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'''Post-anarchism''' is the term used to represent [[anarchism|anarchist]] [[philosophy|philosophies]] developed since the 1980's using [[post-structuralism|post-structuralist]] and [[postmodernism|postmodernist]] approaches. It is not a single coherent theory, but rather is different for each thinker, who utilize the differently combined works of any number of post-structuralists ([[Michel Foucault]], [[Gilles Deleuze]]), [[postmodern feminism|postmodern feminists]] ([[Judith Butler]]), and [[Post-Marxism|post-Marxists]] ([[Ernesto Laclau]], [[Chantal Mouffe]], [[Jean Baudrillard]]), with those of classical anarchists, with particular concentration on [[Emma Goldman]] and [[Max Stirner]], thus varying rather widely in both approach and outcome. |
'''Postanarchism''' or '''Post-anarchism''' is the term used to represent [[anarchism|anarchist]] [[philosophy|philosophies]] developed since the 1980's using [[post-structuralism|post-structuralist]] and [[postmodernism|postmodernist]] approaches. It is not a single coherent theory, but rather is different for each thinker, who utilize the differently combined works of any number of post-structuralists ([[Michel Foucault]], [[Gilles Deleuze]]), [[postmodern feminism|postmodern feminists]] ([[Judith Butler]]), and [[Post-Marxism|post-Marxists]] ([[Ernesto Laclau]], [[Chantal Mouffe]], [[Jean Baudrillard]]), with those of classical anarchists, with particular concentration on [[Emma Goldman]] and [[Max Stirner]], thus varying rather widely in both approach and outcome. |
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The prefix "post-" does not mean 'after anarchism', but refers to the challenging and disruption of typically accepted assumptions within frameworks that emerged during the Enlightenment era. This means a basic rejection of the epistemological foundations of classical anarchist theories, due to their tendency towards essentialist or reductionist notions - although post-anarchists are generally quick to point out the many outstanding exceptions, such as those noted above. Such an approach is considered to be important insofar as it widens the conception of what it means to have or to be produced rather than only repressed by [[power (sociology)|power]], thus encouraging those who act against power in the form of domination to become aware of how their resistance often becomes overdetermined by power-effects as well. It argues against earlier approaches that [[capitalism]] and [[government|the state]] are not the only sources of domination in the moment in which we live, and that new approaches need to be developed to combat the network-centric structures of domination that characterize late modernity. Although thinkers such as Foucault, Deleuze, [[Jacques Derrida|Derrida]], Butler, [[Jacques Lacan|Lacan]], and [[Jean-François Lyotard|Lyotard]] are not explicitly self-described anarchists, their ideas nevertheless serve of great importance, given that their thought is certainly some of the most thoroughly anti-authoritarian to emerge in the history of philosophy and since most of these actively engaged in the Events of [[May 1968]]. |
The prefix "post-" does not mean 'after anarchism', but refers to the challenging and disruption of typically accepted assumptions within frameworks that emerged during the Enlightenment era. This means a basic rejection of the epistemological foundations of classical anarchist theories, due to their tendency towards essentialist or reductionist notions - although post-anarchists are generally quick to point out the many outstanding exceptions, such as those noted above. Such an approach is considered to be important insofar as it widens the conception of what it means to have or to be produced rather than only repressed by [[power (sociology)|power]], thus encouraging those who act against power in the form of domination to become aware of how their resistance often becomes overdetermined by power-effects as well. It argues against earlier approaches that [[capitalism]] and [[government|the state]] are not the only sources of domination in the moment in which we live, and that new approaches need to be developed to combat the network-centric structures of domination that characterize late modernity. Although thinkers such as Foucault, Deleuze, [[Jacques Derrida|Derrida]], Butler, [[Jacques Lacan|Lacan]], and [[Jean-François Lyotard|Lyotard]] are not explicitly self-described anarchists, their ideas nevertheless serve of great importance, given that their thought is certainly some of the most thoroughly anti-authoritarian to emerge in the history of philosophy and since most of these actively engaged in the Events of [[May 1968]]. |
Revision as of 01:40, 19 October 2005
Postanarchism or Post-anarchism is the term used to represent anarchist philosophies developed since the 1980's using post-structuralist and postmodernist approaches. It is not a single coherent theory, but rather is different for each thinker, who utilize the differently combined works of any number of post-structuralists (Michel Foucault, Gilles Deleuze), postmodern feminists (Judith Butler), and post-Marxists (Ernesto Laclau, Chantal Mouffe, Jean Baudrillard), with those of classical anarchists, with particular concentration on Emma Goldman and Max Stirner, thus varying rather widely in both approach and outcome.
