{"id":4840,"date":"2019-05-04T09:52:55","date_gmt":"2019-05-04T13:52:55","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/praxis1313\/?p=4840"},"modified":"2019-05-04T09:59:25","modified_gmt":"2019-05-04T13:59:25","slug":"bernard-e-harcourt-the-space-of-praxis-an-introduction","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/praxis1313\/bernard-e-harcourt-the-space-of-praxis-an-introduction\/","title":{"rendered":"Bernard E. Harcourt | The Space of Praxis | An Introduction"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong>By Bernard E. Harcourt<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>\u201cThe only scientific thing to do is revolt! Movements, not just individuals, are critical. [\u2026] Revolt! Think we must; we must think. Actually think, not like Eichmann the Thoughtless. Of course, the devil is in the details\u2014how to revolt? How to matter and not just want to matter?\u201d<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\">&#8212; Donna J. Haraway, <em>Staying with the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene<\/em><\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>We arrive at the final session of Praxis 13\/13 having explored a wide range of modalities of contemporary critical practice, from the Left Populism of Chantal Mouffe and (perhaps) Bernie Sanders, theories of assembly with Judith Butler, Michael Hardt and Toni Negri, and the idea of \u201cthe common,\u201d to the radical anarchist separatism of the Invisible Committee in France and the explosive \u201cUndercommons\u201d of Fred Moten and Stefano Harney, to Frankfurt School praxis with Martin Saar, death fasts, self-immolation, and the weaponization of life with Banu Bargu, and Bruno Latour\u2019s urgent invitation to address global climate change. We have, over the course of the 2018-2019 year, surveyed the field of contemporary critical practice\u2014what we might call \u201cthe space of praxis.\u201d It is now time to reflect on that space.<\/p>\n<p>For our final session, we had originally planned to focus on one last set of praxis readings that include Hakim Bey\u2019s <em>The Temporary Autonomous Zone\u00a0<\/em>(1985) and Joshua Clover\u2019s <em>Riot. Strike. Riot\u00a0<\/em>(2016). Those critical texts develop two other important directions in contemporary practice: first, the creation of autonomous zones such as, most recently in the news, the \u201c<em>zone \u00e0 d\u00e9fendre<\/em>\u201d (ZAD) at Notre-Dame-des-Landes outside of Nantes, France, which involved a decades-long peaceful occupation of lands with a political and environmental agenda, originally opposed to the enlargement of the Nantes airport; and second, the increasing practice of riots and looting as forms of uprising tied to our current political-economic condition of neoliberal consumption capitalism. Both of these texts\u2014to which I will come back to in a moment\u2014are essential building blocks in the effort to map the space of praxis.<\/p>\n<p>But rather than end on a close reading of these texts, we have invited three extraordinary critical theorists\u2014the philosopher Amy Allen, the war reporter and Berlin performer Carolin Emcke, and the Pulitzer-Prize winning historian Heather Thompson\u2014to reflect more broadly on this \u201cspace of praxis\u201d today\u2014from the perspective of critical philosophy, critical practice, and critical history. In the process, I would like to suggest or intimate, we may actually imagine the space of praxis itself as a \u201c<em>zone \u00e0 d\u00e9fendre.<\/em>\u201d More of that in a minute.<\/p>\n<h1>Autonomous Zones and Riots<\/h1>\n<p>Let me turn first, for a moment here though, to those ZADs and TAZs. Hakim Bey offers a seductive, poetic vision of anarchist separatism in his writings on temporary autonomous zones. His is a romantic vision drawing on the imagination of the pirate alcove, the explorers gone native, the artists in the limit experience. Bey embraces the fugitive, the deviant in all manners. The vision Bey offers is a creature of our post-revolutionary moment\u2014of the lapse in that \u201cmodern conception of revolution\u201d that we discussed in conversation with the writings of Reinhardt Koselleck. The revolutionary ideal, Bey warns us, is behind us\u2014a thing of the past. What lies ahead are uprisings and insurrections. His poetics are strident: \u201crealism demands not only that we give up waiting for \u2018the Revolution\u2019 but also that we give up wanting it. \u2018Uprising,\u2019 yes\u2014as often as possible and even at the risk of violence.