{"id":11893,"date":"2017-08-28T19:20:20","date_gmt":"2017-08-28T17:20:20","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/egophobia.ro\/?p=11893"},"modified":"2017-08-28T18:28:31","modified_gmt":"2017-08-28T16:28:31","slug":"fifty-years-from-guy-debords-la-societe-du-spectaclethe-society-of-the-spectacle","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/egophobia.ro\/?p=11893","title":{"rendered":"Fifty years since Guy Debord\u2019s &#8220;La soci\u00e9t\u00e9 du spectacle\/The society of the spectacle&#8221;"},"content":{"rendered":"<p style=\"text-align: right;\">by Ana Bazac<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">What can one say by remembering Guy Debord\u2019s book? Certainly: reminding the general historical context as well as the political appurtenance of the writer. But also the representativeness of the book and the necessity to go forward from it: because, really, to remain only, implicitly or explicitly, in the nostalgia occasioned by book reviews is no longer enough. But to go forward means to go in the direction emphasised by Debord (1931-1994).<!--more--><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>1<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Therefore, the little book was published in 1967. In an era of aggressive singing of the virtues of the <em>\u201csocial\u201d capitalism<\/em> or <em>state<\/em> (this one was called in French \u201c<em>l\u2019\u00c9tat providence<\/em>\u201d, the <em>providential state<\/em> that \u2013 letting aside the origin of the expression \u2013 has offered to the working classes of the developed countries some or even substantial social benefits, related to both the need of the national monopolies to have internal outlets\/buyers and the necessity to have an internal social peace diverting the radicalisation of masses during the WWII). The social state was of direct Keynesian origin (again letting aside the origins in the conservatism of Bismarck\u2019s Germany aiming at developing in an accelerated manner after the unification of German states and aiming at lest at a neo-colonialist capitalist march in Europe, if not a colonialist space too, in Africa; and letting aside the origin in the catholic conservatism aiming at counteracting the rise of the Western working class conscience): a reformist solution (promoted also in the Northern states and related, there too, to the Great Depression (1929-1933)) that, irrespective of the specific forms where the social aspects were more or less accentuated in different countries, signified the contradiction and exhausting of the <em>monopoly <\/em>phase of capitalism and the transition to <em>state monopoly<\/em> phase that <em>begun<\/em> after 1931\/1932; but it did not avoid the <em>wars<\/em>, as today the neo-liberal\/transnational phase \u00a0did not avoid \u00a0the wars occurred, let say, only after 1990.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">The Western social state coexisted with colonialism and later, neo-colonialism, \u2013 or rather, had a rich source of income from the countries subjected to the economic domination of the West. At the same time, the Western social state was also the result of the transfer of surplus American money, resulted from the huge economic gains of the USA from the war, to the devastated European countries and the severely wounded Japan. The reason and at the same time the consequence of this transfer was the American capitalism\u2019s need to fructify its surplus money (so, to transform it into \u2013 profitable \u2013 capital) and the lack of money of the European and Japanese capitalism, highly indebted during the war, thus not having money for the internal investments for the recovery of the destroyed infrastructure and nor for the payment of debts.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Certainly, the transfer \u2013 donation, and also loans without interest and with a very low interest \u2013 had also a political reason. The European and Japanese destroyed economies meant a high unemployment and low salaries, so the class opposition could but rise. But, at the same time, the American capitalism \u2013 though interested to have in that moment almost full employment in its plants, and certainly profit, because Europe and Japan could but buy and were to buy the American goods \u2013 was absolutely conscious that at the end of the European and Japanese economic recovery, these countries will savagely competing the American economy. This is the reason why the Marshall Plan started only from April 1948, and not before (with all the American aid after 1945): \u00a0actually, since capitalism uses many ways to keep its subjects under its control (as, for example, merciless external wars and domination, internal repression and fear, economic constraint, various ideological manipulation), the American ruling class thought that it will succeed further in obtaining profit from Europe and Japan without the \u201cgift\u201d of donation and loans with no interest and low interest.\u00a0 On the other hand, there certainly were \u201cdebates\u201d in the ruling circle, and the political and military arguments proved to be preponderant towards the economic ones which deplored both the immediate loss generated by the policy of no interest and low interest, and the further loss determined by the future economic competition of Europe and Japan. But to rescue the world from \u201ccommunism\u201d and to have a wide market for its armament seemed to be more pressing.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Briefly, an alert economic recovery and development took place in Europe, the living standards rose and the flourishing \u201ccapitalist way of life\u201d (whose promoter certainly was the \u201cAmerican way of life\u201d), based on consume of material goods and smoothing of the social conscience to the level of petit-bourgeois thirst of the egotistic indifference and easy entertainment of the well-offs, seemed to leave back the harsh problems of legitimacy, beyond the aspect of liberal representative democracy.