In an unusual experiment, three theorists engage in a dialogue on central questions of contemporary philosophy and politics. Their essays, organized as separate contributions that respond to one another, range over the Hegelian legacy in contemporary critical theory, the theoretical dilemmas of multiculturalism, the universalism-versus-particularism debate, the strategies of the Left in a global economy, and the relative merits of post-structuralism and Lacanian psychoanalysis for a critical social theory.
Judith Butler is an American post-structuralist and feminist philosopher who has contributed to the fields of feminism, queer theory, political philosophy and ethics. They are currently a professor in the Rhetoric and Comparative Literature departments at the University of California, Berkeley.
Butler received their Ph.D. in philosophy from Yale University in 1984, for a dissertation subsequently published as Subjects of Desire: Hegelian Reflections in Twentieth-Century France. In the late-1980s they held several teaching and research appointments, and were involved in "post-structuralist" efforts within Western feminist theory to question the "presuppositional terms" of feminism.
Their research ranges from literary theory, modern philosophical fiction, feminist and sexuality studies, to 19th- and 20th-century European literature and philosophy, Kafka and loss, and mourning and war. Their most recent work focuses on Jewish philosophy and exploring pre- and post-Zionist criticisms of state violence.
This book is a great introduction to the debate that has plagued the Left since the arrival of the cultural turn, the main question being summed up in: "How do we come to terms with the possibility of a Universal political project with the current proliferation of identity and "issue oriented" struggles like those of Decolonial efforts, LGBT rights/emancipation, Feminism and Anti-Racism"
The juxtaposition and staging of this debate between Butler, Laclau and Zizek is perfect as an introduction to the affinities and differences of their projects. The sometimes veering on "confrontational" attitude of each of the theorists in their round of essays adressed to each other is great at articulating the network of readings and misreadings that are produced within the ensemble of their responses to each other. To put it in terms that Zizek may be privy to, it is in the particularizations of the "project of universality" within the theories of Butler, Laclau and Zizek that allow an "oppositional determination" to emerge between them, each theorists view of their project and the differences they project onto the others tend to not overlap with how the others read themselves and the differences the others espouse.
To dive into each of the theorists main formulations. I would describe them as such:
Butler seems to me to want to emphasis the role of "parody" or "iterability" in the language game of universality. Noting how political projects that claim to be universal rely on exclusions of political subjects deemed to be(to put in Laclau's terms) a general crime against the ideal holism of the social order, and ideality which is only sustained by the hegemonic presence of a particular social interest that has claimed the role of expressing a universal project that guarantees social cohesion(think of the Nazi ideal of an organic social whole, this whole relied on the exclusion of the Jew as a that threatens this "ideal order"). Butlers main claim is that the language of "universality", by the very fact that it is always contaminated by a rhetorical/particularistic remainder(interest of a social agent) it creates the possibility for that universality to negotiate its very own practical existence. The formerly excluded agents of this universality could try and articulate their own particular interests as something that merits inclusion in the universal.
Laclau, while noting this, gives this play a different theoretical grounding. The tendency to universality is fundamentally an index of an irreducibly political dynamic in society to institute hegemony. It is only by making the particularistic demands of a specific social agent into the axis by which other different particular social identities can view their emancipation that these projects acquire normative/political force in society.(think of how minority movements may coalesce into unified projects in resistance to present forms of opression like state sanctioned violence, systemic inequality or capitalism as such). This process should not be seen as purely a "linguistic" game but also in the actual practices that constitute or challenge existing social institutions. What Laclau gives emphasis to however is that this "universality" and its concomitant function of indicating a "social wholeness" untained by antagonism is what the process of radical democracy must put into question. The point is that all the struggles between particular social sectors/agents/identities can never be superseded in toto. Any instantiation of a hegemony will always rely on exclusions of a social sector deemed to be a constitutive threat to this social order. This very "hypostasization" of the obstacle to social wholeness is an inalienable part of the very process of hegemony in the political realm. This process of particulars universalizing their interests through equivalential links with other particular interests indicates for Laclau a "Real Antagonism". The point is to recognize that "Universality" is both impossible and necessary. There is no such thing as a social wholeness that we could ever achieve, all we can do is employ this dimension of politics to solve partial problems in society in a self aware way.
