"Politics
and the Limits of Modernity"
Thesis: Laclau's focal point of the theory centers on
anti-foundationalism, which derives from Heidegger's conception of the
dissolution of categories. The emphasis on radical contingence provides
a way to 'weaken' the contents of the project of modernity.
- Introduction:
Generally speaking, Laclau
deals with postmodernity from a positive viewpoint.
As for him, postmodernity can manifest its radical contingence
to challenge the foundations of modernity. That is to say,
postmodernity focuses on anti-foundationalism and it attempts
to weaken the logic of the construction between social and
cultural identities. |
A. Laclau's view of postmodernity:
1. "Postmodernity has advanced by means
of two converging intellectual operations. . . which share one characteristic:
the attempt to establish boundaries, that is to say, to separate an
ensemble of historical features and phenomena (postmodern) from others
also appertaining to the past and that can be grouped under the rubric
of modernity." (329)
- What's the importance of these two
operations? Both of them serve as radical ways to establish the
boundaries of modernity
a). "The first announces a weakening
of the metaphysical and rationalist pretensions of modernity, by way
of challenging the foundational status of certain narratives." (329)
- . "The second challenges not the ontological
status of narrative as such, but rather the current validity of
metanarratives, which unified the totality of the historical experience
of modernity within the project of global, human emancipation
- Postmodernity is an ensemble of pre-theoretical
references that establish certain 'family resemblance's' among
its diverse manifestations, that is suggested by the process of erosion
and disintegration of such categories as 'foundation,' 'new,' 'identity,'
'vanguard,' and so on. (330)
- Postmodernity cannot be a simple rejection
of modernity, rather, it involves a different modulation of its themes
and categories, a greater proliferation of its language-games. (330)
- It is precisely the ontological status
of the central categories of the discourses of modernity, and not
their content, this is at stake; that the erosion of this this status
is expressed through the 'postmodern sensibility; and that this erosion,
far from being a negative phenomenon, represents an enormous amplification
of the content and operability of the values of modernity, making
it possible to ground them on foundations much more solid than those
of the Enlightenment project. (332)
-
Language and
Reality:
This part is very significant,
for it unfolds Laclau's central idea and it is also in relation
to the following sections of discussion. First, Laclau deconstructs
traditional structuralism. Saussurean theory of linguistics is
the target of his argument. Laclau shows us the analysis of the
ambiguities between the signifier and the signified. There is
no fixed character of the signifier/the signified relation. |
And then, he generalizes this analysis into
two points: context is changeable and every identity is relational.
Second, in this sense, Laclau skillfully applies the ambiguous feature
of language to the explanation of the social action.
As for him, the 'social' itself is a discourse
and it is in the form of discursive sequences that articulate linguistic
and extra linguistic elements, which leads the society to plurality.
- The crisis of linguistic model in
structuralism:
- Where is the crisis?
"The crisis consisted precisely in the increasing difficulty
of defining the limits of language, or, more accurately, of defining
the specific identity of
the linguistic object." (332)
- Saussurean theory of linguistics
as an example: it exposes a set of ambiguities between the signifier
and the signified. (333)
- three moments to transcend
the ambiguities: (333)
- . ¡§[O]ne of the fundamental oppositions
of this system was required to be externally defined, thus confining
linguistic formalism within a new limits. Beyond this point, it
was impossible to posit a 'linguistics of discourse', if by discourse
we mean a linguistic unit greater than the sentence."
- . "In this second moment of the radicalization
of structuralism, the stable character of the relation between signifier
and the signified had not, however, been questioned; only the structural
isomorphism between the two had been broken. The boundaries of linguistics
had been expanded, but the immediacy and the characteristic of full
presence of its objects were only reaffirmed." (333)
. "The quasi-Cartesian transparency that
structural formalism had established between the purely relational
identities of the linguistic system served only to make them more
vulnerable to any new system of relations." (334) A double
movement in the crisis of the immediacy of the sign: "While the signified
was less closed within itself and could be defined only in relation
to a specific context, the limits of that context were increasing
less well defined." (334)
- The unfixed character of all
identities:
1. Example: Democracy is a floating signifier.
(335)
The term 'democracy' has a radical
ambiguity, which subverts the fixity of the sign. This ambiguity
is precisely what gives the context its openness.
2. Three consequences come after a floating
signifier.
- . The concept of discourse is not linguistic
but prior to the distinction between the linguistic and extralinguistic.
- . The relational character of discourse
is precisely what permits the generalization of the linguistic model
within the ensemble of social relations.