The prefix "post-" does not mean 'after anarchism', but refers to the challenging and disruption of typically accepted assumptions within frameworks that emerged during the Enlightenment era. This means a basic rejection of the epistemological foundations of classical anarchist theories, due to their tendency towards essentialist or reductionist notions - although post-anarchists are generally quick to point out the many outstanding exceptions, such as those noted above. Such an approach is considered to be important insofar as it widens the conception of what it means to have or to be produced rather than only repressed by power, thus encouraging those who act against power in the form of domination to become aware of how their resistance often becomes overdetermined by power-effects as well. It argues against earlier approaches that capitalism and the state are not the only sources of domination in the moment in which we live, and that new approaches need to be developed to combat the network-centric structures of domination that characterize late modernity. Although thinkers such as Foucault, Deleuze, Derrida, Butler, Lacan, and Lyotard are not explicitly self-described anarchists, their ideas nevertheless serve of great importance, given that their thought is certainly some of the most thoroughly anti-authoritarian to emerge in the history of philosophy and since most of these actively engaged in the Events of May 1968.
Some concepts common within post-anarchism include:
- the misalignment of the subject in relation to discourse
- the denaturalization of the body and sexuality
- the rejection of the repressive hypothesis
- Foucault's genealogy
- the deconstruction of the binary opposition of Western thought
- the deconstruction of gender roles through feminist poststructuralism
Approaches
One post-anarchist thinker, Todd May, argues for a "poststructuralist anarchism" grounded in the poststructuralist understanding of power, particularly through the work of Michel Foucault and Emma Goldman as a corrective to more circumscribed notions, while taking the anarchist approach to ethics as a mode through which to recast the poststructuralist lack of elucidation in this domain. The "Lacanian anarchism" proposed by Saul Newman utilizes the works of Jacques Lacan and Max Stirner more prominently. Newman criticizes classical anarchists, such as Michael Bakunin and Peter Kropotkin, for assuming an objective "human nature" and a natural order; he argues that from this approach, humans progress and are well-off by nature, with only the Establishment as a limitation that forces behavior otherwise. For Newman, this is a Manichaen worldview, which depicts only the reversal of Thomas Hobbes' Leviathan, in which the "good" state is subjugated by the "evil" people. Lewis Call has attempted to develop post-anarchist theory through the work of Friedrich Nietzsche, rejecting the Cartesian concept of the "subject". From here a radical form of anarchism is made possible; the anarchism of becoming. This anarchism does not have an eventual goal, nor flow into "being", it is not a final state of development, nor a static form of society, but rather becomes permanent, as a means without end.
Reading
- Call, Lewis: Postmodern Anarchism, Lanham, Lexington Books 2002
- Kastner, Jens: Politik und Postmoderne. Libertäre Aspekte in der Soziologie Zygmunt Baumans, Münster 2000 - ISBN 3897714035
- May, Todd: The Political Philosophy of Poststructuralist Anarchism, The Pennsylvania State University Press, University Park 1994 - ISBN 0271010460
- Mümken, Jürgen: Freiheit, Individualität und Subjektivität. Staat und Subjekt in der Postmoderne aus anarchistischer Perspektive, Frankfurt am Main 2003 - ISBN 3936049122
- Mümken, Jürgen (editor): Anarchismus in der Postmoderne. Beiträge zur anarchitischen Theorie und Praxis, Frankfurt am Main 2005 - ISBN 3936049378
- Newman, Saul: From Bakunin to Lacan. Anti-Authoritarianism and the Dislocation of Power, Lanham, Lexington Books 2001 - ISBN 0739102400