
One of the most prominent intellectuals in the contemporary world was named to the list of the âTop 100 Global Thinkersâ in Foreign Policy magazine in 2012. He shares this distinction with the likes of Dick Cheney, Recep Tayyip ErdoÄan, Benjamin Netanyahu, and former Mossad director Meir Dagan. The theoristâs best ideaâaccording to this well-known publication that is a virtual arm of the U.S. State Departmentâis that âthe big revolution the left is waiting for will never come.â
Other ideas were surely strong contenders, and we could add to the list more recent positions. To select but a few examples, this top global thinker has described 20th-century communism, and more specifically Stalinism, as âmaybe the worst ideological, political, ethical, social (and so on) catastrophe in the history of humanity.â As a matter of fact, he adds for emphasis that âif you measure at some abstract level of suffering, Stalinism was worse than Nazism,â apparently regretting that the Red Army under Stalin defeated the Nazi war machine. The Third Reich was not as âradicalâ in its violence as communism, he insists, and âthe problem with Hitler was that he was not violent enough.â Perhaps he could have taken some tips from Mao Zedong who, according to this theoretical grandee, made a âruthless decision to starve tens of millions to death.â This undocumented assertion positions its author well to the right of the anti-communist Black Book of Communism, which recognized that Mao did not intend to kill his compatriots. Such information is of no import, however, to this theorist since he operates on the assumption that the worst âcrime against humanityâ in the modern world was not Nazism or fascism, but rather communism.
The thinker in question is also a self-declared Eurocentric who intimates that Europe is politically, morally, and intellectually superior to all other regions of planet Earth. When the European refugee crisis was intensified due to brutal Western military interventions around the wider Mediterranean region, he parroted Samuel Huntingtonâs âclash of civilizationsâ credo by declaring that âit is a simple fact that most of the refugees come from a culture that is incompatible with Western European notions of human rights.â This top-tier pundit also endorsed Donald Trump for president in the 2016 election. More recently, he explicitly positioned himself to the right of the notorious warmonger Henry Kissinger by accusing the latter of âpacifismâ and expressing his âfull supportâ for the U.S. proxy war in the Ukraine, claiming that âwe need a stronger NATOâ to defend âEuropean unity.â
Being fĂȘted by the preeminent journal co-founded by the arch-conservative national security state operative Huntington is only the tip of the iceberg for this global superstar, who has achieved a level of international fame rarely accorded to professional intellectuals. In addition to being an academic celebrity with prestigious appointments at leading institutions in the capitalist world and innumerable international junkets, he has consolidated an enormous media platform. This includes publishing books and articles at a dizzying speed for some of the most prominent outlets, serving as the subject of multiple films, and regularly appearing on television and in major media spectacles.
Given the nature of these political positions and their amplification by the bourgeois cultural apparatus, one might assume that the thinker in question is a rightwing ideologue promoted by imperialist think tanks and the U.S. national security state. On the contrary, however, this is a commentator that anyone perusing online for radical theory or even Marxism is likely to encounter almost immediately, because he is one of the most visible intellectuals taken to represent the Left: Slavoj ĆœiĆŸek.
Donald Trump expressed his belief in the power of the U.S. propaganda machine by infamously claiming that he could âstand in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shoot somebodyâ without losing a single voter. In our perverse and decadent society of the spectacle within the imperialist core, much the same applies to the poster child for the global theory industry. ĆœiĆŸek could take the most reactionary political positions imaginable, have them broadcast around the world by the capitalist cultural apparatus, and still be presented as a towering intellectual of the Left. As a matter of fact, he has done precisely that.
Discursive Sausage for the Uneducated
As a young philosophy student in the United States in the early 1990s, I must admit that I was hoodwinked by this huckster and the system that promoted him. He burst onto the scene like the Evel Knievel of the theory industry when I was an undergraduate. Rather than endless disquisitions on a European philosophic history I knew nothing about, here was someone who could talk about it all to a poorly educated 19-year-old-wannabe intellectual: Hollywood movies, science fiction stories, consumer society, online culture, cool theories from Europe, pornography, sex, and, well, more sex. He was intoxicating to read, particularly for someone miseducated by the capitalist ideological apparatus and hungry for somethingâmarketed asâdifferent.
I devoured each book when it came out in the 1990s and early 21st century. I also followed on his heels by pursuing a Ph.D. under the direction of his intellectual father figure in Paris: Alain Badiou. However, as I continued to educate myself, I began to tire of his repetitions, theoretical superficiality, and rote rhetorical moves. I increasingly saw his provocative antics as a poor ersatz for historical and materialist analysis. This came to a head in 2001 when he endeavored to explain the events of September 11th through a cheeky Lacanian interpretation of The Matrix. His hot takes, while they sold like hot cakes, paled in comparison to rigorous materialist analyses of the history of U.S. imperialism and the machinations of its national security state, if it be in the work of Noam Chomsky, or much better, that of Michael Parenti.
I then had a unique opportunity to see how ĆœiĆŸekâs discursive sausage is made when I translated a book by Jacques RanciĂšre as a graduate student. Since RanciĂšre was largely unknown in the Anglophone world at the time, every single publisher turned down the project. When I was finally able to talk one of them into considering it, after a hasty initial rejection, the acquisitions editor for the publishing houseâwhich is now defunctâimposed one condition: to guarantee lucrative sales, I needed to secure a preface by a major marketing force in radical theory like ĆœiĆŸek. The latter agreed and later sent me a jumbled text that bore more than a striking resemblance to the section on RanciĂšre in his book The Ticklish Subject. He had added to this some free-associative ruminations and prefatory comments for one of RanciĂšreâs books on cinema, which demonstrated little to no knowledge of the latterâs work on aesthetics or the book in question (I had translated Le Partage du sensible: EsthĂ©tique et politique). Disgusted by this shameless disregard for scholarly rigor, yet devoid of any institutional power or a deeper political analysis at the time, I felt that my hands were tied because I needed to accept the theory industryâs use of this charlatan to promote its commodities if I wanted my translation to see the light of day. I sought to bury the preface by turning it into a postface and surrounding it with scholarly elucidations of RanciĂšreâs work. In retrospect, however, I should have simply halted the project.
In looking back on my experiences with the so-called Elvis of cultural theory, I now see that, as part of the ascendent and miseducated professional managerial class stratum in the imperialist core, I was the target audience for his antics. In 1989 the Berlin Wall fell, and ĆœiĆŸekâs first major book came out in English with Verso: The Sublime Object of Ideology. With a preface by the post-Marxistâviz. chichi anti-Marxistâradical democrat Ernesto Laclau, it was presented as a flagship publication in his new series with Chantal Mouffe. The series sought to draw on âanti-essentialistâ theoretical trends, like those in France inspired by Martin Heidegger, in order to provide âa new vision for the Left conceived in terms of a radical and plural democracyâ rather than support for socialism. These two radical democratsâwhose political orientation resonated with the anti-communist movements that were presented as âpro-democracyâ and used to dismantle socialist countriesâplayed a central role in promoting ĆœiĆŸek. They invited him to present his work in the Anglophone world and opened up prestigious publication platforms to him. He reciprocated by explicitly using their post-Marxist pronunciamento, Hegemony and Socialist Strategy (1985), to frame his first book, based on their shared opposition to âthe global solution-revolutionâ of âtraditional Marxism.â In 1991, the USSR was dismantled, and the aspiring post-Marxist theorist catering to the West published two more books: another in Laclau and Mouffeâs series, and one as an October book. He thus definitively caught the rising theoretical wave of radical democracy just as dissident âpro-democracyâ movements backed by imperialist states and their intelligence services were aggressively rolling back the gains of the working class in order to redistribute wealth upwards.