\u201d (99-100) Bey explains the appeal of the uprising: \u201cThe concept of the TAZ arises first out of a critique of Revolution, and an appreciation of the Insurrection. The former labels the latter a failure; but for us uprising represents a far more interesting possibility, from the standard of a psychology of liberation, than all the \u201csuccessful\u201d revolutions of bourgeoisie, communists, fascists, etc.\u201d (100)<\/p>\n<p>For Hakim Bey, the TAZ already exists\u2014it has been with us for centuries, and is here with us today. We are in it now, at least for the lucky ones among us: \u201ca certain kind of \u2018free enclave\u2019 is not only possible in our time but also existent.\u201d (97) It is the experience of Tortuga, the pirate enclave, but also of the explorers who preferred to stay, of early Madagascar, or just the space we have escaped to in order to get away. For Bey, it is the party \u201cwhere for one brief night a republic of gratified desires was attained.\u201d (132) For one brief night, or for two or three years, Bey notes. (132).<\/p>\n<p>The zone allows us to get outside or beyond the state\u2014without conceding to the state. The relationship is that of having overcome the state, escaped it, and ignored it, and being a step ahead. \u201cThe TAZ is like an uprising which does not engage directly with the State, a guerilla operation which liberates an area (of land, of time, of imagination) and then dissolves itself to re-form elsewhere\/elsewhen, <em>before\u00a0<\/em>the State can crush it.\u201d (99) In the zone, we discover other ways to be fully ourselves, and we withhold judgment. \u201cIn the end the TAZ is almost self-explanatory,\u201d Bey writes. \u201cIf the phrase became current it would be understood without difficulty\u2026 understood in action.\u201d (97)<\/p>\n<p>\u201cUnderstood in action\u201d: that defines, perhaps, the space of praxis, where the practices themselves inform us, guide us, theorize us. There, we are no longer theorizing praxis, praxis theorizes us. There is, in a sense, an autonomy of praxis.<\/p>\n<p>That autonomy is central to Joshua Clover\u2019s intervention in <em>Riot. Strike. Riot. <\/em>In conversation with Joshua Clover, I proposed to him that his book could be interpreted as advocating the autonomy of praxis\u2014to which he responded, instead, that it more likely represented the autonomy of theory. Praxis goes on, no matter our theorizing. It is the theorizing that is almost autonomous\u2014and in that sense, perhaps, irrelevant to the ongoing praxis. Critical theory is so immanent, it is almost outside the space of praxis. As Clover writes in his introduction: \u201cTheory is immanent in struggle; often enough it must hurry to catch up to a reality that lurches ahead.\u201d (3)<\/p>\n<p>In his work, Clover traces a parallel history of praxis and political economy\u2014a history in which modalities of uprising are shaped by economic conditions and evolve as a result of the necessary evolution of economic history. Clover offers a three-part story: during the medieval and early modern period, marked by an economy of circulation of goods, forms of uprising are dominated by the mob riot, the form of uprising described and theorized through the lens of moral economy by the English historian, E. P. Thompson. Early capitalism and the Industrial Revolution bring about an economy of production that is accompanied by labor movements, syndicalism, and the modality of the strike as the dominant form of struggle against capitalism. With the neoliberal turn in the 1970s and the transformation of the advanced capitalist economy into a service economy dominated once again by the circulation of goods, revolt turns to a new form of riot, what Clover calls \u201criot prime,\u201d that involves urban youth attacking the commercial symbols of consumption. These are the London riots of 2005, the <em>\u00e9meutes<\/em>of the French <em>banlieus<\/em>in the late aughts, and the rioting in Ferguson, Baltimore, and elsewhere in the United States. They are the direct product of the crises of capitalism at the turn of this century: \u201c<em>crisis signals a shift of capital\u2019s center of gravity into circulation, both theoretically and practically, and riot is in the last instance to be understood as a circulation struggle, of which the price-setting struggle and the surplus rebellion are distinct, if related, forms,\u201d <\/em>Clover emphasizes. (129)<\/p>\n<p>The historical trajectory that Clover