Slavoj Žižek: A “Radical” Apologist for Imperialism

Slavoj Žižek: A “radical” apologist for imperialism.

The Slovenian philosopher Slavoj Žižek has a reputation for lashing out against the “postmodern” and “social democratic” Left, rightly pointing out that this hodgepodge are advocates of capitalism with a human face and not of genuine revolutionary change. A closer look at the political positions taken by Žižek, however, would show that he is no different from the quarters that have been at the receiving end of his attacks.

I have keenly followed the zigzags of Žižek’s school of thought in the past five years and even defended him on some occasions. His infusion of Lacanian psychoanalysis into the concept of ideology, his defense of revolutionary violence against the objective violence of the ruling system, his humorous diatribes, and his appropriation of popular culture references to enhance his arguments seemed refreshing for a time.

However, it would seem that Žižek’s trajectory only seeks to lead the emergent social movements away from the path of a clear and organized struggle to smash the present system and replace it with a new and liberating one. Žižek’s regressive views are particularly crystallized in an interview by Haseeb Ahmed and Chris Cutrone at the Platypus Review entitled “The Occupy Movement, a renascent Left, and Marxism Today: An Interview with Slavoj Žižek.”

FROM KAUTSKY TO ŽIŽEK

“There is no longer the metropolis screwing the Third World countries,” declares Žižek. Eschewing the theory of uneven development and the fundamental contradiction between the imperialist powers and the oppressed nation, he posits that the globalization of capital has erased the divide between industrial capitalist powers and their client-states.

Global capitalism has, in this view, transformed the entire world into “colonies” of an all-powerful international capital that is not beholden to any nation. “American capital cannot be considered that of the U.S.,” Žižek boldly proclaims. “Capitalism is really universal today,” he adds. It has become, as Hardt and Negri describes it, a “Global Empire.”

In this regard, Žižek is no different from present-day anarchists and postmodern leftists such as Hardt and Negri who rail against what they perceive as an amorphous and increasingly anonymous multinational or transnational capitalism lorded over by octopus corporations that have transcended the nation as their base.

Žižek, in short, simply rehashes the ideas of Karl Kautsky and his disciples in the social democratic Second International. For them, the investment of surplus capital in the Third World by the industrial powers would provide the basis for the peaceful transition of the whole world to capitalism. In this theory of “ultraimperialism,” the peripheries would gradually acquire the capacity for industrial production in exchange for their raw resources and cheap labor.

While there is no question about the global scope of the world capitalist system, what is questionable about Žižek’s foray into political economy is the analysis of the relationship between the different parts of this system, of how the prosperity and abundance in the United States, Western Europe, and Japan rests on the superexploitation of the rest of the world through a chain of sweatshops, agricultural plantations, call centers, logging and mining concessions, and export processing zones.

In this setup, we have the imperialist nations on the one side and their direct colonies and semi-colonies on the other. The advanced industrial powers maintain their political, economic, and cultural hold on these subordinate states for the plunder of raw products, natural resources, and cheap labor as well as captive markets for the disposing of their manufactured goods and surplus capital.

The so-called “outsourcing” that he bandies about loosely has its limits and does not lead to the industrial development of Third World countries. Even now we are already seeing how U.S. Barrack Obama threatened to withdraw the business process outsourcing centers outside the U.S. when he spoke in his January 2012 State of the Nation Address.

Even the newly industrialized countries like South Korea and Taiwan did not progress out of the benevolence of the imperialist powers or the whim of an anonymous global capitalist system that simply saw the profitability of investment in these regions.

The development of these countries was based on the implementation of genuine agrarian reform and the liberation of millions of poor peasants which became the basis for further industrial development. These minor exceptions were allowed by the geopolitical considerations of countering the “red menace of North Korea and Mao’s China.

APOLOGIA FOR IMPERIALISM

Žižek has a reputation for bandying about the name of Lenin in his avowed aim of resuscitating the late revolutionary’s legacy in works such as Repeating Lenin, A Plea for Leninist Tolerance, Revolution at the Gates, etc. What comes as a surprise is Žižek’s complete disregard for the same Lenin who wrote Imperialism: the Highest Stage of Capitalism.

Production and capital is now more concentrated than ever in the hands of monopolies based in the imperialist nations. The financial oligarchy sitting on the merger of industrial and financial capital has grown in leaps and bounds, especially with the financialization of the global economy. The export of capital has become more extensive than ever, with the most powerful imperialist nations having divided the whole world for themselves.

The fundamental features of the world capitalist system as described by Lenin remain all the more true today. And to Žižek’s distorted political economy, Lenin would have said: “is ‘ultraimperialism’ possible, or is it ultra-nonsense?” It is precisely this nonsense that leads Žižek to take some of the most reactionary positions.