As Soviet-style socialism was being dismantled, this Eastern European native informant increasingly presented his post-Marxism as nothing short of the most radical form of Marxism. Not unlike Elvis, who notoriously rose to fame in the music industry by appropriating, domesticating, and mainstreaming music from Black communities that was often rooted in very real struggles, ĆœiĆŸek became a front man in the global theory industry by borrowing his most important insights from the Marxist tradition but subjecting them to a playful postmodern cultural mash-up to crush their substance, thereby commodifying them for mass consumption in the neoliberal era of anti-communist revanchism. It is essential to note in this regard that, while the capitalist establishment celebrated the supposed end of history in the 1990s, it also promoted, for the rather niche social stratum of the radlib intelligentsia, the symbol of Marxism, purportedly set free from its substance, like a red balloon floating whichever way theâcapitalist-drivenâwind would blow. This was ĆœiĆŸek: he was to become the most well-known âMarxistâ in the neoliberal age of accelerated anti-communism. The mystery man from the Eastâa literal caricature of the âcrazy Marxist,â best captured by the sobriquet âthe Borat of philosophyâârose like a perverted phoenix publicly masturbating over the flames that had destroyed Soviet-style socialism.
Dialectical Sophistry
Like many of his fellow self-styled radical thinkers, whose snake oil sells so well because it is ever so slippery, ĆœiĆŸek prides himself on his elusive prose and erratic behavior. In reading him, one comes to anticipate, at the turn of each page, yet another âgotchaâ moment when we learn that itâs actually the opposite (of whatever he had led us to believe on the previous page)! Like a child who never tires of playing hide-and-seek, in spite of their inability to actually hide, the Slovenian wunderkind constantly shirks and spirals out of discursive control to say everything and its opposite in the hopes that he can cover his tracks and remain ever elusive. He appears to be ignorant of the fact that there is an obvious and consistent ideology operative in the chameleonic character of intellectuals of his ilk. It is called opportunism.
When ĆœiĆŸek was interviewed for the Abercrombie and Fitch catalog, his interviewer said sheâd share the text with him in advance of publication. He retorted: âOh thatâs not necessary. Whatever I say, you can make me say the opposite!â Saying something is just as good as saying its opposite for an opportunist whose main objective is to have his name in lights. In fact, if you say both over timeâwhile disingenuously attributing this tiresome rhetorical move to âdialecticsâ in order to provide pseudo-intellectual cover for nothing more than crass self-promotional chicaneryâyou occupy more space and take up even more time, squeezing out any of those who might actually have something to say. The fact that the bourgeois cultural apparatus gives him such an enormous platform reveals its proclivity to promote such tomfoolery over and against truly radical forms of analysis. It is worth recalling, in this regard, that his dada dialectics knows very precise limits. We have never heard him say, as far as I know, something like: âthe dominant ideology constantly says that actually existing socialism was utterly horrific⊠but itâs precisely the opposite!â
We might wonder why a self-stylized Marxist uncritically embraces the crassest elements of the culture industry that promotes him, willingly whoring himself out to a mega-corporate clothing line that was placed on the âSweatshop Hall of Shameâ by the International Labor Rights Forum in 2010. This is, however, just one example among many others of the intimate relationship between the global theory industry and the general industry of consumer capitalism. ĆœiĆŸek doesnât only sell books; he also peddles movies, art, literature, magazines, newspapers, public spectacles, and, well, American-style clothes for âcool, good-looking people,â in the choice words of A&Fâs CEO.
Pro-Western, Anti-Communist Dissident
Since this grifter says and re-says just about everything and its opposite, it is helpful to focus on what he has actually done and the nature of his theoretical practice. To fully understand the latter, it is necessary to situate him and his specific skullduggery within the social relations of intellectual production. In other words, by theoretical practice, I not only mean his subjective activities as an intellectual but also the objective social totality within which he operates, and which has promoted him as an international superstar. Part of my argument is that ĆœiĆŸek needs to be understood as a cultural product of the global theory industry rather than fetishized as a sui generis subject.
The author of In Defense of Lost Causes was born in 1949, and he grew up in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (SFRY). He would later assert, with no evidence beyond anecdotes to support his claim, that âlife in a Communist state was mostly worse than life in many capitalist states.â However, his home country provided a quality of life for the masses that is worth briefly recalling:
Between 1960 and 1980 it [Yugoslavia] had one of the most vigorous growth rates, along with free medical care and education, a guaranteed right to an income, one-month vacation with pay, a literacy rate of over 90 per cent, and a life expectancy of seventy-two years. Yugoslavia also offered its multi-ethnic citizenry affordable public transportation, housing, and utilities, in a mostly publicly owned, market-socialist economy.
According to his biographer Tony Myers, ĆœiĆŸek disliked the communist culture of his homeland. Surely clued into potential opportunities for personal socio-economic advancement in the larger capitalist world, this venal young intellectual devoted himself to imbibing Western pop culture. âAs a student,â Myers writes, âhe developed an interest in, and wrote about, French philosophy rather than the official communist paradigms of thought.â His Masterâs thesis on French theory âwas deemed to be politically suspiciousâ because, in the words of his fellow Slovenian philosopher Mladen Dolar, âthe authorities were concerned that the charismatic teaching of ĆœiĆŸek might improperly influence students with his dissident thinking.â
He did end up writing his first book on the unrepentant Nazi Martin Heidegger, the principal reference for the Slovenian anti-communist opposition according to ĆœiĆŸek himself. He also published the first Slovene translation of the French philosopher who made an enormous contribution to rehabilitating Heideggerâs reputation after WWII: Jacques Derrida. The French magus of deconstruction was himself directly involved in dissident anti-communist political activism against the government in Czechoslovakia. He co-founded the French chapter of the Jan Hus Educational Foundation, which has been funded by an impressive array of corporate and Western governmental sources with a record of supporting anti-communist subversion, including the Margaret Thatcher Foundation, the Open Society Fund (Soros), the Ford Foundation, the United States Information Agency, and the National Endowment for Democracy (NED), which is a CIA cutout.
After a sojourn in Paris to complete a second Ph.D., ĆœiĆŸek returned to the SFRY in 1985 and first came to public attention as an anti-communist dissident who was part of the French-theory inflected, Western-oriented âopposition.â âIn [the] late 1980s,â he explained, âI myself was personally engaged in undermining the Yugoslav Socialist order.â He was âthe main political columnistâ for Mladina, a prominent weekly publication that was part of the dissident movement against the communist government. The magazine, for which he wrote a weekly column, was accused of being backed by the CIA in a long and detailed report by the Yugoslav Communist Party, which also highlighted the proliferation of counter-revolutionaries who were threatening the very survival of the SFRY. ĆœiĆŸek later claimed, on numerous occasions, that this was precisely his orientation as a dissident who contributed to the fall of communism. He was involved, amongst other things, in the Committee for the Protection of Human Rights of the Four Accused in 1988 that demanded, in his own words, âthe abolishment of the existing socialist systemâ and âthe global overthrow of the socialist regime.â This was in perfect line with President Ronald Reaganâs National Security Decision Directive 133 (NSDD), which advocated in 1984 for âexpanded efforts to promote a âquiet revolutionâ to overthrow Communist governments and partiesâ in Yugoslavia and other Eastern European countries.