Zizek i think is the most provocative, because while he accepts Laclaus notion of Hegemony, he seeks to historicize the very centrality that hegemony has acquired in modern politics. The very proliferation of multiple identity formations and the decentering of what have been deemed the traditional marxist focuses on the universality of the proletariat and capitalism. Zizek does not question that hegemony is an undeniable reality the left must inquire to, but he is suspicious of the lack of a questioning of the conditions that allow the modern terrain of hegemony to be shaped. This term has to be sought in Capitalism and the forms it has acquired in the post-industrial era. Zizeks thesis with regards to this is unfortunately left to his final essay response, his point being ultimately that "class struggle" has ended up creating its own non-centrality in postmodern life. It is the very processes and failures of the proletariat in the 20th century that have been marked in the ever increasing stratification of the proletariat(into the middle classes, the increasing stratified line between skilled and deskilled labour, the effects of unevene development and the offshoring of hyperexploited labour in the third world) this is opposed to the tendency of proletarianization which was seen as the axis by which the universality of the working class in the early marx(seen through the lens of the increasing concentration of workers in factories and in the expansion of the density of workplaces)
I could not go on with the more particular debates enmeshed within these summaries since it covers alot of ground(which include to name a few, the debate over what can be considered formalist, the structure or historicity of "historicism" as a paradigm of analysis, the coherency of the employment of thinkers such as Hegel,Lacan, Derrida and Foucault for an analysis of subjectivity, etc, the relation between theory and practice, description and normativity) but i would like to end by positing that I think Butlers project fares the worse out of the ones presented here, and i mostly relegate it to her very weak responses to Laclaus and Zizeks correct insistence that historicism needs a practical/pragmatic internal limit without which all historicism would end up contradicting itself.
This book will be difficult for people who are not at least decently familiar with the theoretical work of each of the authors engaged in dialogue here. At minimum I would recommend reading at least a couple of books by each author, including at least "Hegemony and Socialist Strategy" (Laclau), "The Ticklish Subject" (Zizek), and "Bodies that Matter" or "The Psychic Life of Power" (Butler). Indeed, I myself postponed reading this book for several years until I had done enough prepatory reading, and my patience was amply rewarded.
So, presuming familiarity with the theoretical positions at stake here, this is actually a fascinating and engaging conversation between three theorists who are trying to articulate theoretical concepts useful to the project of a radical emancipatory leftist politics at the dawn of the twenty-first century. In a rather innovative experiment, each author contributes three rounds of essays that comment on and critique the work of the other two. Zizek advances the thesis (elsewhere) that the history of philosophy is the history of (productive) misreadings, and this volume emphasizes that what we are dealing with here is not so much a philosophical dialogue as a series of (more or less) productive misreadings of each other: it is clear that Butler persistently misreads Lacan's notion of the Real, Laclau misreads Hegel, Zizek misreads the history of (post-)Marxism, and so on... But in the gaps and lacunae that separate these three thinkers and their ability to understand each other, they reveal the stakes of theory, and why the rigorous articulation of theoretical categories is useful and essential to the practice of radical politics. Some may accuse these thinkers of accomplishing nothing more than the splitting of increasingly fine hairs--but if these debates prove anything it is that one's theoretical orientations can have a dramatic impact on one's political activity.
This was not an easy book. More than once I was extremely lost. Philosophy, especially at this level, not only uses extremely specialized language to deal with concepts, but argues about the language as well as the concepts. Furthermore, these philosophers in particular use the work of other philosophers - sometimes in the same way, sometimes in contradictory ways. For example: What is the Lacanian Real? Is it the same thing at all times in history? Is there always something that escapes us, even if we don't believe in "always"? That kind of thing.
