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ESF: Encounter or Representation

Graeme Chesters | 22.10.2004 19:15 | European Social Forum | Analysis

Social Forums are spaces of encounter, or at least they should be. As the Zapatistas noted, encounters offer a mirror and a lens, a means to reflect movements and to focus energies. To find our own struggles refracted through others experiences and in the same process to find these struggles changed, opened and multiplied. Spaces of encounter are fundamentally different to spaces of representation and this difference is at the heart of the organised left failing to understand the concept of a social forum. Whilst a few of them have learned the lyrics, so far the tune evades them.

ESF: Encounter or Representation?

‘Something in the world forces us to think. This something is not an object but a fundamental encounter’ – Gilles Deleuze.

Social Forums are spaces of encounter, or at least they should be. As the Zapatistas noted, encounters offer a mirror and a lens, a means to reflect movements and to focus energies. To find our own struggles refracted through others experiences and in the same process to find these struggles changed, opened and multiplied. Spaces of encounter are fundamentally different to spaces of representation and this difference is at the heart of the organised left failing to understand the concept of a social forum. Whilst a few of them have learned the lyrics, so far the tune evades them.

In order to understand why, it is important to know something of who was involved in turning the ‘official’ ESF in to an ideologically homogenous trade fair at Alexandra Palace. Equally, we don’t need to know too much to know that such an outcome was the inevitable result of professional politicians – union leaders or party cadre - manipulating processes of decision-making, buying political power, restricting information and strong-arming those who dissent, whilst still claiming to represent ‘the movement’, workers or some combination of both. All of the above were commonplace in the UK ESF process and despite the simplistic temptation to portray this as the result of some anarchist/Marxist schism the reality is more complex.

In bringing the ESF to London the SWP, Socialist Action and parts of the GLA envisaged a set of political opportunities. Whilst their perceptions and motivations varied markedly, there was sufficient common ground amongst these groups to pursue control of the forum. Socialist Action set out to play their usual covert role, asserting influence within the left yet insulating their paymaster (Livingstone) from any negative fall out. Livingstone in turn was happy to play socialist Mayor and municipalist, apparently alive to the need for social change but restricted by the realities of limited power and centralised government, a solid performance he’s perfected over a number of years.

For the SWP, however, the stakes were bigger and involved their desire to demonstrate a base within the alter-globalisation movement in order to sure up their negotiating position in a European realignment of the Trotskyist left. Over the past two years, Alex Callinicos on behalf of the Central Committee of the SWP has sought an intellectual and political accord with the LCR (Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire) an influential Trotskyist party in France who are active in a number of movements and movement organisations, including ATTAC and the French WSF organising process. This tactical rapprochement is considered by the SWP to be strategically advantageous, yet ironically it was criticised by the LCR who suggested the SWP were a ‘verticalist’ organisation unable to recognise the autonomy of the social movements. Criticisms that interestingly predate the vertical/horizontal debate that lit up the variety of ESF lists in the months before the event. It seems the LCR has heard the tune even if it doesn’t want to dance!

So what is this tune, this refrain of the movements that the organised left seems mostly unable or unwilling to hear. Marcos alluded to it when he suggested that:

‘The revolution in general is no longer imagined according to socialist patterns of realism, that is, as men and women stoically marching behind a red, waving flag towards a luminous future: rather it has become a sort of carnival.’

Instead of the linear march of the faithful to the tune of the vanguard the alter-globalisation movement is traceable in those rhythms of thought and action that prefer to privilege encounters and transgressions, communication and reflection. These traces are multiple and non-linear. They are participatory, intellectual, embodied and affective and were often in evidence in the autonomous spaces of the ESF. Whether in the theoretical articulation of the commons conducted during ‘Life Despite Capitalism’, or traversing the concepts of precarité and complexity that found expression in the ‘Radical Theory Forum’. In the subversive street theatre of confusion unleashed by the ‘Laboratory of insurrectionary imagination’ or throughout the affinity groups, spokes councils, disruptions and parties conducted ‘Beyond the ESF’. Of course, they were also profoundly in evidence during the rhythms of resistance, creative fora and carnival blocs that illuminated the drabness of grey skies and earnest speeches and which managed to combine celebration with solidarity. All of these are in direct contradiction to the presumption of representation that animates the organised left, representation that presumes to define, determine, solidify and control a movement of movements that arose in defiance of such mediation and continues to grow despite the best attempts of leftist parties to strangle it.