Žižek has on various occasions taken the role of the apologist of imperialism like in his support for the U.S.-led imperialist war of aggression in the Balkans in the 90s in the guise of humanitarian missions.

He even alludes to supporting the U.S. puppet regime in occupied Iraq in the pretext of supporting the so-called Iraqi “Left”. Because of his eschewing of the theory of imperialism, he absurdly forwards the idea that the U.S. occupation is needed because the Iraqi people cannot liberate themselves on their own.

But is it not that the events in Egypt and Tunisia effectively contradict his assertions? The same could have happened in Iraq on its own if not for the U.S. intervention:

The racist Western left’s view was that the only way you can mobilize the stupid Arabs was through anti-Semitism, religious fundamentalism, or nationalism. But here we had secular democratic protest that was not anti-Semitic, not Islamic fundamentalist, or even nationalist.

He even idolizes Nelson Mandela for pushing neoliberal policies in favor of foreign monopoly capitalist interests and in betrayal of the South African masses. “Mandela was not a traitor,” declares Žižek, saying that the alternative would have been a disastrous repetition of what he calls “a Zimbabwe fiasco.”

So any effort, for Žižek, to independently chart out one’s national development outside the auspices of the world capitalist system inevitably ends in certain failure. Isn’t this line any different from his criticism of the fear that all revolutions lead to the establishment of even more oppressive and exploitative conditions?

STALINIST BOGEYMAN

Žižek testifies: “isn’t the tragedy of 20th century Stalinism that precisely they tried to suspend, not money, but the market, and what was the result? The re-assertion of brutal direct domination.”

Echoing the standard reactionary narrative against Russia under Stalin and China under Mao, he comes up with the one-sided notion that these experiments in socialist revolution and construction were “total failures.”

“This is the lesson of the 20th century,” Žižek pronounces. “The lessons are only negative: We learn what not to do. This is very important. Maybe I’m wrong, but I don’t see positive lessons. I am an honest pessimist.”

The fact that the Chinese revolution as led by Mao liberated millions of poor Chinese peasants and workers from the shackles of imperialist domination and feudal subjugation is overlooked. The victorious advance of a poor war-torn country relying solely on its own people and resources in order to develop step by step its agriculture and industry and raise the standard of living of its people is disregarded.

In fact, Mao’s socialist regime that Žižek maliciously accuse as a “total failure” presided over the emancipation of women and minorities from gender and national oppression, the elimination of exploitation by the old comprador-landlord classes, and the provision of the material needs of the people, including food, healthcare, water, shelter, and education.

The Great Leap Forward, which Žižek paints in the vilest colors as a mega-tragedy causing the death of millions due to famine and starvation, actually endeavored to collective agriculture, close the gap between urban and rural areas, and lay down the foundation for the satisfaction of human needs and industrial development for the people.

The Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution meanwhile brought further development to the masses by bringing millions of youth to the countryside to provide education and health care and help in the management of agri-industrial production in the grassroots. This in turn helped remoulded these youth to make them more dedicated servants of the people.

The conscious struggle against the capitalist-roaders in the state bureaucracy and the party hierarchy empowered millions of Chinese masses, a process that was unfortunately reversed with the death of Mao and the capitalist restoration.

Stalin did commit errors in the form of a tendency towards an overgrown bureaucracy, the premature announcement of the withering away of classes and class struggle, and excesses in the struggle against enemies of the people. But the Žižekian “only negative” verdict ignores real gains in the construction of socialism, the gigantic leaps in the soviet economy, the social welfare system, and the heroic defense against fascism in the Second World War.

All these were achieved in spite of the imperialist encirclement and intervention, the various schemes by the former ruling classes and the bourgeois elements inside the Soviet party to regain power, and the real limits posed by the vestiges of the old czarist society from whose womb the new Soviet state emerged.

RADICAL FACADE

It comes as no surprise that Žižek, who aligns himself with Trotsky and other rightwing figures and renegades who he considers “brutal realist,” eschews all forms of resistance to the present order:

Not only state socialism and the social-democratic welfare state, but also, I would add, the deepest hope of the utopian left, “horizontal organization,” local communities, direct democracy, self-organization—all this, I don’t think it works.

For all the lip service on how doing nothing will lead to even greater global catastrophes, all he coughs up is another version of the reactionary Fukuyama conclusion that there is no alternative to capitalism.

In a time when the whole world is up in arms against the oppressive and exploitative system and social movements are advancing towards ever greater heights, we are all, as Mao puts it, faced with three alternatives: “To march at their head and lead them? To trail behind them, gesticulating and criticizing? Or to stand in their way and oppose them?”

It has become increasingly clear where Žižek stands on this question. Far from representing a truly revolutionary alternative, he only exposes himself as an apologist of the ruling order hidden behind a radical façade.