describes, then, is directly reflected in the title of his book, <em>Riot. Strike. Riot<\/em>: \u201cRiots\u201d during the medieval and early modern period of a circulatory economy, \u201cStrikes\u201d throughout capitalism, and now the \u201cRiot prime\u201d in our age of post-industrial neoliberal capitalism. What is important in his thesis is that the economic dimension drives the praxis: forms of uprising are determined by economic conditions and evolve regardless of human intervention\u2014or critical theory. We face a distinct future of praxis, regardless of theory. \u201cThe riot, the blockade, the barricade, the occupation. The commune. These are what we will see in the next five, fifteen, forty years. The list is not new.\u201d (175) The space of praxis is, in this sense, autonomous.<\/p>\n<h1>Rethinking the Space of Praxis with Amy Allen, Carolin Emcke, and Heather Thompson<\/h1>\n<p>Within the framework of these and earlier texts, we will turn in our final session to a broader exploration of this \u201cspace of praxis\u201d in conversation with three brilliant critical theorists. We will begin with the philosopher and critical theorist Amy Allen\u2014one of the critical thinkers who has done the most to integrate the Frankfurt School writings with post-colonial, queer, and decolonial critical theory\u2014who will open with a philosophical examination of praxis in conversation with the debate between <a href=\"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/praxis1313\/nancy-fraser-and-rahel-jaeggi-contesting-capitalism\/\">Nancy Fraser and Rahel Jaeggi<\/a> on capitalism titled \u201cContesting Capitalism,\u201d and Wendy Brown\u2019s essay, \u201cNeoliberalism\u2019s Frankenstein: Authoritarian Freedom in Twenty-First Century \u2018Democracies\u2019\u201d in <a href=\"https:\/\/ctjournal.org\/index.php\/criticaltimes\/issue\/view\/1\"><em>Critical Times<\/em>, Volume 1<\/a> (2018). Allen will also develop further her ideas about how to think about psychoanalysis as a model for doing social critique\u2014and the implications for critical praxis of taking it as a model\u2014that she began to develop in her 2016 esssay in <a href=\"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/praxis1313\/amy-allen-psychoanalysis-and-the-methodology-of-critique\/\"><em>Constellations<\/em><\/a>, \u201cPsychoanalysis and the Methodology of Critique.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The author, journalist, performer, and critical theorist, Carolin Emcke, joins us from Berlin and will explore what it means to travel back and forth from the university and philosophy to regions of crises as a war reporter and critical theorist, in order to elaborate \u201cthe space of praxis\u201d in terms of what she calls \u201chidden spaces, restricted spaces, gendered spaces,\u201d as well as \u201cspace as contested territory: ethnic cleansing, territory of natives\u201d and \u201cspace in a broader sense as visibility: different strategies to make invisible people visible.\u201d Incidentally, Carolin Emcke will also be intervening two days before Praxis 13\/13, on May 6, 2019, with Masha Gessen and Edouard Louis, at the \u201cLaws of Desire\u201d panel discussion at the Cooper Union, <a href=\"https:\/\/worldvoices.pen.org\/session\/the-laws-of-desire\/\">information here<\/a>\u2014please join us and RSVP there.<\/p>\n<p>The Pulitzer-Prize winning historian and critical theorist, Heather Thompson, will then discuss the theory and praxis implications surrounding the prison abolition movements today to think through the theory of prison abolition in this moment of such severe prison crises. Heather Thompson has curated for us a number of important readings on prison abolition and prison reform\u2014and how reform itself might perpetuate the crisis\u2014and they are <a href=\"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/praxis1313\/praxis-13-13-readings\/\">available on-line here<\/a>. They include work by <a href=\"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/praxis1313\/are-prison-obsolete-chapter-1\/\">Angela Davis<\/a>\u00a0and a chapter from the report \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/johnjay.jjay.cuny.edu\/nrc\/NAS_report_on_incarceration.pdf\">The Growth of Incarceration in the United States: Exploring Causes and Consequences<\/a>\u201d (2014), by the National Academy of Sciences panel on which Heather Thompson herself sat.