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>2<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">There were \u2013 indeed, not significant, but anyway \u2013 economic crises in this period and, something graver, horrible wars outside the \u201coasis\u201d of the Western civilization but waged by this civilization; the watchword inside it was to buy and to have fun, and that if the war happens on the other side of the border, we can ignore it: but this watchword was assumed not only by the explicit bourgeois parties and ideological singers, but also by the \u201crespectable left\u201d, the social-democratic type parties and voices. \u201cCapitalism was to develop and assure prosperity for all, through science, technology and, on political level, through social reforms and the democracy of consensus: all of these will elide a bloody revolution that would impose totalitarianism\u201d. As the right, the \u201cleft\u201d also has excluded from the picture offered to masses the problems on international scale: they had in view exclusively their own countries, namely the \u201ccapitalism in a single country\u201d, if I may borrow and paraphrase Trotsky\u2019s formula for Stalin\u2019s theory of \u201csocialism in a single country\u201d. As a result, as the right waged wars for the \u201cvital space\u201d of the Western countries, as the \u201cleft\u201d either eventually formally condemned these wars or, rather, even supported them in the name of the same \u201cnational\u201d egotism and \u201cprestige\u201d: anyhow, but explicitly refusing the original left-wing internationalism. Thus, the problem was not only that social-democracy did no longer differentiate itself from the explicit right and that it refused the class analysis and the paradigm of capital \u2013 becoming incapable, like the explicit right, to understand the social and economic processes \u2013, but also that it narrowed in the same manner as this right did the problem of the meanings of the human life: the ancient precept to do the good <em>for others<\/em> (Aristotle) \u2013 developed in modernity as <em>responsibility <\/em>towards others on the basis that the moral good is only that which is <em>universalisable<\/em> (Kant), and as <em>internationalism<\/em> (Marx), i.e. 1) the others are not only the acquaintances, but also those far away from us, and\u00a0 2) the universalisable moral good can be realised only by destroying the economic and relational logic of power relations\/domination-submission.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Since the dominant \u201cleft\u201d was social-democracy, it\u2019s obvious that its ideology became dominant and that it not only did not leave room for the development of a different left-wing search for alternatives, but it has considered the different, non-social-democratic left-wing organisations as its main enemy. And these ones lost their time in many quarrels between themselves and with social-democracy.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Briefly, in those times the main message about the Western society was euphoric, and it was the frame of the social researches too.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">There were exceptions: and Guy Debord\u2019s <em>Society of the spectacle<\/em> was a brilliant such exception.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>3<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">But let\u2019s finish this general description of the social frame of Debord\u2019s work. After 1967, in 1968 the youth revolt occurred, showing that both the real and imagined affluence were not enough: people needed social ideals and creative jobs, not only some money for a life of modern <em>proles<\/em>. The revolt \u2013 whose one tendency was to unite with the workers of Paris \u2013 was so frightening for the upper classes that, first, they diverted it from class views to deformed manifestations \u2013 as the banal non-conformism (from drugs and \u201csexual revolution\u201d to escapism and nomadism) \u2013 and secondly, they <em>accelerated<\/em> the erection of a huge system of mass entertainment based on individualistic manners of having fun. The official prohibition of drugs \u2013 but not at all of the social causes of drug addiction \u2013 has given them perversely the meaning of anti-establishment protest. And it seemed that, besides the quest for daily fun, not too much would remain to people, since, on the one hand, all real political oppositions vanished and, on the other hand, that the march of capitalism was unstoppable.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Indeed, from the 70s on capitalism has passed from its post-war <em>state monopoly<\/em> phase \u2013 when the capital\u2019s need to have no troubles in its productive process, in order to have merchandises to sell inside the country to the working masses and certainly outside, has determined it to accept the progressive tax system and the development of state ownership, so the compromise of social state \u2013 to the present <em>trans-national<\/em> phase: in order to compete the shrinking markets (since all the countries develop their supply), the big companies have moved their production abroad, in developing or low developed countries where the salaries paid to workers were very low, and anyway much lower than in the Western countries where the social state was to be dismantled only at the latest; since the technological level used by the big companies is similar, the only differentiating factors generating competing profits was and is the level of salaries, and the price of row materials. Therefore, a huge process of <em>de-localisation <\/em>and, at the same time, <em>deregulation<\/em> in the Western countries (dismantling of the former social state\u2019s intervention in economy, i.e. of all the above-mentioned <em>reforms<\/em>) took place. The former social consensus was and is under attack, because capital no longer needs it: on economic level, if the labour-force growls, it is threatened with the loss of jobs; the rest of means of constraint is covered by an aggressive ideological bombardment and by a democracy that annuls mass political participation.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>4<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">\u00a0As a result, the former social-democratic type parties \u2013 and the Western communist ones also have assumed the \u201cyellow\u201d<a href=\"#_edn1\" name=\"_ednref1\">[1]<\/a> social-democratic stance, for example through the \u201ceuro-communist\u201d tenet that considered, ignoring the economic macro-processes and rejecting internationalism in the name of regionalism, that the European social state, democracy and integration within the European Union, will lead this union to a peaceful transformation toward \u201ccommunism\u201d \u2013 entered a profound <em>decay<\/em>. Either they waved the flag of nostalgia for the former social state whose conquests were and are systematically destroyed (especially through privatisation of the former national companies and through deregulation), but they still propose an historically impossible return to it \u2013 because the phases of capitalism are determined by inevitable, objective economic processes \u2013, or they had and have the same neo-liberal policies as the explicit right; they proposed and imposed neo-liberal \u201creforms\u201d, calling the destruction of the former social state \u201creforms\u201d, so with the name of the post-war social policies; they proposed and imposed the austerity that \u201cwould keep the employments, the coming of big trans-national companies to invest and the competitiveness\/ profitable economy\u201d. (Obviously, these policies do not keep the employments and the decent level of general living standards, but only the profit of capital).