ĆœiĆŸek cofounded the Liberal Democratic Party (LDS), and he served as one of its leading public spokespeople. The LDS was rooted in the liberal tradition of promoting âpluralismâ and would dominate Slovenia during the first decade after the end of socialism. ĆœiĆŸek was the partyâs candidate for the four-person presidency of the earliest break-away republic, which served as a wedge for dismantling the SFRY. He made the following campaign promise in a 1990 televised debate: âI can, as a member of the Presidency, substantially assist in the decomposition of ideologic Real-socialist apparatus of the state.â He expressed his willingness to implement policies of liberal economic restructuring, which had already had catastrophic consequences for workers, asserting that heâs a âpragmatistâ in this area: âif it works, why not try a dose of it?â Indeed, he openly advocated for âplanned privatizationsâ and flatly asserted, like a good capitalist ideologue: âmore capitalism in our case would mean more social security.â This was, once again, in perfect line with Reaganâs NSDD 133, which explicitly called for âYugoslaviaâs long-term internal liberalizationâ and the promotion of a âmarket-oriented Yugoslav economic structure.â
The Eastern liberal also affirmed his support, at least in the short term of socialist demolition, for what the anti-communist philosopher Karl Popper called the âopen society.â He claimed that George Soros, the anti-communist founder of the Open Society Fund (and Popperâs former student), was âdoing good work in the field of education, refugees and keeping the theoretical and social sciences spirit alive.â Popper supported NATOâs intervention in the SFRY, and his work had been promoted by the Congress for Cultural Freedom, the infamous CIA front organization. Soros has been deeply invested in anti-socialist regime change operations in Eastern Europe. In Yugoslavia, âhis Open Society Institute channeled more than $100m to the coffers of the anti-Milosevic opposition, funding political parties, publishing houses and âindependentâ media.â Moreover, Soros openly admitted that he wasâthrough his foundationâs lavish funding of anti-communist organizations and activitiesââprofoundly implicated in the disintegration of the Soviet system.â
Although ĆœiĆŸek was narrowly defeated in his presidential run, he served as the Ambassador for Science in the emerging post-socialist republic and apparently continues to provide informal advice to the government. Indeed, he expressed his âopen support for the Slovenian state after the restoration of capitalism in the 1990s,â and he remained faithful to his anti-communist liberalism: âI did something for which I lost almost all my friends, what no good leftist ever does: I fully supported the ruling party in Slovenia.â The LDS, as a party of capital, pursued denationalization and privatization. This was in a context in which the IMF and World Bank were pushing through brutal economic counter-reforms that had been destroying the industrial sector, dismantling the welfare state, fostering the collapse of real wages, and laying off workers at a terrifying pace (614,000 out of a total industrial workforce of some 2.7 million had been laid off in 1989-90). The pro-privatization party that ĆœiĆŸek openly supported, during a time of âmassive declines of living standards for large sections of the world population,â was also keen on becoming a junior partner in the imperialist camp. It was âthe leading proponent of accession to the European Union (EU) and North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO).â This process began in the 1990s, and Slovenia officially joined the EU in 2003 and NATO the following year.
It must not be lost on us, then, that this entrepreneurial intellectual had been for pro-Western civil society and against the state when the latter was socialist, whereas he was proudly against civil society and for the state when the latter turned capitalist (and sought membership in capitalist and imperialist transnational organizations). As a matter of fact, in his presidential campaign, he advocated for an anti-socialist purge of the state apparatus, adding that he would be very strict and âstart from scratchâ regarding âthe Administration of internal affairs, political police and so on.â He explicitly advocated for developing an intelligence service that would be completely liquidated of all socialist elements, announcing what could only be interpreted as the CIAâs wet dream in the first break-away republic (which raises serious questions about his precise relationship to the agency that has played such a central role in overthrowing socialist governments around the world, often by working hand-in-glove with local anti-socialist political parties, intelligence agencies, publication outlets, and intellectuals): âThere [regarding the Administration of internal affairs and the political police] I would make a cut. Now I will say something sinful. I think that in these turbulent times Slovenia will need an intelligence service because during this battle for sovereignty there will be actions to destabilize it. But for this service it is particularly important that it does not share any continuity with the current Administration of internal affairs [i.e. the socialist one]. Here I advocate a cut.â The communists, according to this toady of the West, hate him. They undoubtedly recognize that he is an opportunist playing a very dangerous game to advance his careerâas well as brutal privatization schemes and imperialist expansionâat the expense of the masses of workers. âI am rather perceived as some dark, ominous, plotting, political manipulator,â writes the Lacanian joker about how heâs seen in Slovenia, âa role I enjoy immensely and like very much.â
Although he provided mild pushback against the Western propaganda narrative that ethnic hatred was the principal cause of the dissolution of the SFRY, his rationale for this stance perfectly alignsâlike so many of his other political positionsâwith the propaganda promoted by pro-capitalist public relations firms like Ruder & Finn and CIA media assets. In a text entitled âNATO, the Left Hand of God,â he flatly asserted: âit was Serbian aggression alone, and not ethnic conflict, that set off the war.â The Serbs, it is worth recalling, had âa proportionately higher percentage of Communist party membership than other nationalities.â ĆœiĆŸek was thus parroting the position put forth by Ruder & Finnâs Director James Harff, who bragged that his spin doctors had been able to construct for the SFRY a âsimple story of good guys and bad guys.â The Eastern liberal even attempted to blame the communists, who had overseen a functioning multi-ethnic state for decades, for producing nationalism and âthe compulsive attachment to the national Cause.â He also embraced the Western demonization of the socialist President Slobodan MiloĆĄeviÄ by indulging in liberal horseshoe theory, claiming that âhe managed to synthesize some unthinkable combination of fascism and Stalinism.â However, whatever mistakes or misdeeds were committed by the socialists, the fact of the matter is that, as Michael Parenti has explained in a fact-driven book on the topic: âthere was no civil war, no widespread killings, and no ethnic cleansing until the Western powers began to inject themselves into Yugoslaviaâs internal affairs, financing the secessionist organizations and creating the politico-economic crisis that ignited the political strife.â
Where did the pro-capitalist stand on NATOâs self-proclaimed humanitarian bombings of defenseless civilian populations and socialist infrastructure, whose real goal was the âThird Worldizationâ and effective colonization of the only nation in the region that had refused to shed what remained of its socialism? He cheekily asserted, with his signature gusto for puerile provocation: âSo, precisely as a Leftist, my answer to the dilemma âBomb or not?â is: not yet ENOUGH bombs, and they are TOO LATE.â Since he made this ringing endorsement for intensifying the illegal mass murder of civilians in a draft that circulated online, and this particular statement dropped out of the text when it was published, we should note that he is crystal clear in other interviews, like when he flatly asserts: âI have always been in favor of military intervention from the West.â
In his subsequent career as one of the worldâs most visible public intellectuals, he has repeatedly taken strong positions against actually existing socialism. Cuba, for him, is nothing but âa nostalgic inert remainder of the pastâ that provides no hope for the future and is undeserving of even circumspect support. In perfect line with capitalist propaganda, he casts China as an existential threat, and he unflinchingly describes Chinese communist leader Xi Jinping as an authoritarian capitalist who runs in the same corrupt gang as Trump, Putin, Modi, and ErdoÄan. It is quite obvious in reading him, in spite of his radical mummery, that he abides by Margret Thatcherâs infamous neoliberal mantra: TINAâThere Is No Alternative. In fact, he regularly says as much himself: âIâm not aware of any convincing radical left alternativesâ and âI donât have any fundamental hopes in a socialist revolution or whatever.â In the 1990 presidential debate mentioned above, he expressly embraced the views of Winston Churchillâwhose dogged advocacy for colonial butchery positioned him âat the most brutal and brutish end of the British imperialist spectrumââby claiming that capitalism âis the worst of all systemsâ but âwe donât have another one that would be better.â
At the same time, he has regularly intervened in public debates to express his support for the European Union (a longstanding capitalist project promoted by the U.S. national security state as a bulwark against communism) and select acts of Western imperialism, including some of NATOâs brutal military interventions, particularly those in or near Europe. His grand idea for the future of humanity is not to be found in the socialist states in the Global South that have waged successful anticolonial struggles against imperialism. It is instead located in the historic epicenter of colonialism and imperialism. âIn todayâs global capitalist world,â he writes, âit [the idea of Europe] offers the only model of a transnational organization having the authority to limit national sovereignty and the task of guaranteeing a minimum of norms for ecological and social well-being. Something subsists in this idea that directly descends from the best traditions of the European enlightenment.â As a matter of fact, according to his Euro-diffusionist historical narrative, Third World anti-colonial struggles are themselves dependent upon concepts purportedly imported from the West, including what ĆœiĆŸek describes as the latterâs âself-critical examinationâ of its own âviolence and exploitationâ in the Third World. As a social chauvinist who deeply believes that Europe is the natural leader of world development, he even concurs with Bruno Latourâs reactionary assertion that âonly Europe can save us.â
Commie Cosplay
In spite of ĆœiĆŸekâs clear political orientation in practice as a pro-Western anti-communist, who aggressively supported the overthrow of socialism in favor of capitalism, this self-styled eccentric never tires of claiming that heâs a communist. He even attempts to dress the part, so to speak, presenting himself as the âdirty communistâ from the East. In addition to the obligatory beard and the disheveled appearance, he belligerently talks over his interlocutors, spewing out endless dirtbag left provocation like pseudo-intellectual logorrhea was going out of style. A true performance to Ă©pater les bourgeois.