Representation, of course, cannot simply be willed away, in many ways it is as much a problem for those who advocate direct or participatory forms of democracy yet simultaneously presume to speak for ‘missing constituencies’: people absent from the physical space where the decision is made; future generations; other sentient beings; the environment and so on. These are philosophically fascinating and somewhat intractable problems but the practice that raises these questions equally implies a rejection of crude syntheses articulated by parties where difference is to be assimilated and singularity crushed.

If we value encounter over representation, one question that perhaps needs raising is the multiplication of autonomous spaces. Perhaps we should ask whether this is an example of hybridity and complexity or whether it indicates the embedding of specific identities that are then reinforced by their performance amongst sympathetic audiences. A process of self-ghettoisation can easily arise where we chose to organise alongside friends, events that we know will attract similar people to ourselves. Encounter also implies a degree of friction and confrontation, which can energise or debilitate depending upon how it proceeds. Such friction is often a necessary part of movements traversing problems and oppositions and provoking intensities that leap the gap separating the potential from the actual.

In this sense whilst proliferation is healthy and encounters occur through the random passage of people through places, perhaps the logic of the encounter suggests a need for mechanisms to cross-fertilise these autonomous initiatives and multiply links and communications. Some of this was already in evidence, such as the Lab of ii feedback sessions at the Indymedia centre, the Infoespai (Barcelona) project to produce a thematic directory of autonomous groups and movement networks, the rampart radio project and the wikis at altspaces.net and esf2004.net. These are indicative of the radically democratic culture that these movements have produced and no doubt we can imagine other possibilities: coordinating assemblies, twinning exchanges between groups, spokes-councils for the autonomous spaces etc all of which will push us further beyond the monoculture and formulaic rhetoric of the leftist bandwagon that went so far off the rails in London.

In the meantime, it’s good to see the autonomous spaces are being described, documented and extended in processes which will become irreducible to the events that catalysed them.

Graeme Chesters
Oct. 2004

Graeme Chesters

Comments

Hide the following 6 comments

Good Stuff

24.10.2004 12:34

Very interesting article, and quite challenging on that grey cells. Having read it through the first time I had some strange ideas like:

Sherlock Holmes had a lens (magnifying glass), right. So, if he'd also had a mirror, he'd a been a real anarchist, yep. Yo! Anarcho Shirly!

Now, Sherlock, or as he was known in private to Watson, Shirly, used to play the violin in his closet wearing a dress, fact. So lets promote an international wear a dress to work day to subvert gender stereotyping.


- Feel that breeze between yout knees chaps, wear a skirt to work.


Perhaps I need some help, or just a little love, but anyway, later, I read the article again, this time, I believe, getting some of the intended meaning. And yes, it's a very good article, possible at number 1, if not definitely in the top 5, in the charts of ESF inspired comments.

Too Embarrassed to Say


Honesty, --honestly!

26.10.2004 16:24

In general agreement with Graeme Chesters' reflection upon the ESF: there are those who organise hierarchically, centrally and powerfully with a simple aim to gain influence and members while waiting for the revolution and there are those who believe that another world is possible and that such a world would be a consequence of a different mode of organisation. This fault line, this disagreement on an appropriate architecture of organisation is significant and does reflect, to some extend, the split between Marx and Bakhunin. To say that this is equal to a split between Marxism and Anarchism is of course simplistic, as Chesters note. There are many flavours of each of these political ideas to be found in history and certainly, if we consider anarchism as a recursive relation between theory and practice of organisation, many who call themselves anarchists are “just” angry white young men – not to say that there is anything wrong with being angry for there's an abundance of reasons to be angry with the world! Likewise there are direct action communists who build on, say, Marx's “Grundrisse” to organise in autonomous ways. So yes, it would be simplistic to call this a split between Marxism and Anarchism. Any form of anarchism cannot succeed without a Marxist inspired analysis of the ownership of means of production, but this need is diminishing, and we can thank the global stage of capitalism for that: there are now so few that own so much, the gap between rich and poor ever widening, that it should be obvious to anyone that change is overdue.