<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>5<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Why so much economy when one announced a discussion about \u201csuperstructure\u201d? For three reasons.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">First, the problems of the ideas about society cannot be understood only seeing their antecedents in the history of ideas and, certainly, not only interpreting and commenting them. This level of analysis, obviously <em>sine qua non<\/em>, is rather descriptive and the meanings of ideas are related to a causality moving inside the realm of ideas. What is similarly necessary is to relate this realm with the more comprising one, the structures and mechanisms of society, which are more or less visible, and to exclude any legitimating function of ideas for these structures and mechanisms. On the contrary: and the capacity of ideas to describe them is the higher as they penetrate in more profound strata of social reality and link these strata \u00a0with the more visible ones. Actually, only this approach is able to grasp the contradictions of the social phenomena beyond the visibly describable ones. The understanding of macro-economics is thus necessary for the understanding of the determinism of political institutions, processes and ideas.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Secondly, because in the present ideological atmosphere impregnated by the capitalist ideology, the fashionable intellectuals pique themselves that they do understand nothing from economics, but at the same time they offer the opinion that the only good and reasonable economy is the capitalist one. In fact, and this is the third reason, the modern tradition of the intellectuals \u2013 and not only from humanities \u2013 is the neutralist and \u201capolitical\u201d stance as proof of their respectable position, and the sure means for this is the ignorance in economics.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>6<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">After the WWII, the \u201cleft\u201d-wing, and not only the explicit right-wing parties, have advanced in their <em>bureaucratisation<\/em>, \u00a0process showed long ago by Ostrogorski<a href=\"#_edn2\" name=\"_ednref2\">[2]<\/a> and Michels<a href=\"#_edn3\" name=\"_ednref3\">[3]<\/a>, i.e. with their leadership having as agenda the integration within the state, their re-election and their acceptance by the other \u201crespectable\u201d state and party bureaucracies: thus, with an increasing <em>distance<\/em> between this agenda and, on the other hand, the former ideals of the left, as well as on the third hand, the present real agenda of the majority of the population.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Perhaps the main idea thrown in the public space by the \u201cleft\u201d-wing was, a the same time hypocritically praising the social state and proving with this social state that capitalism may be reformed (and thus, it is far better than the \u201cbarrack socialism\u201d) is: it does not need revolution, so all the bearers of contesting messages must be silenced.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>7<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">When we analyse the political frame of ideas about society we have to keep ourselves from making the mistake to reduce the whole picture to the above dominant \u201crespectable\u201d position. Yes, both the \u201cmost modern\u201d explicit right and the social-democratic type parties and ideas were and are partisans of the \u201cpolitical correctness\u201d: they were and are against dictatorship \u2013 and for the \u201conly\u201d democracy, the representative liberal one \u2013 against any political discrimination \u2013 but not against exploitation \u2013 and even against fascism, though the meanings of this last concept are equivocal for them. At any rate, they opposed fascism, but at the same time they did not protest \u2013 or their protest was and is formal, weak, inefficient \u2013 against the rehabilitation of the old fascists (see in Spain, Ukraine) and thus against the rewriting of history: no, since they equated and equate fascism and communism, and fascism fought communism, it would result that fascism is \u201cnot so guilty\u201d or is \u201cthe lesser evil\u201d, would it?<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">They opposed dictatorship but kept silence on\/ignored that dictatorship is only a specific political form of the economic dictatorship of the capital, and that if democracy is transformed by this capital into a farce \u2013 and certainly this farce loses the force to legitimate the domination-submission relations \u2013 this capital as such substitutes it with a new type of political dictatorship: as in present.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Today, they oppose the discriminations considered as aberrations resulted from malign ideas: and thus they keep silence on the <em>structural <\/em>cause of discriminations; but they do this because they <em>accept<\/em> \u2013 as capitalism supports and is depending on \u2013 the social\/class discriminations. Consequently, they oppose only the visible \u2013 certainly very important, but not structural \u2013 discriminations: they speak about equal opportunities for men and women in education, politics and culture, but not about the unequal salaries to equal work; they speak about the equal right to education, but not about unequal social conditions which transform that right into words; they oppose racism, but at the same time they want people be equal, <em>but separate<\/em>. The neo-liberal political correctness diverts attention from structural causes of discriminations, wars, exploitation and lack of hope, thus from class divisions, only to <em>personal \u00a0rights<\/em><a href=\"#_edn4\" name=\"_ednref4\">[4]<\/a> \u2013 those of the \u201catomised, abstract individuals\u201d selected so as their example \u00a0avoid, in the conscience of recipients, the structures of class domination and so as the struggle against discriminations has an abstract universality<a href=\"#_edn5\" name=\"_ednref5\">[5]<\/a> \u2013 <em>separated from the social rights<\/em>, and <em>artificial divisions<\/em> concerning, for example, the marriage of LGBT or concerning even harmful problems: as\u00a0 the \u201cright\u201d of LGBT couples to raise children. For: certainly, if the LGBT persons have the right to civil unions\/partnerships, they have no the right to raise children, whether conceived by one partner or not, because the \u201cright\u201d of LGBT couples infringe the rights of children. Or, the neo-liberal political correctness, absolutely assumed by the present social-democratic \u201cleft\u201d, is sensitive to the rights of \u201csexual workers\u201d, but not to the structural causes of prostitution. In the dominant ideology, the more exotic is the minority that is really or in imagination discriminated, the more suspect seems to be the rights of the class oppressed majority.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>8<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">But the political space was not, and is not, filled only with this type of voices. In those times, the researchers have showed that a majority of the youth, and even of the population, was sceptical towards slogans not only because these ones trumped them but also because their individual security and well-being seemed to be the only reasonable end<a href=\"#_edn6\" name=\"_ednref6\">[6]<\/a>, while the majority of intellectuals was confuse and opportunistic. Individually or politically committed, including as social-democrats, they have contributed to the dissolution of the traditional <em>left culture<\/em>, impregnated with the ideals of emancipation and revolution.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">But there were also rebels. Guy Debord was an example of the challenging voices which were \u2013 as they are today \u2013 wrapped in the conspiracy of silence. He was not the only one, but the formidable pressure of the \u201cdemocratic state\u201d on the challenging messages and personalities was so efficient that rather discontinuity and fragmentation characterised their evolution. Anyway, a main goal of the \u201cdemocratic state\u201d was to stop the connections between the workers from factories and the non-conformist intellectuals.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Guy Debord was a representative of this type of intellectuals. He has continued Paul Lafargue\u2019s <em>Le Droit \u00e0 la paresse <\/em>(1880), the bohemian stance of the old Fran\u00e7ois Villon, the impressionist literature of Baudelaire, and the later expressionism, aas well as Sartre\u2019s existentialism and opposition. First, he became member of Letterism but soon he founded the Letterist international (1952), and more important, the Situationist International (1957). One can read on the net about all of these artistic movements. Here we must notice that, perhaps especially from 1957 on, Guy Debord has developed a system of an explicit social function of art and aesthetics, and critique of capitalism, with avant-garde concepts. This critique started both from the visible phenomena and focus on these visible phenomena (as art), and from a philosophical critique.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">In <em>Rapport sur la construction de situations et sur les conditions de l&#8217;organisation et d l&#8217;action de la tendance situationniste internationale<\/em> (1957), Guy Debord wrote: \u201cFirst, we think that the world must be changed. We want the most liberating transformation of the society and life where we are locked up. We know that this change is possible\u2026To begin, a state of the modern culture from the standpoint of globality (<em>globalit\u00e9<\/em>) must give off an aggregate claiming. Futurism, Dadaism, and surrealism were incorrect from this point of view. \u00a0We must go forward and better rationalise the world, first condition for passionise it\u201d<a href=\"#_edn7\" name=\"_ednref7\">[7]<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">This intention to critique capitalism by critiquing art and culture \u2013 though Debord\u2019s and other members\u2019 of the Situationist International propensity were art and, generally, culture \u2013 was radicalised (i.e. pointing capitalism <em>directly<\/em>, not indirectly) through the connections of Debord with Marxist thinkers (as Henri Lefebvre (1901-1991), see his <em>Critique de la vie quotidienne<\/em>, 1947, and <em>Critique de la vie quotidienne II, Fondements d&#8217;une sociologie de la quotidiennet\u00e9<\/em>, 1961): the critique of capitalist <em>consumerism<\/em> (so, not of modernity as such, but of capitalism) was made from the standpoint of and in order to disclose the <em>intermediary <\/em>stratum of objects between humans and the structural relations \u00a0framing them.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Guy Debord was convinced that without a revolutionary theory there is no revolutionary practice. Does his sound known, does it? In order to make theory, Debord has profoundly studied the modern thinkers, then Hegel, Marx, Lenin and the Russian revolution, anarchists, Bernstein and social-democrat writers, different Marxist writers (as Luk\u00e1cs), Stalin, Trotsky, and the history of the modern era \u201cof revolutions\u201d<a href=\"#_edn8\" name=\"_ednref8\">[8]<\/a>. The result was <em>The society of the spectacle<\/em> that is the most profound, original and critical development of the proletarian theory, after Marx, Lenin and the later representatives of different types of radical thinking. His critique of the Stalinist bureaucracy is far more profound than that of the \u201cdissidents\u201d and in fact it is a critique of these ones too.