ĆœiĆŸek is neoliberal capitalismâs court jester. Aping the figure of the Marxist-qua-antisocial-fanatic, he encourages disdain for the real-world project of socialism, while hawking the wares of Western consumer society through his pop cultural mash-up. The histrionic show put on by this contumacious enfant terrible isâwe must never forgetâon the capitalist stage. The trickster is just a hireling, and a telling symptom of neoliberalismâs cultural apparatus. It is the capitalist court that has made the joker into a superstar, precisely because he has played his part so well. Like all good jesters, he pushes the limits of courtly decorum and says the most outrageous things in a hysterical spectacle of critique, while ultimately toeing the most important line by demonstrating his fealty to the puppet master (king capital).
To convincingly play his provocative part, this clown not only says heâs a Marxist, but he insists on being nothing short of a Leninist. Letâs listen in to one of his ridiculous rants, which, of course, is part of his routine and is therefore repeated in numerous texts: âI am a Leninist. Lenin wasnât afraid to dirty his hands. [âŠ] When you get power, if you can, grab it. Do whatever is possible.â This commie cosplay depiction amounts to saying that Leninism is all about playing dirty and ruthlessly pursuing power. Such a disingenuous representation of Lenin, and Marxism-Leninism more generally, is perfectly in line with a long ideological history. Benedetto Croce, the Italian liberal and fascist sympathizer, said the exact same thing about Marx: he was the Machiavelli of the proletariat because he put force first and sought to ruthlessly seize power. Steve Bannon, relying on a similar conflation of Leninism with brute power politics, is also a self-declared âLeninistâ Ă la ĆœiĆŸek. This is likely one of the many reasons why the neo-Nazi leader Richard Spencer declared: âSlavoj ĆœiĆŸek is my favorite leftist. He has more to teach the alt Right than a million American conservative douches.â
Since the jester always has more to say on every topic, letâs hear him out on what it means to be a Leninist in 2009, when he made the claim cited above: âI am a Leninist. [âŠ] This is why I supported Obama.â This is one of his best jokes of all time. The deadpan delivery is killer because he actually means it. He literally equates Leninism with supporting the neoliberal Deporter-in-Chief whose diversity cred provided thin cover for revving the engine of the U.S. imperial machine around the world, leading to Obamaâs infamous statement about his assassination program, namely that he was âreally good at killing people.â ĆœiĆŸek, though, homes in on the former Presidentâs purportedly revolutionary approach to healthcare, meaning an imposed mandate for private insurance modeled on Republican Mitt Romneyâs plan: âI think the battle he is fighting now over healthcare is extremely important, because it concerns the very core of the ruling ideology.â Obama, we might remember, rejected any discussion whatsoever of single-payer healthcare, a system of universal coverage with socialist roots.
When youâre an idealist wag like ĆœiĆŸek, Leninism is just a word, a floating signifier, that you can play around with, using it as just one more prop or gimmick. This is painfully obvious in his comic book Repeating Lenin. In spite of what the straightforward title might suggest to the naĂŻve and uninitiated, he proclaims: âI am careful to speak about not repeating Lenin. I am not an idiot. It wouldnât mean anything to return to the Leninist working class party today.â What he likes about Lenin âis precisely what scares people about himâthe ruthless will to discard all prejudices. Why not violence? Horrible as it may sound, I think itâs a useful antidote to all the aseptic, frustrating, politically correct pacifism.â Itâs that unbridled death drive that the Slovenian Lacanian feels compelled to repeat. âTo REPEAT Lenin,â he writes with clownish typography,âdoes NOT mean a RETURN to Leninâto repeat Lenin is to accept that âLenin is dead,â that his particular solution failed, even failed monstrously, but that there was a utopian spark in it worth saving. [âŠ] To repeat Lenin is to repeat not what Lenin DID, but what he FAILED TO DO, his MISSED opportunities.â As the most visible âLeninistâ never tires of repeating, communism was and is a cataclysmic failure. His compulsion to repeat it is thus best understood in terms of the line in Beckett that he regularly quotes in contexts such as these: âTry again. Fail again. Fail better.â What the future has in store, according to this rebel with a lost cause, is thus nothing more than enhanced failure: âwe have to accept the fact that it is impossible for Communism to win [âŠ] , i.e., that, in this sense, Communism is a lost cause.â
The final payoff for the jesterâs commie cosplay is that the super-rich chortle in their martinis and invite him to write copy for their advertisements. Meanwhile, some students and members of the professional managerial class stratum buy up his pop philosophy thinking perhaps theyâll learn something about Marxism. Instead, they are taken on a theoretical magic carpet ride that demonstrates how ridiculous Marxism is while advertising Hollywoodâs blockbuster films, TV shows, science fiction novels, and assorted consumer products of the global theory industry.
The Discreet Charm of the Petty-Bourgeoisie
ĆœiĆŸek, like Badiou, is not a historical materialist. Neither of these philosophers engage in rigorous analysis of the concrete, material history of capitalism and the world socialist movement, and they eschew serious political economy in favor of discussing superstructural elements and products of the bourgeois cultural apparatus. Both of them openly indulge in an idealist philosophical approach that privileges ideas and discourses, and they are metaphysicians who defend an anti-scientific belief in superstition.
If we bracket their idiosyncratic vocabularies and examine their theoretical practices outside of the ideological confines of cultural commodity fetishism, their specific version of idealism could best be described as transcendental idealism. They present their brand-managed conceptual framework (largely based on personal interpretations of non-Marxist discourses like those of Jacques Lacan and G.W.F. Hegel) as the transcendental structure of reality. They then choose specific empirical elementsâa current event, a text, a Hollywood movie, a candy wrapper, the back of a cereal box, a Starbucksâ cup, a porn site, or literally anything else, particularly in the case of ĆœiĆŸekâthat they contend confirms this pre-established theoretical model, thereby producing the illusion that it has been proven true. Such a claim, however, can never be collectively tested in any rigorous manner, because it is up to the whims of each speculative prestidigitator to decide what empirical data corroborates their theoretical assumptions (and thus what information can be ignored).
This can be clearly seen in their approach to communism. Unlike Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, who maintained that âcommunism is the real movement which abolishes [aufhebt] the present state of things,â they assert that communism is an âIdeaâ and a âdesire.â At the same time, they regularly toe the capitalist propaganda line by condemning the real movement of communism for purportedly indulging in bloodthirsty terrorism, violent dictatorship, and genocide (blithely ignoring the need to provide documentation for such claims, or simply invoking as âproofâ the work of reactionary anti-communists or sources funded by the U.S. State Department and the Open Society Fund). The possible exceptions they sometimes point to would often better be described as anarchist, at least as they interpret them, because they tend to celebrate moments of anti-state and anti-party insurgency, including against socialist states (as in Badiouâs interpretation of the Chinese Cultural Revolution). Meanwhile, those who support actually existing socialism are presented as ideological dupes or remnants of a bygone era, trapped in an imaginary world not unlike those ensnared in capitalist ideology. âThe left which aligned itself with âactually existing socialismâ has disappeared or turned into a historical curiosityâ is what we are told in the introduction to their widely acclaimed volume The Idea of Communism.
When this book was published by Verso in 2010, the Chinese Communist Party boasted some 80 million members, which surpassed the entire combined population of both France and Slovenia by about 16 million people. Where, then, we might wonder, are these social chauvinists getting their information about the current state of the world? The answer is embarrassingly simple for these idealist philosophers: Jacques Lacan and the Lacanian elements in Louis Althusserâs work. The latter drew on Lacanâs mirror stage and conceptualization of the imaginary to create a misleading portrayal of ideology in his famous interpellation scene. As Althusser asserted in a passage that contradicts his earlier analysis, an individual becomes an ideological subject when it recognizes itself as the one being hailed (interpellĂ©) by a police officer in the street, meaning that the individual identifies with the image put forth by the other, assuming oneâs place in the extant symbolic order.
