessors. The mode of exposition of
|
||
dialectical theory will thus itself exemplify the negative spirit it
|
||
contains. The truth, says Hegel, is not "detached... like a finished article
|
||
from the instrument that shapes it." Such a theoretical consciousness of
|
||
dialectical movement, which must itself bear the stamp of that movement, is
|
||
manifested by the reversal of established relationships between concepts and
|
||
by the diversion (or d<>tournement) of all the attainments of earlier critical
|
||
efforts. Thus the reversed genitive, as an expression of historical
|
||
revolutions distilled into a form of thought, came to be considered the
|
||
hallmark of Hegel's epigrammatic style. As a proponent of the replacement of
|
||
subject by predicate, following Feuerbach's systematic practice of it, the
|
||
young Marx achieved the most cogent use of this insurrectional style: thus
|
||
the philosophy of poverty became the poverty of philosophy. The device of
|
||
d<>tournement restores all their subversive qualities to past critical
|
||
judgments that have congealed into respectable truths -- or, in other words,
|
||
that have been transformed into lies. Kierkegaard too made use of
|
||
d<>tournement, and offered his own pronouncement on the subject: "But how you
|
||
twist and turn, so that, just as Saft always ended up in the pantry, you
|
||
inevitably always manage to introduce some little word or phrase that is not
|
||
your own, and which awakens disturbing recollections" (Philosophical
|
||
Fragments). The defining characteristic of this use of d<>tournement is the
|
||
necessity for distance to be maintained toward whatever has been turned into
|
||
an official verity. As Kierkegaard acknowledges in the same work, "One
|
||
further remark I wish to make, however, with respect to your many
|
||
animadversions, all pointing to my having introduced borrowed expressions in
|
||
the course of my exposition. That such is the case I do not deny, nor will I
|
||
now conceal from you that it was done purposely, and that in the next section
|
||
of this piece, if I ever write such a section, it is my intention to call the
|
||
whole by its right name, and to clothe the problem in its historical
|
||
costume."
|
||
|
||
207
|
||
Ideas improve. The meaning of words has a part in the improvement. Plagiarism
|
||
is necessary. Progress demands it. Staying close to an author's phrasing,
|
||
plagiarism exploits his expressions, erases false ideas, replaces them with
|
||
correct ideas.
|
||
|
||
208
|
||
D<>tournement is the antithesis of quotation, of a theoretical authority
|
||
invariably tainted if only because it has become quotable, because it is now
|
||
a fragment torn away from its context, from its own movement, and ultimately
|
||
from the overall frame of reference of its period and from the precise option
|
||
that it constituted within that framework. D<>tournement, by contrast, is the
|
||
fluid language of anti-ideology. It occurs within a type of communication
|
||
aware of its inability to enshrine any inherent and definitive certainty.
|
||
This language is inaccessible in the highest degree to confirmation by any
|
||
earlier or supra-critical reference point. On the contrary, its internal
|
||
coherence and its adequacy in respect of the practically possible are what
|
||
validate the ancient kernel of truth that it restores. D<>tournement founds
|
||
its cause on nothing but its own truth as critique at work in the present.
|
||
|
||
209
|
||
Whatever is explicitly presented as d<>tournement within formulated theory
|
||
serves to deny any durable autonomous existence to the sphere of theory
|
||
merely formulated. The fact that the violence of d<>tournement itself
|
||
mobilizes an action capable of disturbing or overthrowing any existing order
|
||
is a reminder that the existence of the theoretical domain is nothing in
|
||
itself, that it can only come to self-knowledge in conjunction with
|
||
historical action, and that it can only be truly faithful by virtue of
|
||
history's corrective judgment upon it.
|
||
|
||
210
|
||
Only the real negation of culture can inherit culture's meaning. Such
|
||
negation can no longer remain cultural. It is what remains, in some manner,
|
||
at the level of culture -- but it has a quite different sense.
|
||
|
||
211
|
||
In the language of contradiction, the critique of culture manifests itself as
|
||
unified: unified in that it dominates the whole of culture -- culture as
|
||
knowledge as well as culture as poetry; unified, too, in that it is no longer
|
||
separable from the critique of the social totality. It is this unified
|
||
theoretical critique that goes alone to its rendezvous with a unified social
|
||
practice.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From the Society of the Spectacle, by Guy Debord
|