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">This entire critique is made from the standpoint of the concept of <em>spectacle<\/em>, borrowed from Marx and Sartre. This concept describes \u2013 it is a main form of \u2013 the <em>intermediary-ness<\/em> the capitalist relations of private ownership wear, as if this intermediary-ness would be guilty for the capitalist phenomena, and promote. The spectacle is \u201cthe extreme form of the appropriation of the commune<a href=\"#_edn9\" name=\"_ednref9\">[9]<\/a>, i.e. the politics where we live in\u201d<a href=\"#_edn10\" name=\"_ednref10\">[10]<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">The result of the drowning of the human persons in the intermediary world of objects and spectacle\/spectacle of the world is the sentiment of <em>separation<\/em>: this sentiment is the consequence of economic estrangement, of course, but its presence is the sign of the (situation of) annihilation of the autonomous will of persons aiming at deciding on their own life. The humans are interrelated in such a way that they cannot decide over the deep causes of their situations but together. Just this acting community is capitalism\u2019s enemy which it wants to destroy.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">All the humans, certainly the proletarians first, are made <em>spectators<\/em>\/reduced to be <em>spectators<\/em>. Because: \u201cThe general separation of worker and product tends to eliminate any consistent sense of accomplished activity and any direct personal communication between producers. With the increasing accumulation of separate products and the increasing concentration of the productive process, accomplishment and communication are monopolized by the managers of the system. The triumph of this separation-based economic system <em>proletarianizes <\/em>the whole world\u201d<a href=\"#_edn11\" name=\"_ednref11\">[11]<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">In order to disclose and counter the sentiment of separation, Debord (and the Situationist International) shows concretely \u2013 something very new in the social sciences, only Marx and Engels having done this job; therefore, Debord and his friends were the ground of the development in France of the critical sociology (Bourdieu) and philosophy (especially Deleuze and Guattari) \u2013 how the society of spectacle influences, is powerful and then loses its power.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">The directions considered to countering the theoretical weakness surrounding the proletariat, weakness that generates also its practical, revolutionary weakness, are marked by the sign of the time; thus the suppression of the work in order to suppress the commodity market, which is, in fact, not a new idea, and it is related to the already cited Lafargue\u2019s praise of laziness<a href=\"#_edn12\" name=\"_ednref12\">[12]<\/a>. But the <em>self-management<\/em> and the <em>bottom up<\/em> political organisation (not from top to bottom) are valuable and irrefutable ideas: as the core idea that the <em>image <\/em>form of the capital is the \u201clast metamorphosis of the commodity, where the exchange value has definitely annulled the use value\u201d\/ \u201cThe fetishism of the commodity \u2014 the domination of society by \u201cintangible as well as tangible things\u201d \u2014 attains its ultimate fulfillment in the spectacle, where the real world is replaced by a selection of images which are projected above it, yet which at the same time succeed in making themselves regarded as the epitome of reality\u201d<a href=\"#_edn13\" name=\"_ednref13\">[13]<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">But \u201cthe abundance of commodities \u2014 that is, the abundance of commodity relations \u2014 amounts to nothing more than an <em>augmented survival\u201d<a href=\"#_edn14\" name=\"_ednref14\"><strong>[14]<\/strong><\/a>.<\/em><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">\u201cThe spectacle is the stage at which the commodity has succeeded in <em>totally <\/em>colonizing social life. Commodification is not only visible, we no longer see anything else; the world we see is the world of the commodity. Modern economic production extends its dictatorship both extensively and intensively\u201d<a href=\"#_edn15\" name=\"_ednref15\">[15]<\/a><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">It would be better to stop: because this inherently superficial pointing of main ideas omits the complex and multifaceted analysis Debord made. Indeed, \u201cthe most alarming aspect of Debord\u2019s books is the relentlessness with which history seems to have applied itself to confirming his analyses\u201d<a href=\"#_edn16\" name=\"_ednref16\">[16]<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Let\u2019s give a last example. By speaking about the <em>integrated<\/em> spectacular \u2013 in <em>Commentaires sur la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 du spectacle<\/em>, 1988 \u2013 that was the result of unification of the <em>concentrated<\/em> spectacular (on the figures of dictators in the explicit dictatorships) with the <em>diffuse <\/em>form of the spectacular in rather pre-war democracies, and that \u201chas since tended to impose itself globally\u201d<a href=\"#_edn17\" name=\"_ednref17\">[17]<\/a>, Debord has showed the \u201cAmericanisation\u201d of the global society (we remember, Gramsci too has observed this aspect), namely the generalisation of the <em>domination <\/em>through the form of the society of spectacle, inducing \u2013 as we see nowadays \u2013 a general anomy, an extreme sentiment of vulnerability leading to the fascination for violence, and a general disenchantment marked by saddened obscurantist orientation. The integrated spectacular impose the pattern of absolute <em>non-truth<\/em>, of a <em>simulated<\/em> reality where \u201cthe spectacle has drawn from the <em>outlawing<\/em> of history, from having condemned the recent past to clandestinity, and from having made everyone forget the spirit of history within society, is above all the ability to cover its own history of the movement of its recent world conquest. Its power already seems familiar, as if it had always been there. All usurpers have wanted to make us forget that <em>they have only just arrived<\/em>\u201d<a href=\"#_edn18\" name=\"_ednref18\">[18]<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Do we not see this almost 30 years ago observation as a present chronicle of our era of \u201cpost-truth\u201d? Do we\/at least some of us not consider, as Debord, that \u201ca State, in which one has durably installed a great deficit of historical knowledge so as to manage it, can no longer be governed strategically\u201d<a href=\"#_edn19\" name=\"_ednref19\">[19]<\/a>?