That being said, this book was extremely illuminating. Reading all three philosophers debating about where they agree and disagree helped get three perspectives on each writer. With writing as dense as Zizek's or Butler's, this helped round out my understanding a bit. It was also interesting to read Laclau for the first time. He not only has some extremely provocative ideas about "chains of equivalents" as the way to unify social movements, but also manifested some really astute criticism of Zizek that had crossed my mind reading Z's previous works. At times I also found Z a little out of touch responding to Butler and Laclau. To me, Butler's true strength was in her analysis of the struggle for gay marriage and the broader Left alliance. It's pretty clear to me that to call for inclusion in the State is to break alliance with those who don't want any part of the State. Alliances are extremely important. Wanting to be "included" in the "mainstream" is participating in some kind of illusion/violence, I think. A spectacle - a fantasy that there is even a mainstream to which one can belong.
Anyway, I digress. This was on the whole a good book, despite its many difficulties. I will probably be mullin' it over for a long time to come.
The greatest issue with the organization of this text is the fact that it is structured around reception to Laclau and Mouffe's Hegemony and Socialist Strategy, which means that, instead of a "neutral" confrontation between three thinkers, the frame of the discussion is "overcoded" by one. Thus, it becomes cannibalized by rather stunted discourse around tired notions, "contingency," "hegemony," "universality." I also think that triangulating is a rather difficult proposition, for in each author having to respond to two others simultaneously, there ends up being three discussions (between pairs) going on simultaneously, which means that there are six threads to follow within the text, which makes what is going on much less clear than if the discussion was just between two thinkers. The even worse problem is that, as representatives of "the Left," all three of these authors are rather weak (both theoretically and politically). Butler wants to clarify the connection between the transhistorical and the political, which Laclau and Žižek will both reveal as a false dichotomy. Nevertheless, there is a problem in how the discussion is framed, especially in choosing these particular three as the participants: in pitting things this way, in which Butler wants to discuss concrete political issues, while Žižek's general apathy towards these questions draws his attention elsewhere, it makes it seem as though "formalism" is pitted against "praxis." For Laclau is correct to note that Žižek has no program, bandying about slogans in lieu of any genuine suggestions, though Laclau's tepid post-Marxist liberalism leaves much to desire, to understate things. So while I think Butler is right to critique the defense of sexual difference as signaling failure itself for failing to adequately answer the question, their position (especially in connecting a defense of sexual difference to heteronormative attacks against LGBTQ rights) is just as incorrect. The problem is that no real defense of sexual difference is provided, and Žižek, who is brought in to defend it, is not interested in doing so on feminist grounds because he is not a feminist (hence his narrow defense on Lacanian grounds that empties it of content precisely to render it uncritiquable). Yet, Žižek actually says something rather enlightening, which I don't think he fully realizes the implications of, when he notes that while conservatives conceive of a foreign intruder in order to support their notion of a consistent society, leftists conceive of society as fundamentally divided, and uses Lévi-Strauss's example in order to explicate sexual difference, which is that he is really saying that there is a sexual antagonism which rives society apart, ontologically, and thus more fundamentally than class antagonism, which is why his insistence on class as fundamental rings so hollow. (Laclau is right to critique him here, though his notion that class is now just an identity alongside others within a broader identity politics is just as, if not more, wrong.) Laclau, meanwhile, seems to have taken the Lyotardian detour straight into a ditch, for his (mis)reading of the "linguistic turn" in philosophy (he claims that signifiers, signifieds, and signs should all be taken as signifiers - disastrous!) leads him to think of politics purely in terms of contestation over messaging, and this is primarily what his and Mouffe's notion of "hegemony" refers to. This point of agreement between him and Butler is rather tepid, this notion that universality and particularity are necessarily imbricated, that universals can never fully be instantiated in a particular. Even Ruti realizes that it is the psychoanalytic singular which needs to be poised in opposition to both the universal and the particular. One really wishes that a figure such as Copjec would have been brought in to defend Lacan on terms that Butler would actually be amenable to, instead of the masculinist Žižek. Sometimes I wonder if this discussion is at least partially a product of its time, and that the Lacanian field has progressed in the two-and-a-half decades between its publication and now, and that part of the reason so many of these questions seem so tired and outdated now is due to developments in the field. Partway through Žižek's second contribution, he stops even trying to respond to his interlocutors and just starts riffing irrelevantly in the manner of his other "books," leaving the discussion to continue mostly between Butler and Laclau, which is perhaps the least interesting of the pairings. I do want to read Who Sings the Nation-State? at some point, I really wonder what a Spivak-Butler collab would generate.
