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Scattered Speculations on the Notion of Inquiry PDF Print E-mail
Written by Stevphen Shukaitis   
Tuesday, 22 January 2008
 
“I know that things are getting tougher /When you cant get top off from the bottom of the barrel / Wide open road of my future now... Its looking fucking narrow / All I know is that I don't know /All I know is that I don't know nothing.” – Operation Ivy

I'd like to use my intervention in this round of the edu-factory discussions to make a few scattered speculations on the notion of inquiry, which I hope will provide somewhat of a bridge between the themes of hierarchization and the autonomous university. I say scattered speculations not simply because my remarks may very well be diffuse and scatterbrained in their nature (as they are written in the period of a marathon grading), but more because in saying so I am thinking of Spivak’s famous essay on the question of value. I mention this essay not to invoke its legendary density (it took me at three reads to even scratch at it), but because of her rather interesting description of labor not as work, but rather as the “the irreducible possibility that the subject be more than adequate – super-adequate – to itself.” In other words, to understand labor not as the particular forms of work that comprise the labor process (although one can never forget them), but as the possibility of this process to create something that goes beyond itself. And this seems a fitting point to begin a discussion for the renewal of the practices and politics of inquiry, as well as considering what comprises the labor of that inquiry. And more precisely, to bridge between Operation Ivy and Spivak, to renew an inquiry that starts from its not knowing, not as a mark of failure or inadequacy, but rather as a means of maintaining an open status to which is it always has moved beyond before coming to an awareness of this state: to keep up a constant process of questioning and discovery without falling into uncovering knowledge as object.


But I am getting ahead of myself, as would be fitting. So let’s take a few steps back before proceeding to what is already known yet constantly needs to be articulated.

I first became interested in inquiry and politically engaged research several years ago when I began grad school in New York. At the same time I was becoming enmeshed in various circles of political organizing and media production coming mainly out of the globalization movement. Naively enough I was interested in social movement theory, because I thought such would be a space for elaborating political theory and ideas in conjunction with forms of organizing already in motion. I also had the mistaken idea that since the institution where I was located, the New School for Social Research, portrayed itself in all its advertising as the inheritor of a grand tradition of critical theory and politics, that it would be especially open to this kind of work. Unfortunately I was wrong on both counts: for the most part ‘social movement theory’ was boring and irrelevant rubbish, and the New School was more of a bastion for former Marxist humanists come washed up social democrats more concerned with endlessly rehashing some strange imaginary Foucault-Habermas debate than anything else. That’s not to say that you couldn’t talk about politics, on the contrary, one could discourse-ify about anything you wanted as long as you did so with the proper distance and detachment from your subject matter, and made sure to publish in publications (in such a manner) that in the rare event more than five people actually saw what you wrote it wouldn’t matter. Oh, yes, and you were to accept this strange fate and celebrate it as “doing politics.”

Now I could go on ranting about such for quite a long time (right until all my student loans are paid off to be precise), but I won’t. The main point of this biographical flashback is to point out that even in a place where one might reasonably expect to be open to academic work with radical political intent, this was not to the case.  Or more honestly I should say there was, but the constraints place upon that ‘radicality’ were such to render it not at all. There simply just wasn’t support for anything else. And it was this realization that motivated me to search out for other tools and traditions for the development and elaboration of political theory in a non-vanguardist manner, one that does not objectify and reify the protagonism of social movement. And so for the past several years I’ve worked on this, gathering resources and ideas mainly from comrades and at various encuentros and gatherings, drawing from the tradition of participatory action research, the history of radical education projects, and the writings of collectives such as Colectivo Situaciones, Precarias a la Deriva, and Kolinko’s writing on call centers. In particular I’ve found practices of workers inquiry and class composition, as elaborated within the operaisti tradition (if one can say that there is one), especially for the emphasis that inquiry is not really particular practices involved but a perspective and on-going process; inquiry operates, to borrow Raniero Panzieri’s wording, as “a permanent point of reference for our politics” that underlies particular investigations and goes beyond them (here one can see a parallel between the labor / work distinction and the possibility of being more than adequate). So, rather than thinking about inquiry as the particularities of an investigation, rather it is the realization that as forms of struggle shift the ground on which they occur there is a constant need to re-evaluate how the grounds for political intervention have shifted, and to re-orient to these shifting grounds. Inquiry then is always an open question, because the situation in which one is inquiring from and investigating is always shifting according to the ways in which insurgency determines its development within the present.