<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>9<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Once again, Debord was not alone. But fellows as Raoul Veneigem, the already quoted Henri Lefebvre, Marcuse, From, Ivan Illich, Andr\u00e9 Gorz, the already cited Deleuze and Guattari, Arne Naess, Badiou, Agamben, Negri, Virilio were and are few and, what is more important \u2013 and not only 50 years ago but even today, in the era of Internet \u2013 their voice was and is overwhelmed by the mainstream, including the false left, ideology<a href=\"#_edn20\" name=\"_ednref20\">[20]<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">And though one may observe a positive \u2013 though rather indirect, not (quite) assumed \u2013 influence of the radical social critique on the later analysis of the consume society and on media ecology (Postman, but not at all Marshall McLuhan), in fact, there was and is an ignorance of the Debordian continuity of Marxism by the post Debord thinkers. And see, for example, how \u201cnot in fashion\u201d are Bernard Stiegler, decomposing the symbolic misery and its causes<a href=\"#_edn21\" name=\"_ednref21\">[21]<\/a> and showing new manners to <em>proletarianise<\/em> people<a href=\"#_edn22\" name=\"_ednref22\">[22]<\/a>, or Gianni Vatimo\u2019s <em>The Transparent Society<\/em><a href=\"#_edn23\" name=\"_ednref23\">[23]<\/a> where the is no transparent communication, or Crary\u2019s <em>Ends of Sleep<\/em><a href=\"#_edn24\" name=\"_ednref24\">[24]<\/a>, towards the permanent repetition for 30 years of gender studies and studies of discriminations, and political sciences absolutely broken from economics and structural causes, and having as axioms the undisputable model of Western liberal democracy.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>10<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Not stopping me to mention that the fragmentary and isolated approach of the \u201crespectable\u201d topics reminded above reflects the <em>externalisation<\/em>, by the capital, of the upstream (resources, energy, environment, folks) and downstream (resources, energy, environment, folks) of its concrete businesses which bring profit, I insist that if the scientific research in humanities would have advanced in the trail of Debord, things would appear different. Actually, and mostly in the present post-2008 world crisis, it seems that many researchers began to re-discover \u2013 starting from a neutralist standpoint \u2013 the contradictions of the capitalist society.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">The guilt of most of the scientific research in humanities\u00a0 was \u2013 and is \u2013 that they did not study things by relating economics, politics, culture, ideas, and that they did not analysed their topics from the perspective of <em>totality<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">They, and thus the general public too, would have gain time and perhaps, as a result of their practical indignation, would have avoided at least some historical tragedies reverberating on millions of individual lives.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">But, as Engels noted, people see and understand the course of things only after their development.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Today it seems to many researchers that elegant is to critique. Bu they do not arrive to the discussion of the <em>means<\/em> of transformation. And from this viewpoint, they are backward towards Debord who not only criticised, but pointed the solutions too.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Today, to go forward of Debord is to discuss the urgency of practical indignation.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>11<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Therefore, what is the clue of this reminding of Guy Debord? It is that the post-war history was covered, during the <em>trentes glorieuses<\/em><a href=\"#_edn25\" name=\"_ednref25\">[25]<\/a>, by a dominant ideology whose paradigm was that of the <em>illusion<\/em>. On the one hand, the entire glorification of the social state which, together with the spring of science and technology, \u201cwill bring a universal well-being\u201d seems somehow inherent. On the other hand, the illusion paradigm was really the result of the covering of the world problems by the social state that seemed to be the most prominent, and promising, tendency. Certainly, the concept of social state was instrumentalised by the explicit right-wing and social-democratic \u201cleft\u201d type theories as the main argument of the possibility to reform, to transform capitalism into a \u201csystem with human face\u201d. And both the explicit right-wing and social-democratic \u201cleft\u201d type theories were blind towards the colonialist and neo-colonialist practices of the enlightened Western civilisation, insisting \u2013 as till nowadays<a href=\"#_edn26\" name=\"_ednref26\">[26]<\/a> \u2013 that the well-intentioned aid to the backward countries\/countries left behind in terms of development will help them to surpass this state. No one from the dominant ideology has discussed that the <em>structural <\/em>mechanism of capitalism\/the capitalist competition of private companies need their \u201ccomparative advantages\u201d realised through the unlimited extraction of cheap resources, through the dumping of goods sold by the Western companies, and the use of more than cheap labour force from the entire world exterior<a href=\"#_edn27\" name=\"_ednref27\">[27]<\/a> to the Western home of the big private companies.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">But the illusion paradigm consisted not only in the avoiding of a global view on capitalism, but also in eschewing the methodological problem of the narrowness resulted from the reduction of \u201cprogress\u201d and well-being only to a buying\/material accumulation fever.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">The illusion paradigm was avoided only by non-conformist intellectuals who, because this situation was (and is, is it?) not at all comfortable, were few. This was the reason, together with the power of the illusion paradigm, of the avatars and weak efficiency of the general critique made outside and against the current.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">\u00a0 But today, as a result of the perilous agglomeration of the consequences of capitalism, neither this illusion paradigm nor its support by the intellectuals is understandable. Actually, the power of domination and the inertia of intellectual conformism \u2013 if not aggressively, at least being mum \u2013 are still dominant, but the contradiction between the dominant tenet and the real facts is not only dangerously huge but more and more not believed and not assumed by the recipients it is destined to. They are away from this tenet, are silent because of their estrangement, but also wait, begin to think, oppose, are again reduced to silence by the treacherous unions and parties, become disappointed but, when all is said and done, no more believe the Sirens.