In her final essay of the book (which, in my opinion is easily the best and most rewarding of the nine essays), Judith Butler begins, "This volume runs the risk, since it is not clear which of two projects it seeks to fulfill. On the one hand, it is an occasion for some practitioners of theory with convergent commitments to think together about the status of the political domain; on the other hand, it is an occasion on which each practitioner defends his or her position against the criticisms of others, offers his or her own criticisms, distinguishes his or her position. There appears to be no easy way to resolve this tension, so perhaps the interesting question will become: is the irresolution that the text performs a particularly productive one?"
A few sentences later she posits, "It would be bad, I think, if our efforts devolved into a point-by-point rejoinder to criticisms […] while the status of universality, contingency and hegemony somehow fell by the wayside."
Well, given the latter criteria criteria, this book has failed. It seemed to be that the status of the three political concepts often fell by the wayside amid many pages of squabbling. Though I wonder if the format is at least partially to blame, I read another book with the same setup (three essayists write three essays each, responding to each consecutive round), and the result was essentially the same.
That being said, in the end the most interesting question really did become, "is the irresolution that the text performs a particularly productive one," particularly for the purposes of this review, and the answer to that is yes, absolutely! I suppose if I had to boil the whole books down to two words, they would be: productive failure. All three philosophers were insightful and, since my thinking about our current situation has been altered from its enrichment, I have gained from reading them. They (mostly) rose above their squabbles when it counted; and their differences, which seemed like chasms at times, actually tended to overlap in the most illuminating and fruitful ways, even when unacknowledged.
And probably the largest takeaway I have from this book is the one fissure that has dominated the political left since the 2016 election: identity politics versus class-based politics, was just as dominating an issue in 2000 when this book was published (and probably was for at least two decades prior as well). Ours is a hidebound lot; perhaps it isn’t such an obscure thing to see why the left has been blown politically off course for so long after all.
Overall I had difficulty choosing three stars and four. I chose four because: 1) the book's insight 2) I didn't want to give the "score" much thought
The book's benefit certainly outshines it limitations, and it should be given consideration.
The third star is for Laclau's (necessary) heavy-handed critiques of Butler and Zizek. The book is an exchange between three Leftists who do not see eye-to-eye on matters of the Left; which is par for the course for any position on the New Left. It is meant to be a dialogue to reach understanding of the others' opinions, but after three rounds of papers, there is not much change or consensus. Butler represents universality, even though she rejects it and opts for a kind of subjectivism where everyone chooses what aspects participate in the universal. Laclau represents hegemony, placing all matters in Gramscian dialogue and struggle. Zizek represents not contingency but Lacanian analysis of sociopolitical matters, including Marxism and Hegelianism.
The most valuable part of the book are Laclau's second and third papers because they give significant critiques of Butler and Zizek, admitting they all have significantly different views and are not understanding each other (possibly deliberately in order to fit each other in their own personal philosophical framework). Laclau characterizes Butler as trying to uphold universalism but failing to do so in her own bid for hegemonic struggle where individuals manifest their subjective views (largely in expressions of gender) to defy social values. He also gives one of the most accurate descriptions of Zizek I have heard (having read several of Zizek's books already) that Zizek is not a sociopolitical critic with Lacanian perspectives but a psychoanalyst using sociopolitical examples to explain his psychological ideas.
Overall, all three writers make things as difficult to understand as they can, although Laclau is the clearest out of all of them.