There is another possibility, however, which Lacan referred to in his seventh seminar as following the imperative to not compromise oneâs desire (ne pas cĂ©der sur son dĂ©sir), which ĆœiĆŸek has theorized in terms of the âethical act.â Rather than remaining an ideological subject trapped in an imagined relationship to the social relations of production within the symbolic order, one can become a Subject Ă la Badiou by fearlessly pursuing the Real, which is that je ne sais quoi that resists the symbolic order (while at the same time being âcontained in the very symbolic formâ insofar as the Real is âthe absent Cause of the Symbolicâ). The object-cause of desire, what Lacan called the objet petit a, is in ĆœiĆŸekâs words âthe void [of the Real] filled out by creative symbolic fiction.â It drives our jouissance in the sense that we crave it precisely because of its impossibility: the Real can never be seamlessly integrated into the symbolic order or simply translated into what Lacan calls âreality.â
Since Badiou is more systematic and rigorous than the scattershot ĆœiĆŸek, and the latter borrows profusely from the idealist whom he refers to as a living Plato, it is worth recalling the basic Lacanian structure of Badiouâs âIdea of communismâ: âthe communist Idea is the imaginary operation by which an individual subjectivation projects a fragment of the political real into the symbolic narration of a History.â In slightly more straightforward language, this means that the Idea of communism is an operation by which an individual ideologically (the imaginary) commits themselves to an unexplainable political event (the Real)âlike May â68 for Badiouâwhose consequences they attempt to trace out within a given historical situation (the symbolic). This cannot actually (rĂ©ellement) be done, according to the French metaphysician, because the Event qua Real is recalcitrant to the symbolic realm of âHistoryâ and the âStateâ; it can only be done imaginarily (imaginairement) by the individual Subject. This is one of the reasons why Badiou peremptorily proclaims that âcommunistâ cannot be used as an adjective to describe an actual party or state. A century of collective aspirations and horrors has apparently demonstrated that âthe Party-form, like that of the socialist-State, are henceforth inadequate for assuring the real support of the Idea.â As a matter of fact, the communist Idea can only sustain politics that âit would be definitively absurd to say that they are communist.â Anarchist would be the common term, and more specifically insurgent anarchism, merged with an unhealthy dose of metaphysics and utopian socialism. After all, this is a politics in which an individual becomes a Subject by being faithful to an inexplicable Event that interrupts history, acting on its consequences like the followers of Christ.
âReal communismâ is thus a metaphysical communism of the Lacanian Real. Accordingly, we are told, the collective project of materially transforming the world is in fact destined to fail if it takes the form of parties or states since these would give concrete form or âsymbolizationâ to the otherworldly Real. Communism is thereby displaced from the realm of collective action aimed at socialist state-building projectsâas a first but necessary step to break the chains of imperialismâto that of individual consciousness and the subjective experience of the privileged few that Nietzsche referred to as âfree spirits.â In counter-distinction to this small group of great thinkers and artists of the world, ĆœiĆŸek explains with his signature disdain for the working class, 99% of âconcrete peopleâ are âboring idiots.â These hapless proles and peasants did not study in Paris with the petty-bourgeois luminaries of the global theory industry, so they have not understood what is most essential: communism is a subjective process of resisting the symbolic order of extant societies and desiring the impossible, even individually âacting onâ this desire.
One of the reasons idealists love to heap scorn on materialists as somehow being crass reductionists and âunphilosophical,â is precisely because the latter are capable of revealing the material structures that undergird and determine the conceptual games they play. If we subject the idealist communism of the Real to a class analysis, it becomes readily apparent that it rejects, under the heading of âactually existing socialism,â the project of the masses, of the global Untermenschen(subhumans) who have imagined that they could make the Real of their desire into a historical reality. It is here that the Nietzschean orientation of these radical aristocrats comes clearly into view because they deride the purported ignorance of the hoi polloi. Over and against their crass materialism, the Real communists aspire to much more than the lowly pursuit of collective access to potable water, food, shelter, healthcare, and so on via concrete anti-imperialist state-building projects (all of these are in the realm of what Lacan called âneedâ as opposed to âdesireâ). Real communists, in the Lacanian sense, have the supreme subjective dignity of individually demanding the impossibleânot something that could materially help improve the lives of the global masses in the here-and-now.
Such a posture literally means that these self-stylized radical thinkers demand something that cannot be done, which is the epitome of petty-bourgeois radicalism. What they truly desire, if we translate their pseudo-intellectual narcissistic self-indulgence into materialist terms, is the appearance of making the most radical demands imaginable while, at the same time, avoiding any threat to the material system of social hierarchies that has elevated them as leading intellectuals in the imperialist core. They desire the impossible, and even âact onâ this desire, precisely because they do not want anything to substantially change. That, then, is their big Idea of communism, namely that it is impossible.
âThe work of the Marxists,â wrote V.I. Lenin in a passage that anticipated the liberal leanings of the Lacanian-Althusserians, âis always âdifficultâ but the thing that makes them different from the liberals is that they do not declare what is difficult to be impossible. The liberal calls difficult work impossible so as to conceal his renunciation of it.â Marx also presciently described these capitalist accommodationists avant la lettre when he diagnosed the essence of petty-bourgeois sophistry in his critique of anarchism, which merges with liberal ideology on essential points. He traced its material roots back to opportunist careerism within the capitalist core. What he says here about Proudhon describes the idealist casuistry of Badiou and the ostentatious contradictions of ĆœiĆŸek with remarkable precision:
Proudhon had a natural inclination for dialectics. But as he never grasped really scientific dialectics he never got further than sophistry. This is in fact connected with his petty-bourgeois point of view. Like the historian Raumer, the petty bourgeois is made up of on-the-one-hand and on-the-other-hand. This is so in his economic interests and therefore in his politics, religious, scientific and artistic views. And likewise in his morals, IN EVERYTHING. He is a living contradiction. If, like Proudhon, he is in addition an ingenious man, he will soon learn to play with his own contradictions and develop them according to circumstances into striking, ostentatious, now scandalous now brilliant paradoxes. Charlatanism in science and accommodation in politics are inseparable from such a point of view. There remains only one governing motive, the vanity of the subject, and the only question for him, as for all vain people, is the success of the moment, the éclat of the day. Thus the simple moral sense, which always kept a Rousseau, for instance, from even the semblance of compromise with the powers that be, is bound to disappear.
Radical Recuperator
The collapsing biosphere, the rise of fascism, and the threat of the ânewâ Cold War turning into WWIII all mean that the stakes of contemporary class struggle could not be higher. Capitalismâs court jester, like other intellectuals of his ilk, is applauded by the ruling classâs elite managers and promoted internationally for encouraging us to ride fearlessly into the apocalypse of âthe Realâ while lapping up his provocative hot takes and binge-watching the blockbuster films and TV shows he promotes.
This neoliberal prankster is thus the epitome of a radical recuperator. He cultivates and markets the appearance of radicality in order to recuperate potentially radical elements in society, particularly young people and students, within the pro-imperialist anti-communist fold. This is precisely why he is the most famous âMarxistâ in the capitalist world, festooned by the likes of a journal linked to the engine of U.S. imperialism. His mantra is nothing but an opportunistic perversion of the closing lines of The Communist Manifesto: âCultural consumers of the pro-Western world uniteâand buy my next book, or movie, or crossover product, or whatever, and so on, and so on!â
Gabriel Rockhill is a Franco-American philosopher, cultural critic and activist. He the founding Director of the Critical Theory Workshop and Professor of Philosophy at Villanova University. His books include Counter-History of the Present: Untimely Interrogations into Globalization, Technology, Democracy (2017), Interventions in Contemporary Thought: History, Politics, Aesthetics (2016), Radical History & the Politics of Art (2014) and Logique de lâhistoire (2010). In addition to his scholarly work, he has been actively engaged in extra-academic activities in the art and activist worlds, as well as a regular contributor to public intellectual debate.
Notes:
- â© I would like to express my gratitude to Jennifer Ponce de LeĂłn, Eduardo RodrĂguez and Marcela Romero Rivera for encouraging me to write this article and providing feedback on it, along with Helmut-Harry Loewen and Julian Sempill. I accept full responsibility, however, for any errors or infelicities.
- â© See Foreign Policy (December 2012): <https://web.archive.org/web/20121201034713/http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2012/11/26/the_fp_100_global_thinkers?page=0,55#thinker92> (accessed on November 22, 2022).
- â© See his interview on the British BBC show âHARDtalkâ on November 4, 2009: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ThTJBKYPiNo&t=153s> (accessed on November 22, 2022).