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">The clue of the present pages is to warn about the present reason to be of the social theory.<\/p>\n<p>#<\/p>\n<p>Notes<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><a href=\"#_ednref1\" name=\"_edn1\">[1]<\/a> Already in the first years of the 1900, this reformist social-democracy was called yellow, or traitor of the working masses.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><a href=\"#_ednref2\" name=\"_edn2\">[2]<\/a> Moisei Ostrogorski, <em>Democracy and the Organisations of Political Parties<\/em>, Translated by F. Clarke, London, 1902.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><a href=\"#_ednref3\" name=\"_edn3\">[3]<\/a> Roberto Michels, <em>Zur Soziologie des Parteiwessens in der modernen Demokratie: Untersuchungen \u00fcber die oligarchischen Tendenzen des Gruppenlebens<\/em> (1910), Leipzig, 1925.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><a href=\"#_ednref4\" name=\"_edn4\">[4]<\/a> Those of the right \u201dto control one\u2019s own body\u201d and \u201dfreely express one\u2019s own bodily feelings\u201d.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><a href=\"#_ednref5\" name=\"_edn5\">[5]<\/a> Bruno Guigue, <em>La supercherie du droit-de-l\u2019hommisme<\/em>,\u00a0 24 ao\u00fbt 2017, <a href=\"http:\/\/www.comite-valmy.org\/spip.php?article8920\">http:\/\/www.comite-valmy.org\/spip.php?article8920<\/a><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><a href=\"#_ednref6\" name=\"_edn6\">[6]<\/a> Helmut Schelsky\u2019s 1957 book <em>Die skeptische Generation<\/em>. An interesting remark tied to the problem emphasised in the book is Hans Bertram\u2019s <em>From the Skeptical to the Overburdened Generation<\/em>, 2012, <a href=\"http:\/\/www.congrex.no\/filestore\/Klientweb_bilder\/ESFR2012\/BertramSkeptical-OverburdenedGeneration.pdf\">http:\/\/www.congrex.no\/filestore\/Klientweb_bilder\/ESFR2012\/BertramSkeptical-OverburdenedGeneration.pdf<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><a href=\"#_ednref7\" name=\"_edn7\">[7]<\/a> Translation of the <em>Rapport i<\/em>nserted in Ghislain Vergnes, <em>Guy Debord et la philosophie subversive <\/em><em>r\u00e9alis\u00e9e<\/em>, Toulouse, 2007, p. 6.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><a href=\"#_ednref8\" name=\"_edn8\">[8]<\/a> Debord has borrowed from Lautr\u00e9amont the technique of anonym and misappropriated citations, but he warned both the editors and readers. See Guy-Ernest Debord &amp; Gil J. Wolman, \u201dMode d\u2019emploi du d\u00e9tournement\u201d, <em>Les l\u00e8vres nues<\/em>, n\u00b0 8, mai 1956, pp. 2-9, and Guy Debord, <em>Relev\u00e9 des citations et des d\u00e9tournements de &#8220;La Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 du spectacle&#8221;<\/em>, 1973, <a href=\"http:\/\/juralibertaire.over-blog.com\/article-releve-des-citations-et-des-detournements-de-la-societe-du-spectacle-42307956.html\">http:\/\/juralibertaire.over-blog.com\/article-releve-des-citations-et-des-detournements-de-la-societe-du-spectacle-42307956.html<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><a href=\"#_ednref9\" name=\"_edn9\">[9]<\/a> The commune\/community privately appropriated generates a false transparency\u00a0 &#8211; see the present social media where a lot of noise and garbage, i. e. irrelevant, superfluous information, that adds nothing to the understanding of the human beings, seems to be the supreme form of transparency \u2013 and, anyway, a loss of time (see Chapter 6 in <em>The society of the spectacle<\/em>, Translated by Ken Knabb, Canberra, Hobgoblin Press, 2002) and lack of culture: \u201cAs culture becomes completely commodified it tends to become the star commodity of spectacular society\u201d, Chapter 8, Negation and Consumption Within Culture, thesis 193).<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><a href=\"#_ednref10\" name=\"_edn10\">[10]<\/a> Giorgio Agamben, <em>Gloses marginales aux &#8220;Commentaires sur la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 du spectacle&#8221;<\/em>, 1990, <a href=\"http:\/\/juralibertaire.over-blog.com\/article-20137929.html\">http:\/\/juralibertaire.over-blog.com\/article-20137929.html<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><a href=\"#_ednref11\" name=\"_edn11\">[11]<\/a> <em>The society of the spectacle<\/em>, Chapter 1, The culmination of separation, thesis 26.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><a href=\"#_ednref12\" name=\"_edn12\">[12]<\/a>\u00a0 This idea did not disappear today. See Tom Hodgkinson and Matthew De Abaitua (eds.), <em>The Idler\u2019s Companion: An Anthology of Lazy Literature<\/em>, London, 4<sup>th<\/sup> Estate, 1996; Tom Hodgkinson, <em>How to be idle <\/em>(2004), New York, HarperCollins Publishers, 2005; <em>The Idler,<\/em> <a href=\"http:\/\/www.idler.co.uk\/\">http:\/\/www.idler.co.uk<\/a>. For the entire problem of work, see Ana Bazac, \u201cWork is Not Freedom; or is it?\u201d, <em>Studia Universitatis \u201eBabes-Bolyai\u201d, Philosophia<\/em>, Volume 57 (LVII), 2\/2012, pp. 65-80.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">\u00a0\u00a0 But we must mention that to this idea of laziness \u201cfrom the left\u201d a laziness from the right is added. On the one hand, capitalism <em>intensifies<\/em> exploitation, in the economic sense of the verb, and letting aside the multiplication of holidays.\u00a0 On the other hand, it develops the <em>ideal<\/em> of <em>dolce far niente<\/em> (as if life would be a permanent tourism and\/or as if work would not need real qualification end effort \u2013 to research and create, not the effort of the classical physical work because of automation \u2013 but only superficial cognisance of \u201cbusiness administration\u201d that makes everybody a CEO).<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><a href=\"#_ednref13\" name=\"_edn13\">[13]<\/a> <em>The society of the spectacle<\/em>, Chapter II, The commodity as spectacle, thesis 36.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><a href=\"#_ednref14\" name=\"_edn14\">[14]<\/a> <em>The society of the spectacle<\/em>, Chapter II, The commodity as spectacle, thesis 40.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><a href=\"#_ednref15\" name=\"_edn15\">[15]<\/a> <em>Idem<\/em>, thesis 42.