- . The radical relationalism of social
identities increases their vulnerability to new relations and introduces
within them the effect of ambiguity.
- The difference of discourses between
modernity and postmodernity (335-36)
- Modernity: The discourses of modernity
characterize their pretension is to dominate the foundation of the
social, to give a rational context to the notion of the totality
of history, and to base in the project of a global human emancipation.
- Postmodernity: The fully present
identity is threatened by an ungraspable exterior that introduces
a dimension of opacity and pragmatism into the pretended immediacy
and transparency of its categories. It weakens the absolutist pretensions
of concepts. However, this 'weakening.' does not in any way negate
the contents of the project of modernity; it shows only the radical
vulnerability of those contents to a plurality of contexts that
redefine them in an unpredictable way.
- Capitalism,
Uneven Development, and Hegemony
Laclau continues his assertion
of radically relational character of identity and further
employs this conception to analyze politics. In this part,
he takes Marxism for an example and challenges the logic of
foundations in the Marxist tradition. |
- Weaknesses/Limits of a central tenet
of Marxism (336-337)
- Capitalism exists only by dint of the
constant transformation of the means of production and the increasing
dissolution of preexisting social relations.
- The history of capitalism is, on the
one hand, the history of the progressive destruction of the social
relations generated by it and, on the other, the history of its
border with social forms exterior to it.
- The relation of exteriority can be
internally defined, since every exterior relation is destined a
priori to succumb as a result of capitalist expansion.
- The internal logic of capital comes
to constitute the relational substrate of History, and the advent
of socialism is thought to be made possible only by the results
of the internal contradictions of capitalism.
- Nodal moments of ambiguity in the history
of Marxism (Laclau's views)
- . Uneven and combined development
- . Hegemony
- Employment of post-Marxism to deconstruct
Marxist tradition:
1. Two examples: Sorel and Gramsci
2. The stance of post-Marxism: Basically,
'post-Marxism' is not an 'ex-Marxism', for it entails an active involvement
in its history and in the discussion of its categories. (339)
3. Declarations:
- . The abandonment of the faith in the
"universal class" and in the unity of Marxism.
- . The rejection of the myth
of foundations.
- . To construct a radical imaginary:
it means trying to insert the isolated struggles within a wider
horizon that 'totalizes' an ensemble of an experience.
- To establish a radical political
discourse.
-
The Process of Arguing and Common Sense (341-42)
Laclau tries to redefine
the categories, such as common sense and tradition, which
we take it for granted.
A. Society can then be
understood as a vast argumentative texture through which
people construct their own identity.
B. Abandonment of the myth
of foundations does not lead to nihilism; it leads to a
proliferation of discursive interventions and arguments
that are necessary, because there is no extradiscursive
reality that discourse might simply reflect.
|
- Argument and discourse constitute the
social, their open-ended character becomes the source of a greater
activism and a more radical libertarianism.
- The dissolution of the myth of
foundations - and the concomitant dissolution of the category 'subject'
- further radicalizes the emancipatory possibilities offered by the
Enlightenment and Marxism.
- Social agents are never 'humans' in general.
They appear in concrete situations and are constituted by precise
and limited discursive networks, In this sense, lack of grounding
does not abolish the meaning of human beings' acts, it only affirms
their limits, their finitude, and their historicity.
-
Global Emancipation
and Empty Signifiers (342-43)
¡@
Laclau makes the concept of empty signifiers clearer and
redefines the global emancipation by telling from the difference between
the foundation and the horizon.
- Empty signifiers:
- Any identity is ambiguous insofar as
it is unable to constitute itself as a precise difference within
a closed totality.
- The degree of fixity of a signifier
varies in inverse proportion to the extent of its circulation in
a given discursive formation.
- A signifier is emptied when
it is disengaged from a particular signified and comes to symbolize
a long chain of equivalent signifieds.
- The difference between the foundation
and the horizon:
- The foundation:
- It is a relation of delimitation and
determination.
- It is unified or totalized.
- It suffices to posit an egalitarian
logic whose limits of operation are given by the concrete argumentative
practices existing in a society.
- The horizon:
- It is open-ended.
- It is a formation without foundation.
- It is an empty locus, a point in which
society symbolizes its very groundlessness, in which concrete argumentative
practices operate over a backdrop of radical freedom, or radical
contingency.'
- Questions:
- What's the difference between 'democracy'
and 'radical democracy'?
- Do you agree Laclau's opinion that democracy
is impossible without the abandonment of the universal discourse?
Postmodern
Theories and Texts
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