REFERENCES

Armando Liwanag, “Hinggil sa Monopolyo-Kapitalistang ‘Globalisasyon’”
Armando Liwanag, “Stand for Socialism against Modern Revisionism”
Haseeb Ahmed and Chris Cutrone, “The Occupy Movement, a renascent Left, and Marxism Today: An Interview with Slavoj Žižek”
Julieta De Lima-Sison, “Si Jose Ma. Sison tungkol sa Moda ng Produksyon”
Mao Zedong, “Report on an Investigation of the Peasant Movement in Hunan”
Pao-yu Ching, “China: Socialist Development and Capitalist Restoration”

About karlo mikhail

Karlo is a bibliophile, youth activist, flaneur, literature graduate, and citizen media advocate. A former student council leader and school paper editor, he is presently the Panay Regional Coordinator for Kabataan Partylist.

9 Comments

  1. Pingback: The Greatest « Kapirasong Kritika

  2. it seems to me that zizek wanted to tread a path of controversial (read: gimmicky) intellectual career. he was good, even enchanting, but he was blinded by capitalist propaganda/ blackmail, a thing which is in abundance in the context he resides. Nice article man, keep it up.

  3. thank youm haha. minus all the idealist-lacanian-hegelian claptrap, zizek makes for a good stand-up comedian

  4. Pingback: » Three Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Student Teams Earn Top Honors for Entrepreneurial Ideas

  5. I read a lengthy introduction to a collection of essays by Robespierre by Zizek, and was impressed by Z’s total disregard for logic; by his obsession with arcane theorizing (not unusual these days); and by his shifty arguments concerning Robespierre’s legacy: he is considered a bloodthirsty embarrassment for the left, and Z seems to accept and reject this at the same time. All in all, I had no appetite for more of him. Robespierre, on the other hand, was interesting. His essay on the rights of Jews and Actors, denied under the Ancien Regime, and some others, filled out his character a bit.

    Now you, on the other hand, are rather clear in your statement about Stalin:

    Stalin did commit errors in the form of a tendency towards an overgrown bureaucracy, the premature announcement of the withering away of classes and class struggle, and excesses in the struggle against enemies of the people. But the Žižekian “only negative” verdict ignores real gains in the construction of socialism, the gigantic leaps in the soviet economy, the social welfare system, and the heroic defense against fascism in the Second World War.

    I am amazed to read such a thing today. I would think that such a facile dismissal of a mountain of crimes (next to a mountain of achievements, as one writer put it) would be obsolete after the publication of The Gulag, the novels of Victor Serge, the historical works of Sebag-Montefiore, not to mention the (admittedly, right-wing) Conquest.

    Was his bureaucracy his major error? The one that set quotas for arrests, imprisonments, and executions? His intellectual faux pas of misjudging the rate at which the state-class system was degrading was a major error, but not the arbitrary imprisonment of millions in slave labor camps, and the equally arbitrary execution of hundreds of thousands, if not millions, many of whom were loyal and committed revolutionaries?

    “Excesses in the struggle against enemies of the people?” That’s pretty mild. Is that what it was? What about his personality cult, his ruthless assumption of all power, his unrelenting drive to constitute himself as a new, secularized Tsar, about which he was often quite candid?

    Did he really build socialism? Then why, thirty years after his death did it fall apart? Yes, he did industrialize the Soviet economy, but he also produced an economy that could not sustain itself and that was horribly inefficient and lopsided in its priorities. It was also one of the most polluting in the world. And, oh yes, those millions killed to supply grain to the cities, all just eggs that had to broken…

    As for the “heroic defense against fascism,” I don’t know how much credit Stalin deserves for that, but he certainly should get the blame for his week of stupefied inaction after Hitler’s invasion, during which he did nothing and allowed no one to do anything, resulting in the death and capture of millions of Russian soldiers, and vast amounts of territory.

    And on and on…

    • I appreciate your “amazement.” It is not new considering all the widespread lopsided portrayals of Stalin. I also read The Gulag Archipelago and is a big fan of A Day in the Life of Ivan Denivosich. (Victor Serge, soon enough). Admittedly, I am clearly against a subjective, one-dimensional assessment of Stalin’s attempt at constructing socialism in Soviet Russia. In order to understand why the former Soviet Union disintegrated, it is necessary to look back not only into Stalin’s negative but also positive contributions. It is also necessary to make a distinction between Stalin’s contributions and the attempts by his successors to actively restore capitalist rule in Russia.

      My attempt to compress a heavily loaded point in the passage that you quoted is corollary to my failure to elaborate it in more depth. But to restate my point shortly, it is precisely Stalin’s tendency towards the premature announcement of the withering away of classes and class struggle and tendency towards an over-reliance on “technocratic experts” over the conscious and massive mobilization of the Soviet masses that led to excesses in the struggle against enemies of the people.