- â© Ibid. Also see Slavoj ĆœiĆŸek. Did Somebody Say Totalitarianism? Five Interventions in the (Mis)use of a Notion (London: Verso, 2001), 127-129.
- â© Slavoj ĆœiĆŸek, In Defense of Lost Causes (London: Verso, 2009), 151 (ĆœiĆŸekâs emphasis).
- â© Ibid. 169.
- â© See Domenico Losurdoâs insightful critique of ĆœiĆŸek in Western Marxism. Trans. Steven Colatrella (New York: 1804 Books, forthcoming).
- â© See, for instance, Slavoj ĆœiĆŸek. âA Leftist Plea for âEurocentrism.ââ Critical Inquiry 24:4 (Summer 1998): 998-1009; Slavoj ĆœiĆŸek. âNous pouvons encore ĂȘtre fiers de lâEurope!â Le Figaro (October 31, 2022); and his oral comments on the future of Europe available here: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8pA35HuhEYY> (accessed on November 22, 2022).
- â© Quoted in Thomas Moller-Nielsen. âWhat Is ĆœiĆŸek For?â Current Affairs (Sept/Oct 2019): <https://www.currentaffairs.org/2019/10/what-is-zizek-for> (accessed on November 22, 2022).
- â© See, for instance, his statements during a 2016 Channel 4 interview archived here: <https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=10154211377601939> (accessed on November 22, 2022).
- â© See Slavoj ĆœiĆŸek. âPacifism Is the Wrong Response to the War in Ukraine.â The Guardian (June 21, 2022): <https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/jun/21/pacificsm-is-the-wrong-response-to-the-war-in-ukraine> (accessed on November 22, 2022).
- â© Huntington served as White House Coordinator of Security Planning for the National Security Council. He also worked as an adviser to P.W. Bothaâs Security Services in Apartheid South Africa (Botha was an outspoken opponent of Black political power and international communism, as well as an unrepentant defender of Apartheid).
- â© Reena Flores. âDonald Trump: I could âshoot somebody and I wouldnât lose any voters.ââ CBS News (January 23, 2016): <https://www.cbsnews.com/news/donald-trump-i-could-shoot-somebody-and-i-wouldnt-lose-any-voters/> (accessed on November 22, 2022).
- â© See, for instance, Noam Chomsky. 9/11: Was There an Alternative? (New York: Seven Stories Press, 2001) and Michael Parenti. The Terrorism Trap: September 11 and Beyond (San Francisco: City Lights Books, 2002).
- â© Issues of plagiarism and self-plagiarism have arisen so often regarding ĆœiĆŸekâs work that there is even a section of his Wikipedia page with links to multiple articles on the topic. See, in particular, Jay Pinho. âA Year of Writing Dangerously: ĆœiĆŸekâs Serial Self-Plagiarism.â The First Casualty (September 22, 2012): <http://archives.jaypinho.com/2012/09/22/the-year-of-writing-dangerously-slavoj-zizeks-serial-self-plagiarism/> (accessed on November 22, 2022).
- â© See their description of the book series âPhronesisâ in Slavoj ĆœiĆŸek. The Sublime Object of Ideology (London: Verso, 1989). For an insightful critique of radical democracy, see Larry Alan Busk. Democracy in Spite of the Demos: From Arendt to the Frankfurt School (London: Rowman & Littlefield International, 2020).
- â© ĆœiĆŸek, The Sublime Object of Ideology, 6 (on ĆœiĆŸekâs embrace of their theoretical matrix, see his acknowledgements on page xvi). I also refer the reader to the book ĆœiĆŸek and Laclau wrote with fellow âanti-totalitarianâ radical democrat Judith Butler for the âPhronesisâ series. In their co-authored introduction, they present the book as being founded on Hegemony and Socialist Strategy insofar as it ârepresented a turn to poststructuralist theory within Marxism, one that took the problem of language to be essential to the formulation of an anti-totalitarian, radical democratic projectâ (Contingency, Hegemony, Universality: Contemporary Dialogues on the Left. London: Verso, 2000, 1, my emphasis).
- â© ĆœiĆŸek described his second book for the series âPhronesisâ as being based on a series of lectures in Slovenia âaimed at the âbenevolently neutralâ public of intellectuals who were the moving force of the drive for democracyâ (For They Know Not What They Do: Enjoyment as a Political Factor. London: Verso, 1991, 3). In addition to Laclau and Mouffe, the Lacanian Joan Copjec helped facilitate the rise of ĆœiĆŸek in the Anglophone world through her promotion of his work in the circles of the French-theory driven New York City arts journal October. As he points out in the acknowledgments to his 1991 book Looking Awry, published as an October book with MIT Press, Copjec âwas present from the very conceptionâ of the project, encouraged him to write it, and spent time helping him with the manuscript (Looking Awry: An Introduction to Jacques Lacan through Popular Culture. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press, 1991, xi).
- â© Jodi Dean. ĆœiĆŸekâs Politics (New York: Routledge, 2006), xi.
- â© Benoit Denezit-Lewis. âThe Man Behind Abercrombie and Fitch.â Salon (January 24, 2006): <https://www.salon.com/2006/01/24/jeffries/> (accessed on November 22, 2022).
- â© Slavoj ĆœiĆŸek. âThe Communist Desire.â Los Angeles Review of Books. âThe Philosophical Salonâ (July 25, 2022): <https://thephilosophicalsalon.com/the-communist-desire/#_ednref1> (accessed on November 22, 2022).
- â© Michael Parenti. To Kill a Nation: The Attack on Yugoslavia (London: Verso, 2000), 17. Drawing on World Bank data, which could not be suspected of pro-socialist sympathies, Michel Chossudovsky provides a similar portrait of pre-1980 Yugoslavia in The Globalization of Poverty and the New World Order (Pincourt, Canada: Global Research, 2003), 259.
- â© Tony Myers. Slavoj ĆœiĆŸek (New York: Routledge, 2003), 10.
- â© Ibid. 7.
- â© On the Heideggerian âoppositionâ and ĆœiĆŸekâs first book, see Christopher Hanlon and Slavoj ĆœiĆŸek. âPsychoanalysis and the Post-Political: An Interview with Slavoj ĆœiĆŸek.â New Literary History 32:1 (Winter, 2001): 1-21.
- â© See, for instance, Barbara Day. The Velvet Philosophers (London: The Claridge Press, 1999).
- â© On the NED, see William Blum. Rogue State: A Guide to the Worldâs Only Superpower (London: Zed Books, 2014), 238-243. Allen Weinstein, who helped draft the legislation establishing the NED, openly acknowledged that âa lot of what we do today was done covertly 25 years ago by the CIAâ (ibid. 239).
- â© See, for instance, Ian Parker. Slavoj ĆœiĆŸek: A Critical Introduction(London: Pluto Press, 2004). On the CIAâs support of French theory and intellectual anti-communism more generally, see Gabriel Rockhill. âThe CIA Reads French Theory: On the Intellectual Labor of Dismantling the Cultural Left.â Los Angeles Review of Books. âThe Philosophical Salonâ (February 28, 2017): <https://thephilosophicalsalon.com/the-cia-reads-french-theory-on-the-intellectual-labor-of-dismantling-the-cultural-left/> (accessed on November 22, 2022).
- â© Thomas Moller Nielsen. âUnrepentant Charlatanism (with a Response by Slavoj ĆœiĆŸek).â Los Angeles Review of Books. âThe Philosophical Salonâ (November 25, 2019): <https://thephilosophicalsalon.com/unrepentant-charlatanism-with-a-response-by-slavoj-zizek/> (accessed on November 22, 2022).
- â© Ernesto Laclau. âPreface.â ĆœiĆŸek, The Sublime Object of Ideology, xi.
- â© See the BBC documentary âThe Death of Yugoslaviaâ: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H3VyGPu6PKc> (accessed on November 22, 2022). On ĆœiĆŸekâs weekly column, see the Encyclopedia Britannicaâs entry on him: <https://www.britannica.com/biography/Slavoj-Zizek> (accessed on November 22, 2022).
- â© Amongst other sources, see his interview on the British BBC show âHARDtalkâ on November 4, 2009: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ThTJBKYPiNo&t=153s> (accessed on November 22, 2022).