These efforts, not surprisingly, congealed into several print projects, most notably a collection that I edited with David Graeber and Erika Biddle for AK Press, Constituent Imagination. This book, along with the efforts of many other wonderful projects (such as transversal, ephemera, Generation On-Line, and others), as well as the infinitely valuable and often underappreciated work of many translators (such as Arianna Bove and Nate Holdren), has helped to start in English speaking circles discussion and debates that have been going on in much more substantial way in the invisible (anti-)empire of romance language radicalism for some time.

Despite trying to get away from the reifying / vanguardist approach to theory production, coming at radical politics as object to be studied rather than as a common project to be elaborated, this dynamic strangely continues in ways and places one would hopefully not expect. To take an obvious example, one can see how ‘anarchist studies’ (which grown much greater prominence over recent years) all too easily slips into becoming nothing more than the study of anarchism. In other words to approach an already existing, strangely reified object that is constantly and self-referentially regenerated in discussion of it as object. This can be contrasted to understanding anarchism as an ethics of practice, a particular approach to politics, and therefore understanding anarchist studies as the elaboration of knowledges useful and immanent to these politics. Shockingly enough, it is not yet another tome about the life of a bearded 19th century figure or re-telling of the glories of Spain 1936, which would offer tools for the rethinking of radical politics in the present.

To make perhaps a risky claim, I would argue that part of the reason that there has been many more people turning to autonomist thought in recent years (at least in an English speaking context) is precisely because while radical politics have more and more drawn inspiration of anarchism as a form of embodied ethics and approach to organizational questions, this has not been met with any corresponding development of something that one could really call an anarchist approach with any theoretical depth. So, the response has been to call on something else, whether workerist thought or continental philosophy (but then again maybe not at all), to use that as a theoretical supplement. This might be quite a problem, but not necessarily in the lack of a specifically ‘anarchist’ theoretical framework, as much as it has helped people to overlook some aspects of traditions they’re boring from that they would be less enthused about if they were made more obvious.

For instance, one of the things I worry about in whether inquiry and class composition has thoroughly or completely shed its vanguardist / Leninist heritage. The risk is that the point of inquiry becomes to find the new hegemonic figure of resistance fitting to the current political-technical composition of class struggle with capitalist development. When I asked Gigi and Anna about this two years ago when they gave a presentation on inquiry at Bluestockings in New York, they commented there is a certain lingering nostalgia to rediscover the hegemonic workerist subject in a new form, but such need not be the case. In other words the purpose of inquiry need not be investigating the development of the ‘highest’ state of capitalist development with the expectation that new forms of protagonism will develop there, but rather to tease out the subversive potentiality of any social positionality and relations there. As George Caffentzis points out, it is often those who seem to be the weakest, rather than most advanced, that can have the greatest impact of fermenting new revolutionary subjectivities. For that reason it is perhaps not all that surprising that more inspiration for struggles have come from the Zaptistas, Agentinean piqueteros and unemployed workers unions, and movements against neoliberalism across Africa and Asia, rather than the rebellion of insurgent IT workers and coders.

This is not to disregard the efforts of digital resistance, the capacities of the socialized worker, etc. It is simply to say that one cannot simply deduce revolutionary potentiality, capacity for political composition, from forms of technical composition. This connects quite closely to a point made by Angela in her contribution (and which she explores with brilliance through her work more generally), namely the question of how we can approach commonalities in the undercommons, to find ways to inquire about them and develop a non-exploitative politics around them, without creating a new figure of normalization. Forms of politics which presume a potentiality in a certain position, or worse yet, that there is inherently a common interest between different positions because of their inherent links, risks falling into just another version of essentialist fetishism, no matter what kind of fancy theoretical clothes its dressed up in.

This is the very process that inquiry should strive to avoid: to risk conflating forms of technical composition and analysis with the reality of political alliance and connection. One of the ways this dynamic was most obvious was in discussions of the relation between the riots in the banlieues and the student anti-CPE actions in Paris. Just because there is a structural similarity or conceptual parallel in forms of precarity (or in forms of affective and immaterial labor for that matter) does not mean that there are ready made lines of political alliance drawn. Rather, if anything, it is these lines of alliance that have be drawn to be elaborated, through finding and elaborating of common grounds, rather than assuming that such already exists or declaring that is the case. Sometimes is also useful to question whether working toward that is always the best plan, rather than assuming that an endless proliferation of networks and connections is a good in itself.