      As Mao puts it: “There is the enemy criticizing us, the enemy being dissatisfied with the Communist party; and there are the people criticizing us, the people being dissatisfied with us; and the two must be distinguished. Stalin for so many years did not make such distinctions, or rarely did.” Nevertheless, this struggle cannot but be waged. And of course, it does not exist in a vacuum. The struggle against counterrevolutionary forces is a reality in any real collective and massive endeavor for social transformation in favor of the exploited and oppressed majority.

      After the overthrow of the Czar, the former ruling classes-the landed aristocracy, the bourgeois, and their foreign partners put up a brutal and vicious struggle to regain their lost power, wealth, privilege, and private property from the victorious proletarians. The young Soviet regime faced encirclement by hostile imperialist countries and even suffered from actual invasions by powers during the Civil War. The western powers imposed one of the enduring economic blockades against Soviet Russia.

      I will not anymore comment on the standard Cold War era imperialist black propaganda on Stalin’s being a “secular Czar” or Khrushchev justification of the dismantling of the Soviet regime’s socialist foundations in the guise of attacking Stalin’s “cult of personality.” It would suffice to reiterate that socialist construction in Soviet Russia under Stalin’s first Five-Year Plan in 1929 was the best time for the toiling masses in the whole world during this time.

      In this Plan, the process of collectivization of agriculture as led by the Bolshevik Party organized, empowered, and mobilized the poor peasantry against the kulaks that were violently resisting efforts towards the redistribution of wealth in the countryside and its serving as aid to the industrialization of the cities. Under Stalin, working hours was only 7 hours. The wages of farm workers increased by 50%. There was no unemployment. Free education for all was implemented in 1930, etc. And all this development and raising of the standard of living in the former Soviet Union were led by Stalin amidst the outbreak of the worse crisis of the world capitalist system in 1930! (“Ang Dakilang Guro”)

      To further emphasize Stalin’s better side, allow me to quote extensively from Mao: “Comrade Stalin creatively developed Lenin’s theory concerning the law of the uneven development of capitalism and the theory that it is possible for socialism to first achieve victory in one country; Comrade Stalin creatively contributed the theory of the general crisis of the capitalist system; he contributed the theory concerning the building of communism in the Soviet Union; he contributed the theory of the fundamental economic laws of present-day capitalism and of socialism; he contributed the theory of revolution in colonies and semi-colonies. Comrade Stalin also creatively developed Lenin’s theory of party-building. All these creative theories of Comrade Stalin’s further united the workers throughout the world, further united the oppressed classes and oppressed people throughout the world, thereby enabling the struggle of the world’s working class and all oppressed people for liberation and well-being and the victories in this struggle to reach unprecedented proportions.”

      Stalin was clearly no Saint. But he was not the Devil incarnate either as decades of US imperialist propaganda in the guise of academic hoopla would like to paint him. As Mao said, “It is impossible for any nation not to commit any mistakes at all, and [since] the Soviet Union was the first socialist country in the world, and has had such a long experience, it is impossible for it not to have made some mistakes.”

      Stalin was even forthright in admitting his own mistakes, in the way, for example that he criticized himself in his failure to effectively advise the Chinese revolutionaries and the excesses in the so-called “purging” of the Party. A year before his death, Stalin already saw the folly of his premature announcement of the dissolution of classes and the class struggle in the former Soviet Union. He already saw how capitalist roaders like Khrushchev and Brezhnev who have crept in the party have gained much influence in the party and Soviet society but he no longer had the chance to correct this grave error.

      It was exactly the conscious and insidious attempt by revisionists cliques led by Khrushchev, Brezhnev, and Gorbachev that led to the disintegration of socialism in Soviet Russia after the death of Stalin–long before the full restoration of Capitalism in the 90s! You may not agree with me on this, but as Mao ultimately said, Stalin was “30 percent wrong and 70 percent correct.”

  6. …Khrushchev justification of the dismantling of the Soviet regime’s socialist foundations in the guise of attacking Stalin’s “cult of personality.”

    Well, Victor Serge, and others, take the point of view that it was Stalin himself who betrayed the Russian Revolution and destroyed socialism. Also, I can’t really credit Mao as a reliable authority on Stalin’s good and bad deeds.

    • …which, understandably, is the standard petty-bourgeoisie, cynical, subjective narrative. As one of the greatest revolutionary leaders of all time next only to Marx and Lenin, Mao is one of the best authorities of not only the weaknesses but more importantly, the contributions of Stalin.

  7. Pingback: Slavoj Žižek: The Empowerment of the Right and the Dissolution of the Left (Video) « Minimal ve Maksimal Yazılar

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s