MY INITIAL PURPOSE WAS TO REFLECT ON THE UNAVOIDABLE, AND OFTEN UNDERVALUED,
NEGATIVE DIMENSION OF ANARCHISM—BUT I SOON REALISED THIS FORCED ME TO LEAVE
ASIDE ITS ENTIRE POSITIVE ASPECT
~ Tomás Ibáñez, Redes Libertarias ~
When I turned on my computer to begin writing this text, I was tempted to title
it: “A passionate praise of the negativity of anarchism,” since my purpose was
precisely to reflect on this unavoidable, and often undervalued, dimension of
anarchism. However, I soon realised that this forced me to leave aside a good
part of what constitutes anarchism. Specifically, the whole positive aspect that
also defines it was marginalised. So, to remedy this unfortunate amputation, I
had no choice but to undertake the elaboration of a second article that would be
titled this time: “Enthusiastic apology for the anarchist dream and its
intermittent embodiments in reality”.
Now, since my commitment was to deliver a single article to Redes Libertarias, I
finally decided to give up that first title and to merge both reflections into a
single text. It would not be appropriate to relate here this anecdote, which is
typical of the private sphere of the author of this article and is devoid of the
slightest substantial interest, if it were not for the fact that the decision to
unite the two reflections has had for me the beneficial effect of putting the
focus on the dilemma intrinsic to anarchism itself. Indeed, from that decision I
have come to perceive it as an entity cut from the same pattern as the two-faced
deity called Janus in ancient Rome, endowed with two diametrically opposed
faces, but inseparably united.
ANARCHIST RADICAL NEGATIVITY
To illustrate anarchist negativity, one can refer to Mikhail Bakunin, who saw in
“the passion for destruction a creative passion,” or to Max Stirner, who
considered that “the eradication of fixed ideas” (his famous spooks) that
permeate our minds was the condition for destroying our docile submission to the
execrable authority of the established order. However, apart from these
historical references, this negativity is based, in my opinion, on two of the
various basic characteristics of anarchism. The first is its scrupulous respect
for the autonomy of individuals and collectives, as well as for the inalienable
principle of self-organisation. The second is its radical refusal to reproduce
what it intends to combat.
Let no one think or decide for you, let no one organise your life, or the form
of your struggle, are expressions that resonate strongly in the anarchist
sphere. This respect for autonomy leads anarchists to reject without hesitation
any temptation to inject struggles from outside with the principles that should
guide them, the forms that they should take and the goals that they should
pursue. All these elements must be formed within the struggles themselves and be
the direct work of their protagonists, without anything coming from outside of
them channelling them (not even anarchism itself). This is the necessary
condition for not violating the full autonomy of those who rise up against the
devices of domination, oppression and exploitation that govern our societies.
It also turns out that, if autonomy is truly valued, as anarchism claims to do,
it is only achieved by practising it, and that this peculiarity prevents any
type of intervention external to the autonomous process itself. Autonomy is an
integral part of the action that strives to achieve it, or in other words,
autonomy cannot be achieved in any other way than through its own exercise.
Respecting the autonomy of those who lead the struggles therefore implies
rejecting any vanguardism and state control, and requires abstaining from
formulating positive proposals (whether of an organisational nature, setting
objectives, or defining ways of acting) that do not arise from the struggle
itself. Based on these basic considerations, all that remains is to strive to
contribute to dismantling the mechanisms and instruments of oppression that
impede the exercise of autonomy, without introducing into this exercise our own
schemes, our principles and purposes, since these have been predefined in other
struggles and in other historical circumstances.
Athens, 16 November 2024. Photo: Alexis Daloumis
Anarchism is thus presented as an instrument of destruction of the established
order, allowing the practices developed in the struggles to shape alternatives,
material achievements and general principles, gradually tracing, through
situated practices, the path to follow.
This does not mean that when anarchists get involved in a struggle they should
leave their own weapons, ideas and proposals off the battlefield; they carry
them with them and it would be absurd to ask them to give up their way of
thinking, being and acting. It is simply a matter of letting oneself be carried
away, as much as possible, by the dynamics drawn up by the struggle instead of
trying to direct it decisively, since there is always the possibility of leaving
it if, at some point, it contradicts one’s own convictions and schemes.