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><a href=\"#_ednref16\" name=\"_edn16\">[16]<\/a> Giorgio Agamben, op. cit. (V).<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><a href=\"#_ednref17\" name=\"_edn17\">[17]<\/a> Guy Debord, <em>Comments on the Society of the Spectacle<\/em>, 1988, <strong><a href=\"http:\/\/www.notbored.org\/commentaires.html\">http:\/\/www.notbored.org\/commentaires.html<\/a><\/strong>, IV.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><a href=\"#_ednref18\" name=\"_edn18\">[18]<\/a> Guy Debord, <em>Comments on the Society of the Spectacle<\/em>, 1988, <strong><a href=\"http:\/\/www.notbored.org\/commentaires.html\">http:\/\/www.notbored.org\/commentaires.html<\/a><\/strong>, VI.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><a href=\"#_ednref19\" name=\"_edn19\">[19]<\/a> <em>Idem<\/em>, VII.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><a href=\"#_ednref20\" name=\"_edn20\">[20]<\/a> See Ana Bazac, \u201dWhat Kind of Criticism should the Intellectuals Endeavour? The Political Mainstream\u2019s Celebration of Octavio Paz\u2019s Rupture with the Left\u201d, <em>Analele Universit\u0103\u0163ii din Craiova, Seria Filosofie<\/em>, 39 (1), 2017, pp. 117-139.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><a href=\"#_ednref21\" name=\"_edn21\">[21]<\/a> Bernard Stiegler, De la mis\u00e8re symbolique 1. L\u2019\u00e9poque hyperindustrielle , Paris, Galil\u00e9e, 2004, followed by <em>The Decadence of Industrial Democracies: Disbelief and Discredit, 1<\/em>, Cambridge, Polity Press, 2011.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><a href=\"#_ednref22\" name=\"_edn22\">[22]<\/a> Bernard Stiegler, <em>La Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 automatique 1. L&#8217;avenir du travail<\/em>, Paris, Fayard, 2015: \u201cthe proletarianization of minds and, more precisely, the proletarianization of the noetic faculties of theorization and in this sense of scientific, moral, aesthetic and political deliberation \u2015 (is) combined with the proletarianization of sensibility and affect in the twentieth century, and with the proletarianization of the gestures of the worker in the nineteenth century\u201d\u2026\u201d proletarianization of theoretical knowledge, which is critical knowledge\u201d\u2026.\u201d The proletarianization of the gestures of work amounts to the proletarianization of the conditions of the worker\u2019s <em>sub<\/em>-sistence.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">\u00a0 The proletarianization of sensibility, of sensory life, and the proletarianization of social relations, all of which are replaced by conditioning, amounts to the proletarianization of the conditions of the citizen\u2019s <em>ex-<\/em>sistence.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">\u00a0 The proletarianization of minds or spirits, that is, of the noetic faculties enabling theorization and deliberation, is the proletarianization of the conditions of scientific <em>con-<\/em>sistence (including the human and social sciences)\u201d.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><a href=\"#_ednref23\" name=\"_edn23\">[23]<\/a> Gianni Vattimo, <em>The Transparent Society<\/em>, London, Polity, 1992.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><a href=\"#_ednref24\" name=\"_edn24\">[24]<\/a> Jonathan Crary, <em>24\/7: Terminal Capitalism and the Ends of Sleep<\/em>, London and New York, Verso Books, 2013: the analysis of the devouring of time by capital, for which the sleep is a loss for business and manipulation, is a good continuation of Debord.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><a href=\"#_ednref25\" name=\"_edn25\">[25]<\/a> <em>Les trentes glorieuses<\/em>, the French name of the glorious 30 years of the post-war social state.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><a href=\"#_ednref26\" name=\"_edn26\">[26]<\/a> See Ana Bazac, \u201dGlobal injustice: what is known, what is assumed and what is promised?\u201d, <em>Studia UBB, Philosophia<\/em>, 58 (2013), No.2, pp. 145-157 (referring to Thomas Pogge etc.).<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><a href=\"#_ednref27\" name=\"_edn27\">[27]<\/a> And not even only exterior. See only the natural and social ravages produced in the USA by the shale gas exploitation.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>by Ana Bazac What can one say by remembering Guy Debord\u2019s book? Certainly: reminding the general historical context as well as the political appurtenance of the writer. But also the representativeness of the book and the necessity to go forward from it: because, really, to remain only, implicitly or explicitly, in the nostalgia occasioned by [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"jetpack_post_was_ever_published":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_access":"","_jetpack_dont_email_post_to_subs":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_tier_id":0,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paywalled_content":false,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[1286,27],"tags":[613,1287,1123,1117],"class_list":["post-11893","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-egophobia-51","category-filosofie","tag-ana-bazac","tag-egophobia-51","tag-english","tag-filosofie"],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"jetpack_shortlink":"https:\/\/wp.me\/p6DakB-35P","_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/egophobia.ro\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/11893","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/egophobia.ro\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/egophobia.ro\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/egophobia.ro\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/egophobia.ro\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=11893"}],"version-history":[{"count":4,"href":"https:\/\/egophobia.ro\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/11893\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":11899,"href":"https:\/\/egophobia.ro\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/11893\/revisions\/11899"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/egophobia.ro\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=11893"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/egophobia.ro\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=11893"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/egophobia.ro\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=11893"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}