- â© ĆœiĆŸek, âA Leftist Plea for âEurocentrism,ââ 990.
- â© Cited in F. William Engdahl. Manifest Destiny: Democracy as Cognitive Dissonance (Wiesbaden: mine.Books, 2018), 101.
- â© Matthew Sharpe claims that ĆœiĆŸek was the cofounder of the LDS in his article on the Slovenian philosopher in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy: <https://iep.utm.edu/zizek/> (accessed on November 22, 2022). Although I have not found this information confirmed by other sources, it is very clear that ĆœiĆŸek was, at a minimum, a major public spokesperson for the LDS.
- â© See, for instance, âLacan in Slovenia: An Interview with Slavoj ĆœiĆŸek and Renata Salecl.â Radical Philosophy 58 (Summer 1991). It would be interesting to explore the history of this partyâs financing, following the lead of the great Michael Parentiâs analysis of the dismantling of Yugoslavia: âUS leadersâusing the National Endowment for Democracy, various CIA fronts, and other agenciesâfunneled campaign money and advice to conservative separatist political groups, described in the U.S. media as âpro-Westâ and the âdemocratic oppositionââ (To Kill a Nation, 26).
- â© See the televised 1990 election debate archived here: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=942h8enHCZs> (accessed on November 22, 2022).
- â© âLacan in Slovenia,â 30.
- â© See another segment of the same televised 1990 election debate, archived here: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rGfNeIRQ350> (accessed on November 22, 2022).
- â© See the digital archive of NSDD-133 available here: <https://irp.fas.org/offdocs/nsdd/nsdd-133.htm> (accessed on November 22, 2022).
- â© Geert Lovink. âCivil Society, Fanaticism, and Digital Reality: A Conversation with Slavoj ĆœiĆŸek.â Ctheory (February 21, 1996): <https://journals.uvic.ca/index.php/ctheory/article/view/14649/5529> (accessed on November 22, 2022).
- â© Neil Clark. âNS ProfileâGeorge Soros.â New Statesman (June 2, 2003): <http://www.slobodan-milosevic.org/news/ns062203.htm> (accessed on November 22, 2022). âFrom 1979,â Clark specifies in this article, âhe [Soros] distributed $3m a year to dissidents including Polandâs Solidarity movement, Charter 77 in Czechoslovakia and Andrei Sakharov in the Soviet Union. In 1984, he founded his first Open Society Institute in Hungary and pumped millions of dollars into opposition movements and independent media. Ostensibly aimed at building up a âcivil society,â these initiatives were designed to weaken the existing political structures and pave the way for eastern Europeâs eventual colonization by global capital.â
- â© Cited in NĂ©stor Kohan. HegemonĂa y cultura en tiempos de contrainsurgencia âsoftâ (Ocean Sur, 2021), 63.
- â© See Myers, Slavoj ĆœiĆŸek, 9.
- â© Lovink, âCivil Society, Fanaticism, and Digital Reality.â
- â© See, for instance, Chossudovsky, The Globalization of Poverty, 267: âCroatia, Slovenia and Macedonia had agreed to loan packages to pay off their shares of the Yugoslav debt [âŠ]. The all too familiar pattern of plant closings, induced bank failures, and impoverishment has continued unabated since 1996 [i.e. in the wake of the November 1995 Dayton Accords]. And who was to carry out IMF diktats? The leaders of the newly sovereign states have fully collaborated with the creditors.â
- â© âThe fall of the Berlin Wall,â writes Minqi Li, âwas followed by massive declines of living standards for large sections of the world population. The disintegration of the socialist economies contributed to the weakening of the global working classes. National income has been redistributed from labor to capital in nearly every part of the worldâ (âThe 21st Century: Is There an Alternative (to Socialism)?â Science & Society 77:1 (January 2013): 11). Also see BoĆŸo Repe. âSloveniaâ in GĂŒnther Heydemann and Karel Vodicka. From Eastern Bloc to European Union: Comparative Processes of Transformation since 1990 (New York: Berhahn Books, 2017) and Leopoldina Plut-Pregelj and Carole Rogel. The A to Z of Slovenia (Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. 2010), 241. On the imperialist dismantling of Yugoslavia, whose horrific consequences for the majority of the local population were in inverse proportion to the increased profits for the capitalist ruling class, also see Boris Malagurskiâs documentary film The Weight of Chains (2010) and Michael Parentiâs 1999 lecture âThe U.S. War on Yugoslaviaâ: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=waEYQ46gH08> and <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GEzOgpMWnVs> (accessed on November 22, 2022).
- â© See MatjaĆŸ KlemenÄiÄ and Mitja Ćœagar. The Former Yugoslaviaâs Diverse Peoples (Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO, Inc., 2004), 300-301.
- â© See, for instance, Lovink, âCivil Society, Fanaticism, and Digital Reality.â
- â© See the second segment of the 1990 presidential debate mentioned above: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rGfNeIRQ350> (accessed on November 22, 2022).
- â© Ibid.
- â© Lovink, âCivil Society, Fanaticism, and Digital Reality.â
- â© Slavoj ĆœiĆŸek. âNATO, the Left Hand of God.â Nettime (June 29, 1999): <https://www.lacan.com/zizek-nato.htm> (accessed on November 22, 2022).
- â© Parenti, To Kill a Nation, 81.
- â© Quoted in ibid. 92.
- â© Slavoj ĆœiĆŸek. âEastern Europeâs Republics of Gilead.â New Left Review I/183 (Sept/Oct 1990): 58.
- â© ĆœiĆŸek, âLacan in Slovenia,â 29. MiloĆĄeviÄ reportedly launched his campaign of âethnic cleansingâ against Kosovo in a speech he gave in 1989. As reported by Michael Parenti, who provides essential contextualization that contradicts, on numerous points, ĆœiĆŸekâs hot takes, here is part of what MiloĆĄeviÄ said: âCitizens of different nationalities, religions, and races have been living together more and more frequently and more and more successfully. Socialism in particular, being a progressive and just democratic society, should not allow people to be divided in the national and religious respectâ (To Kill a Nation, 188).
- â© ĆœiĆŸek, âNATO, the Left Hand of God.â
- â© Cited in Parker, Slavoj ĆœiĆŸek, 35.
- â© Lovink, âCivil Society, Fanaticism, and Digital Reality.â
- â© âSlavoj ĆœiĆŸek on Cuba and Yugoslaviaâ (December 1, 2016): <https://zizek.uk/slavoj-zizek-on-cuba-and-yugoslavia/> (accessed on November 22, 2022). Also see ĆœiĆŸek, âThe Communist Desire.â
- â© ĆœiĆŸek, âNous pouvons encore ĂȘtre fiers de lâEurope!â
- â© See his interview on the British BBC show âHARDtalk,â cited above, and Lovink, âCivil Society, Fanaticism, and Digital Reality.â
- â© This segment of the televised debate was archived here: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rGfNeIRQ350> (accessed on November 22, 2022). For a brief summary of some of Churchillâs contributions to imperial atrocities, including the 1943 Bengal famine that claimed the lives of three million people, see Johann Hari. âNot His Finest Hour: The Dark Side of Winston Churchill.â Independent (October 28, 2010).
- â© On Europe, see, for instance, Steve Weissman, Phil Kelly and Mark Hosenball. âThe CIA Backs the Common Market.â Dirty Work: The CIA in Western Europe. Eds. Philip Agee and Louis Wolf (New York: Dorset Press, 1978). It is also important to note that the European Union has been an important anti-communist force. In 2019, the European Parliament passed a resolution that largely equated communism with fascism and condemned âall manifestations and propagation of totalitarian ideologies such as Nazism or communismâ <https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/TA-9-2019-0021_EN.html> (accessed on November 22, 2022).
- â© ĆœiĆŸek, âNous pouvons encore ĂȘtre fiers de lâEurope!â
- â© Slavoj ĆœiĆŸek. First as Tragedy, then as Farce (London: Verso, 2009), 115.
- â© ĆœiĆŸek, âNous pouvons encore ĂȘtre fiers de lâEurope!â
- â© Slavoj ĆœiĆŸek. âNew Statesman Interview, with Jonathan Derbyshire.â New Statesman (October 29, 2009): <https://zizek.uk/new-statesman-interview-with-jonathan-derbyshire/> (accessed on November 22, 2022).