<\/p>\n<h1>The Praxis ZAD<\/h1>\n<p>Looking back on our own critical practices during Praxis 13\/13, in light of these final sets of readings and discussions, it may be possible to discern a new way to think about our project. Maybe, in the end, this seminar series Praxis 13\/13 is itself a \u201ctemporary autonomous zone\u201d: a space of open experimentation with a willingness to reconsider all our ideas and practices, at the limit, against and without the state, in our own way. In this light, we can imagine the space of praxis, just like our earth today, as a space at risk. A space in danger. Perhaps, the two are symbiotically related. They depend on each other. They are both in need of defense\u2014and of radical rethinking.<\/p>\n<p>In her book,\u00a0<em>Staying with the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene<\/em>, Donna Haraway urges us to rethink our present crises and abandon the notion of the Anthropocene, as well as the more properly named Capitalocene, in favor of what she calls the \u201cChthulucene.\u201d She defines the Chthulucene, with an extra h, as the way to rethink our period through the figure of the spider, <em>Pimoa cthulhu<\/em>, an eight-legged tentacular arachnid home to Sonoma and Mendocino Counties in California (31). It is, she observes, obscene to place man at the heart of the Anthropocene\u2014as Haraway writes, \u201cSurely such a transformative time on earth must not be named the Anthropocene!\u201d (31) Not just for theoretical reasons, but for practical ones as well. \u201cBoth the Anthropocene and the Capitalocene lend themselves too readily to cynicism, defeatism, and self-certain and self-fulfilling predictions, like the \u201cgame over, too late\u201d discourse I hear all around me these days, in both expert and popular discourses, in which both technotheocratic geoengineering fixes and wallowing in despair seem to coinfect any possible common imagination,\u201d she writes (56)<\/p>\n<p>We must, Haraway argues, rethink or better think these categories, in order to practice, and practice better. \u201cWe must think!\u201d Haraway urges us. (57) And with that\u2014with thoughts that think thoughts, real thinking, thinking that can lead to action, to revolt, to the right way to revolt\u2014Haraway urges us to act. \u201cThe unfinished Chthulucene must collect up the trash of the Anthropocene, the exterminism of the Capitalocene, and chipping and shredding and layering like a mad gardener, make a much hotter compost pile for still possible pasts, presents, and futures.\u201d (57)<\/p>\n<p>Welcome to the final Praxis 13\/13, the unfinished Chthulucene, and our own temporary autonomous zone.<\/p>\n<p>Welcome to the \u201c<em>zone \u00e0 d\u00e9fendre <\/em>13\/13\u201d!<\/p>\n<h1 style=\"text-align: center;\">Note<\/h1>\n<p>Special thanks to Molly Rain Kraus for putting Donna Haraway&#8217;s Chthulucene in conversation with Hakim Bey&#8217;s poetic anarchism.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>By Bernard E. Harcourt &nbsp; \u201cThe only scientific thing to do is revolt! Movements, not just individuals, are critical. [\u2026] Revolt! Think we must; we must think. Actually think, not like Eichmann the Thoughtless. Of course, the devil is in&hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/praxis1313\/bernard-e-harcourt-the-space-of-praxis-an-introduction\/\" class=\"more-link\">Continue Reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1641,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[38978],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-4840","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-posts-13-13"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/praxis1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/4840","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/praxis1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/praxis1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/praxis1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1641"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/praxis1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=4840"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/praxis1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/4840\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/praxis1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=4840"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/praxis1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=4840"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/praxis1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=4840"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}