The second basic characteristic of anarchism, in relation to the subject
addressed here, is established in its radical refusal to generate, in its own
course, effects of domination and mechanisms of oppression. Using an expression
that I owe to my comrade Rafa Cid, it is a matter of anarchism being literally
“indominant” in order to be consistent with its own presuppositions, that is,
devoid of the effects of domination. Now, to the extent that we are totally
immersed in the system we combat, it is inevitable that it leaves certain traces
of that which characterises it in our way of being and in our proposals. This
means that it is difficult to avoid the logic of domination leaving traces in
what we think and build because we always do so from within the system in which
we live.
Formulations and realisations that are radically foreign to the existing system,
and contrary to its characteristics, can only arise from that which it does not
control or contaminate. In other words, the new, the radical creation, emerges
in the spaces that escape the system and that means that this “new world that we
carry in our hearts” can only be thought of and emerge from outside the system
that we fight, that is, from its ruins. Consequently, the task of anarchism is
to bring about the collapse of the system, reducing it to simple ruins on which
truly different flowers can sprout, which clearly places it in the realm of
radical negativity.
This is precisely considering that what we have the capacity to project before
having destroyed what exists, will always bear its marks, since it is formed
into what we project. That is the reason why Max Stirner advocated replacing the
concept of revolution, aimed at promoting a social form that substitutes the
existing one, with the concept of a permanent insurrection against the
established. An insurrection that does not seek to overthrow the current social
institution to replace it with a new social institution arising from a
hypothetical revolution, but rather limits itself to attacking at every turn the
current one that is unbearable.
Whether we consider the first of the two characteristics of anarchism that I
have mentioned, or the second, it is clear that anarchism places resistance
against the current system at the centre of the game, allowing this resistance
against the established power to create the conditions for building, on the
ruins of what has been overthrown, the guidelines for values different from
those that exist, and for social forms that are alternative to those that are in
force.
Dresden, 24 November 2024. Photo: de.indymedia.org
What concerns anarchism in this process is, basically, to contribute to the
destruction of what has been established, and to continue practising resistance
as soon as alternative social forms have been established, which, by the way,
are not prefigured in anarchism, but will eventually be created by the
autonomous struggles themselves in the process of destroying capitalism.
THE ESSENTIAL ANARCHIST DREAM
In contrast to the stubborn negativity of anarchism, in accordance with its most
defining principles, it is, of course, its second face that explains why it
arouses such fervour among those of us who are framed within its coordinates.
The pleasure that comes from feeling part of an extraordinary tradition of
struggle and a magnificent historical experience that ignores borders and
crosses cultures is as important to our self-definition as anarchists as the
corpus of libertarian writings that forge our identity and that form a shared
culture or the practices of solidarity and mutual support that weave the
libertarian space.
It does not matter if the obstacles that the utopia that inspires us faces seem
insurmountable, the hope of overcoming them at some point is key to encouraging
the spirit of struggle, and even to maintaining the intensity of resistance.
Although negativity is considered the most coherent perspective of anarchism, it
is still true that fighting for something and not just against something, as
well as pursuing objectives and trying to get other people to share them, gives
a strong impulse to the struggles and gives them a different tone, much more
convivial and more optimistic than that which emanates from pure negativity.
To build and live in the present some of the aspects of the anarchist dream, to
experience the camaraderie that is forged in the heat of shared ideas and common
desires, to feel the union in the elaboration of shared projects and the
enthusiasm of participating in their realisation, all of this is irreplaceable
in the configuration of anarchism. To imagine what does not exist, but which,
nevertheless, could come to be, and to cherish the promises that nest in utopia,
are elements that contribute to forging an identity that makes us feel part of a
beloved community in which we immerse ourselves by our own choice and decision,
and not by obligations of a legal, labour, national, gender or family order,
among many other sources of ascribed determinations.