- â© See, for instance, Domenico Losurdoâs insightful critiques of Croce in Antonio Gramsci: Del liberalismo al comunismo crĂtico(Madrid: disenso, 1997).
- â© Ronald Radosh. âSteve Bannon, Trumpâs Top Guy, told Me He Was âa Leninist.ââ Daily Beast (April 13, 2017): <https://www.thedailybeast.com/steve-bannon-trumps-top-guy-told-me-he-was-a-leninist> (accessed on November 22, 2022).
- â© Spencerâs tweet was archived here: <https://archive.ph/qT5Xu> (accessed on November 22, 2022).
- â© Slavoj ĆœiĆŸek. âNew Statesman Interview.â
- â© Michael B Kelley. âLast Year President Obama Reportedly Told His Aides that Heâs âReally Good at Killing People.ââ Business Insider(November 2, 2013): <https://www.businessinsider.com/obama-said-hes-really-good-at-killing-people-2013-11?op=1> (accessed on November 22, 2022).
- â© ĆœiĆŸek, âNew Statesman Interview.â
- â© âDoug Henwood Interviews Slavoj ĆœiĆŸek.â No SubjectâEncyclopedia of Psychoanalysis (February 27, 2002): <https://nosubject.com/I_am_a_fighting_atheist> (accessed on November 22, 2022).
- â© Ibid.
- â© Slavoj ĆœiĆŸek. Repeating Lenin (Zagreb: bastard books, 2001), 137.
- â© ĆœiĆŸek, âThe Communist Desire.â
- â© To take but one example among many others, ĆœiĆŸek has the audacity to claim that class struggle is not part of âobjective social realityâ but is instead the Real âin the strict Lacanian sense,â meaning that class struggle âis none other than the name for the unfathomable limit that cannot be objectivized, located within the social totalityâ (Slavoj ĆœiĆŸek, Ed. Mapping Ideology. London: Verso, 2000, 25, 22).
- â© Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels. Collected Works. Vol. 5 (Moscow: Progress Publishers, 1976), 49.
- â© Badiou draws attention in particular to the books by the rightwing dissident Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, who was welcomed with open arms by Hienrich Böll and the CIA networks he was involved with in Germany (see Hans-RĂŒdiger Minowâs 2006 documentary for ARTE, Quand la CIA infiltrait la culture: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=58QTcf_mFag>, accessed on November 22, 2022). The metaphysician also refers to the âoutstanding, incontrovertible workâ on the Stalinist Terror and positions âin the first rankâ the âgreat bookâ by J. Arch Getty, The Road to Terror: Stalin and the Self-Destruction of the Bolsheviks 1932-1939 (Slavoj ĆœiĆŸek, Ed. The Idea of Communism. Vol. 2. London: Verso, 2013, 6). Badiou declines to mention that this work was funded by the U.S. Department of State, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the Open Society Fund. He also omits the fact that the book was published in a series whose advisory board includes powerful members of the U.S. imperial elite, including U.S. State Department operative Strobe Talbott and the anti-communist National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski. The latter was involved, amongst other things, in covert CIA operations in Afghanistan that funded and supported the Mujahideenâincluding Osama bin Ladenâto fight the Soviet Union (see Chomsky, 9/11, 82).
- â© For an excellent critique of Badiou along these lines, see Losurdo, Western Marxism.
- â© Costas Douzinas and Slavoj ĆœiĆŸek, Eds. The Idea of Communism (London: Verso Books, 2010), viii.
- â© See Gabriel Rockhill and Jennifer Ponce de LeĂłn. âToward a Compositional Model of Ideology: Materialism, Aesthetics and Social Imaginaries.â Philosophy Today 64:1 (winter 2020).
- â© ĆœiĆŸek, Looking Awry, 39; Slavoj ĆœiĆŸek. Metastases of Enjoyment: Six Essays on Woman and Causality (London: Verso, 1994), 30. âThe Real,â ĆœiĆŸek writes, âis precisely that which resists and eludes the grasp of the Symbolic and, consequently, that which is detectable within the Symbolic only under the guise of its disturbancesâ (Metastases of Enjoyment, 30).
- â© Ibid. 76.
- â© ĆœiĆŸek, Looking Awry, 12. I am under no illusion regarding the stability of ĆœiĆŸekâs political positions or, for that matter, his interpretation of Lacan or other issues. As an opportunist, he has, of course, taken numerous different positions, some of which show clear signs of self-contradiction. What I am pointing out here, then, is simply one of the more coherent through-lines in his work, namely the theme of the ethical act, as it segues with Badiouâs theory of the subject.
- â© Alain Badiou. LâhypothĂšse communiste (Paris: Nouvelles Ăditions Lignes, 2009), 189. On numerous occasions, ĆœiĆŸek explicitly embraces Badiouâs Idea of communism, which overlaps with the formerâs extensive writings on the ethical act. Here is one example: âThe communist Idea thus persists: it survives the failures of its realization as a specter which returns again and again, in an endless persistence best recapitulated by Beckettâs already-quoted words: âTry again. Fail again. Fail betterââ (Douzinas and ĆœiĆŸek, Eds., The Idea of Communism, 217).
- â© Badiou, LâhypothĂšse communiste, 188.
- â© Ibid. 189.
- â© Ibid. 202. Never to be outdone in the realm of hyperbole, ĆœiĆŸek doubles down on Badiouâs position and takes it even further: âIf it is to survive, the radical left should thus rethink the basic premises of its activity. We should dismiss not only the two main forms of twentieth century state socialism (the social-democratic welfare state and the Stalinist party dictatorship) but also the very standard by means of which the radical left usually measures the failure of the first two: the libertarian vision of communism as association, multitude, councils, anti-representationist direct democracy based on citizensâ permanent engagementâ (Taek-Gwang Lee and Slavoj ĆœiĆŸek. The Idea of Communism. Vol 3. The Seoul Conference. London: Verso, 2016).
- â© Badiou, LâhypothĂšse communiste, 190. Badiou tellingly references the following examples: âthe SolidarnoĆÄ movement in Poland in the years 1980-81, the first sequence of the Iranian Revolution, the Political Organization in France [Badiouâs political group], the Zapatista movement in Mexico, the Maoists in Nepalâ (ibid. 203). In the third volume of The Idea of Communism, which was based on a conference in South Koreaâa capitalist state and de facto U.S. colony occupied by the militaryâBadiou insists in his opening comments that the participants in the conference âhave nothing to do with the nationalist and military state of North Korea,â adding for good measure: âWe have, more generally, nothing to do with the communist parties that here and there continue the old fashion of the last century [i.e. actually existing socialism].â
- â© âSlavoj ĆœiĆŸek: âHumanity Is OK, but 99% of People Are Boring Idiots.â The Guardian (June 10, 2012): <https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2012/jun/10/slavoj-zizek-humanity-ok-people-boring> (accessed on November 22, 2022).
- â© ĆœiĆŸek has written extensively on Antigone as someone who performed just such an act by rebelling against the state and rejecting the reign of the âreality principleâ in favor of an uncompromising dedication to her desire (to bury her brother and thus honor the higher law of the gods). âAn act is not only a gesture that âdoes the impossible,ââ he contends in his glorification of individual desire Ă la Antigone, âbut an intervention in social reality which changes the very coordinates of what is perceived as âpossibleââ (Did Somebody Say Totalitarianism?, 167).
- â© Badiou and ĆœiĆŸek have occasionally taken political positions in support of the working class, and this is not the object of my critique. It is instead their stalwart oppositionâwith only very minor and explainable exceptionsâto the international socialist movement from 1917 to the present, which has taken the form of anti-imperialist state building projects from the USSR to Vietnam, China, Cuba and beyond.
- â© See Radhika Desai. âThe New Communists of the Commons: Twenty-First-Century Proudhonists.â International Critical Thought 1:2 (August 1, 2011): 204-223.
- â© V.I. Lenin. Collected Works. Vol. 19 (Moscow: Progress Publishers, 1977), 396.
- â© Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels. Collected Works. Vol. 20 (Moscow: Progress Publishers, 1976), 33.
Source: Mronline.org