Read this book and you will come to a complete understanding why some people cannot stand intellectuals, and think their work is an utter waste of time. It is that difficult to read AND understand, and transferring their theories to real world scenarios (of which there are hardly any here at all) takes a level of effort few people are willing to apply, and additionally a level of intelligence and deep thinking not many have at their disposal. This book is well nigh unintelligible for anyone not familiar with the three author's styles, academic backgrounds, and manner of presentation of their thoughts, ideas, and concepts. I won't try to fool anyone with ambiguous commentary. I had a difficult time understanding a lot of what was being discussed and argued by the trio. I have read other books by all three and even so I struggled to see how their increasingly dense ideas could be taken from theory to practice, but that probably says less about their smarts and more about my lack of them. Still, I got a decent enough amount of brain food from this, but I won't say I enjoyed the book. But reading, learning, and understanding is not supposed to be easy, if you ask me, so while I wouldn't know who to recommend this book to, partly because it is impossible to summarize and partly because much of what it covers is just out of reach of my knowledge foundations, I still think it is an intriguing way to get three respected intellectuals to discuss how their ideas overlap, coincide, and diverge. Or pointless navel-gazing, if you prefer your Marx more Groucho and less Karl.
ottima disamina sui problemi della sinistra da tre dei principi (se non addirittura i massimi esponenti) del pensiero di sinistra. i tre sono di tre correnti specifiche: hegliana, Post Marxista e marxista e, partendo dai propri maestri di pensiero assistiamo a una discussione non scontata dove gli stessi pensatori vengono "scomposti e riassemblati" sui tantissimi temi dall' identità stessa della sinistra. da studiare e far studiare
The premise of this text is fascinating- 3 scholars with similar views lay down three different philosophical tracts that contain similar notions but contradict about particular premises. Observing Butler, Laclau, and Zizek engage with one another and defend themselves is interesting, but their arguments can sometimes be esoteric, especially Butler's within her first essay. Had the scholars focused more upon their readers and less upon each other, I feel as if some of the argumentation would be more compelling because there would be less ambiguity of what is meant when the scholars refer to particular concepts with the conviction that their readership will already know everything they mean. Despite the title, there appears to be less of a focus upon contingency and more so upon semiotics. This is not a bad thing necessarily, but it can catch someone off guard easily. I wouldn't recommend this volume to people who do not have a decent grounding already within philosophy, but the Laclau and Zizek entries are far more accessible than the rest. For those who trek through the text, the mental reward is worth it, even if the 3 authors cannot come to a complete consensus about the nature of hegemony and its relationship to universality.
Good thinkers here, and lots of good ideas regarding political identity, Marxism, and the limits of poststructuralism. The book is set up so that each author writes a piece, then another wave responding to the first set, and so on. They are prone, like most academics involved in such dense, insular conversations, to getting stuck in some petty squabbles and calling each other Crypto-Kantians. Still, this is an interesting insight into how their positions differ. I particularly liked Zizek's "Class Struggle or Postmodernism? Yes, Please!". It's not a coincidence that it's towards the beginning of the book. Don't waste your time if you aren't somewhat familiar with these authors, and even if you are, it might be a slog at times. Overall, I found it a worthwhile read.
Uh... I only made it through the first 3 pieces in this (Butler, Zizek and Laclau's initial arguments). This book is helpful in outlining the importance of the concept of universality in contemporary left discourse. If nothing else, this book presents the clearest articulation of each of the three authors theoretical positions (and since they are three of the most important contemporary thinkers, it is helpful for that). However, I would say that a basic understanding of Lacan and Hegel is a necessary prerequisite.
read it together with a book club of other PhDs at my university; it was interesting, but the three authors unfortunately got too carried away by trying to distinguish themselves from each other, very peculiarly responding on what the other actually meant by saying this and that.. still some interesting concepts are discussed, e.g. universality..
I would not suggest to read it, if you are not familiar with their works separately.
All three authors are incredibly compelling in their work. While a lot of the debate seemed either inconsequential or merely an agreement in disguise, as well as potentially losing the point of the project, it’s an incredibly illuminating piece that I’m sure will prove highly influential in my personal political and philosophical thinking.
This book had me massaging my temples in desperate attempts to comprehend... and then i did, and it was great, and fascinating, and problematic. and it will teach you some great lacan if you don't feel like reading lacan.
I don't even find this book in some libraries in yogyakarta, but when one of my friend cited Laclau to criticize the theory of discourse by Foucault I come to underline that I have to read this book..
A comprehensive conversation between Laclau, Butler, and Zizek that covers the central categories through which they envisage social change. Lots of repetition, but useful as a companion piece to their other texts.