Three thoughts related and disparate provoked by Marcuse. My motivation in all the reading I do is to find answers for my questions regarding the possibilities for and shape of social activism and social transformation.
1) In his book, One-Dimensional Man, Herbert Marcuse writes convincingly about the relationship between capitalism and technology. Technological irrationality is contained by capitalism and thus seems rational. The limited gifts that both capitalism and modern technology have given us make capitalism and industrial technologization appear rational.
2) Marcuse’s book is at least in part an attempt to theorize the possibility of social change. His ambivalent wavering, as Andrew Feenberg has characterized it, comes off as both pessimistic and self-defeating. However, it can also be interpreted as an attempt to provoke a dialectical response and to re-invigorate the drive to action. This is the way I prefer to take his book.
3) On consumerism he writes of how (compulsive, conspicuous, continual) consumption de-politicizes human activity, desires, and interests. If political action, if free time, is found outside of capitalism (selling one’s labour, spending one’s wages), in the spaces of thought, art, and techne, and these spaces are not being sought out or experienced by the masses, what hope do we have for a revolutionary consciousness, for political action, for social change? With my optimistic view that social change directed toward the just treatment of all beings and earth others is still possible, Marcuse offers a program for us to get there.
Peripherally, I want to talk about the troubling phrase “vote with your dollar.” This injunction can be taken in a number of ways, I would like to offer one reading/deconstruction of it. Thinking along Marcusian lines, this phrase encapsulates the ulitmate defeat of any interest in genuine/true/authentic/effective political action. When our disatisfaction can only 'truly' be voiced and measured through consumption we have thoroughly been sucked into the capitalist container. In this sense, I find the phrase noted above troubling because I have so often heard it triumphed by persons interested in alternative social arrangements. While the injunction does certainly pertain in the case of goods that we require to meet our vital needs - whatever they are - it is deeply problematic to herald consumption as the way out of the current political-economic system – indeed, it bespeaks one’s thorough absorption into it.
21/03/2007 Quote from Martin Heidegger:
**As always with Heidegger substitute 'humanity' for 'man' in this passage.
"Man stands so decisively in attendance on the challenging-forth of Enframing that he does not apprehend Enframing as a claim, that he fails to see himself as the one spoken to, and hence also fails in every way to hear in what respect he ex-sists, from our of his essence, in the realm of an exhortation or address, and thus can never encounter only himself" (The Question Concerning Technology, p.27).
22/03/2007
"If one adheres completely to this affirmation of the unavoidability of the current instrumental conception of technology, then it means that one affirms the reign of a process that confines itself to the incessant provision of means without heeding any one positing of ends" (Martin Heidegger, "Traditional and Technological Language" p.137).
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2 comments:
So what would Marcuse think of so-called "ethical" investment funds?
I assume this is rhetorical question.
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