Now, could it be that those aspects of anarchism that are, ultimately, those
that motivate to a large extent our harmony with its postulates and with its
work, turn out to be contradictory with the essential negativity of anarchism?
Could it be that the establishment of principles, the definition of goals, the
elaboration of models of society, the constitution of a specific identity, the
formation of a culture of its own, with its symbols, its memory, its emblematic
figures, etc., violates its indominant character, causing that when the
anarchist dream becomes involved in a struggle, it is blown up in relation to
the full autonomy of those who have undertaken it?
AS AN UNCERTAIN CONCLUSION
It seems quite clear that, on the one hand, anarchist negativity and, on the
other, the intoxicating anarchist dream do not simply represent different
aspects of the same entity. They are not different but complementary elements,
but rather clearly antagonistic aspects. In fact, negativity and the anarchist
dream are simply incompatible. In other words, the anarchist dream is opposed to
that which anarchist negativity pursues, and makes it impossible for the latter
to achieve its objectives of preserving the autonomy of the struggles and of the
collectives that lead them. By penetrating the struggles, wrapped in its
valuable and precious attributes, it is clear that anarchism injects into them
principles elaborated outside of them.
In short, the anarchist dream puts the indominant character of anarchism in a
difficult position, leading it to contradict its own anti-state-control
principles and its radical commitment to autonomy. For its part, anarchist
negativity completely marginalises, and practically eliminates, everything that
makes anarchism attractive and rich, considering that the anarchist dream is far
from indominant, and is, so to speak, insufficiently anarchist. Thus, it seems
that the only thing that can be done is to recognise that anarchism has an
intrinsic dilemma, and to note that two clearly antagonistic and undeniably
contradictory entities coexist within it.
Tomás Ibáñez
However, the contradictory does not have to be disqualified and rejected on
principle, since Aristotelian logic does not rest on any imperative and absolute
mandate. In addition to the existence of other types of logic (and there are
some…) it is also worth bearing in mind that certain realities can be
simultaneously antagonistic and symbiotic (power and freedom perfectly
illustrate this figure).
Perhaps the richness of anarchism lies precisely in knowing how to maintain the
constant tension between its two facets, assuming that it is precisely the
contradiction that they draw that preserves it from falling into the placid
immobility of things that are unproblematic or that are presented as such.
Anarchism is what lives and moves at the precise point where there is an extreme
tension between these two irremediably opposed, but intimately intertwined,
facets of wanting to live collectively free, while at the same time wanting to
live radically indominant.
It is precisely its inability to keep this tension alive that leads a good part
of anarchism to underestimate the importance of the negativity that
characterises it and to privilege what I have called here the anarchist dream.
However, it turns out that focusing on the anarchist dream leads to experiencing
a certain frustration in the face of the evidence that its realisation only
manages to materialise, and in a partial way, in relatively small spaces and in
few numbers. This frustration, which does not have to lead to taking refuge in
inaction, sometimes encourages resorting to the search for scapegoats instead of
proceeding to a calm analysis of the reasons for this stagnation, and to the
exercise of a certain self-criticism in the face of one’s own inadequacies.
To the extent that post-structuralism, conceptualised by, among others, Michel
Foucault, Gilles Deleuze, or Jacques Derrida (which should not be confused with
the American offspring of French Theory, nor with the broken bag of
postmodernism) has put into question certain postulates that anarchism inherited
from the Enlightenment, such as, among many others, and to mention here just two
examples, the belief in grand narratives or the confidence in progress, it has
been quite easy to make post-structuralism and its thinkers the scapegoat
responsible for this stagnation and the weakening of the vigour of the class
struggle and the fragmentation of the fronts of struggle. The worrying thing is
that this focus on the search for scapegoats ignores the fact that the drastic
changes experienced by capitalism and the societies it shapes make certain
models of confrontation with the system inoperative because they are outdated
and cause those who cling to them to stagnate.
Carefully scrutinising these changes is the first condition for inventing and
articulating new forms of struggle that dismantle the established system and
open paths to another way of life closer to the anarchist dream.
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Edited machine translation
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