Finally, I want to raise some questions about the relation between inquiry and visibility. One of the most positive things about conducting inquiry is it can bring to light all sorts of connections, solidarities, relations of affinities, and so forth, that already exist within the workplace or social field more generally, of which we might not have been aware. Ironically enough one of the unintended downsides of inquiry is exactly the same thing. What does that mean? Well, simply that these phenomena, by becoming more visible, also become recuperable. If we take seriously the autonomist argument that is forms of resistance and insurgency that drive capitalist development through their reincorporation and decomposition, then inquiry, by making these known, can inadvertently take part in this process. Let me give an example that should make this a bit less abstract. Last year I was giving a seminar on workers inquiry using texts by Kolinko and Marta Malo de Molina. At one point during the seminar one of the students observed that workers inquiry must be very useful to companies. Taken a bit aback by this comment I asked why that was. He responded that most of the time if one sent in a management consultant or someone like that to conduct a survey into the workings conditions in an organization he or she should would be treated with suspicion, disdain, and in general lied to and deceived – most of the time with very understandable reasons. However, if the workers began conducting inquiries into issues in the workplace and what dissatisfied them, there is both no need for the company to pay for this work at all, greater likelihood that people will be honest in their responses, and no reason why the results have to be used in a particular manner once made visible, i.e. publicly available. In other words the results on the inquiry could easily be used against the interests of those conducting it in the first place. Although I am unclear if many companies have attempted to use the outcomes of workers inquiry for their benefit, I could certainly see how this could be the case quite easily. This raises the questions that when considering workers inquiry it is not just a question of investigating the compositions of labor and social forces in question, but also of who wants to be understood by and how to use the results in ways that they do not instantly get turned against themselves.

This is not to raise the ongoing question of recuperation as one of defeat, but rather an dynamic that must be anticipated and dealt with on an ongoing basis for any politics to retain its radicality. As Jean Barrot argued in his critique of the Situationist International, the counterrevolution does not take up revolutionary ideas because it is manipulative or short of its own, but rather because revolutionary movements deal with real problems which the forces of reactions are also confronted with. So, to the degree that one inquires about something worth struggling over, one’s results always have the potentiality to be used against the purpose the inquiry in the first place. If there was something that could not be turned against itself, was not worth reupcerating into the workings of capitalism and the state, it would also be completely useless to ongoing struggles.

This is not a new observation by any means, and was argued by Mario Tronti (as well as many others) for years now. The point of inquiry is to constantly find ways to understand the field of struggle and how it is being modified by the forms of resistance already in motion. In so far as there are always forces attempting to make these resistances functional to the system, the task is to find new avenues for recomposition by making this no longer the case. The autonomous university then is not the creation of an actual space, formed along the lines of a workers cooperative (I share Nate’s concerns with this kind of approach), but rather the process of knowledge generation and inquiry that is immanent to this ongoing process of inquiry and compositional analysis. It is a diffuse intellectuality that has less to do with how one generally think of a university, and more to do with what Alexander Trocchi refers to as the “invisible insurrection of a million minds,” a project of constant cultural outflanking and creative regeneration through these hidden networks and connections. At its best inquiry is one part of this constant renewal of these undercommons, a process through which the resistance is always more than adequate to itself, but negotiates questions of visibility through constant reversals of perspective.

 

References

Jean Barrot (1996 [1979]) “Critique of the Situationist International.” What is Situationism? A Reader. Ed. Stewart Home. San Francisco: AK Press: 24-62.

George Caffentzis (2003) “The End of Work or the Renaissance of Slavery? A Critique of Rifkin and Negri.” http://www.korotonomedya.net/otonomi/caffentzis.html

Marta Malo de Molina (2004) “Common notions, part 1: workers-inquiry, co-research, consciousness-raising,” transversal. http://transform.eipcp.net/transversal/0406

Raniero Panzieri (2006 [1965]) “The Socialist Uses of Workers' Inquiry,” available at www.generation-online.org/t/tpanzieri.htm

Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak (1985) "Scattered Speculations on the Question of Value," Diacritics Volume 15 Number 4: 73-93.

Alexander Trocchi (1997 [1962]) "Invisible Insurrection of a Million Minds," A Life in Pieces: Reflections on Alexander Trocchi. Ed. Allan Campbell and Tim Niell. Edinburgh: Rebel, Inc: 164-176.

 

 
 
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