The idea that we should keep on organising centrally, prepare for the revolution and then redistribute everything from central place is simply so silly that it merits no discussion, but for those who still haven't understood that dinosaurs vanished for a reason, let me put it in simple terms: if there was a revolution in a modern top-down organised society there would be no fuel lorries, no transport of food, and hence a war of all against all in a matter of days in a city like London, --causing tremendous human suffering. Revolution always was a violent affair, but in today's world it would be even worse. Who would honestly propose that? Well, the SWP – but are they honest? Who are these people?

In other words, there is nowhere near as much need for Marxist analysis and central organisation as there is for practical action -changes through direct non-violent involvement- and autonomous inter-dependent architectures of organisation. We do no longer need to deconstruct the world, we need to reconstruct it: the reconstruction is greater than Genesis itself, as Martin Hall, once said.

On the matter of the outside being fragmented I have little so say. Apart from the obvious that London simply is not a place for a social forum and that if the SWP and all their power greedy friends had been feeling safe and secure enough in themselves and in their political programme, that is to say if these people were honest human beings, I honestly think that they would have taken the Big Green Gathering network of event managers and organisers up on their offer and we would have all been happily hanging out in the countryside somewhere. Instead it was the Big Smoke – Holy Smoke – and where would all the outsiders possibly have fit all at once?

Just to be even more rhetorical: We are more powerful than they can ever imagine – let's just get on with it, the conservatives, whether to the rights or to the left, will sort out their own downfall – it is simply a natural law: the left is right and the right is wrong. So let us go down that road less travelled which defies the linear left-right political spectrum.

Luther Blisset
mail e-mail: atc1@york.ac.uk


Tension, extension and reconstruction

26.10.2004 18:01

In addition to the above comments and arguments: the new and the different, the alternatives that are needed to find ways to socially organise human societies beyond the nation state, the search for a global society of human rights, environmental protection and federated democracy require a new language. It is in the moment of spontaneity and even conflict and tension that values and structures can be seen in a new light. It is in the breaking down of everyday conceptions and routines that the other world, which is indeed possible, have a chance to emerge.

But we need a lot more experimentation! Bender-, yurt- and other DIY ecovillage formations, independent media networks, free software movement, and, of course, interventions at status quo gatherings, such as the ESF/WTO/IMF/IOM, is just a little beginning. We need more of that sort of thing, please. For as anyone who has ever tried it knows: it is a great moment of realisation and awareness when a self-organised action is reflected in the eyes of the beholder. Then they know that another world is possible. But when they check out the book-stall and listen to a lecture by some reputable professor they just think that they are back in school. Rightly so. Get on with it and just forget about arguing with, as humoured above, dinosaurs. Breakdown!

deridada


ESF & the SWP

27.10.2004 10:10

Perhaps there are some in this generation of activists who need it explaining that it is an overtly stated objective of the SWP to go wherever there are counter-capitalist movements of any size and network and deploy strategically within them to exert maximum influence towards their own political genda - which is recruitment, adoption of a macho pretension to violent revolution (presumably at half-term when they aren't teaching) and increased sales of their newspaper;-).

Just as non-heirarchical structures need to be adopted to prevent the incursion of capitalist influences, all radical movements of note need to develop structures to defend themselves against the incursions of the reactionary forces of parasitical 'socialist' activists - who will suck the life out of anything that moves with their endlessly repetitive and counter-productive manipulation.

The creation of the women-only wing of the anti-war movement in the '80s which led to initiatives such as the women's peace camps came about directly as a result of SWP infiltraters consistently attempting in a pre-planned way to subvert peaceful and creative demonstrations into violent 'revolutionary' encounters with the police, thus risking marginalising what was in fact a very popularly supported movement.

The women's peace camp strategy placed women on the interface, with men organising networks of support and backup. As the SWP had almost no women members they were successfully outflanked. They responded by condemning the peace movement as a 'bourgois distraction from the class struggle by middle class women' and forbad their members (what few women there were) to attend on pain of expulsion.
Way to go.

I'm not suggesting a similar strategy, or any strategy. Perhaps attendance of the SWP is a sign of success? I'm just pointing out that this is what they do, they've done it consistently for the past 30 years at least, undeterred by their total failure and the total collapse of everything they've managed to get their teeth into, and they are clear and organised about it - it's not a secret.

Another trick might be to always run slugtrap workshops at big events ie: 'Armed class struggle - a trotskyist masturbatory fantasy?' With a feminist speaker, preferably from the NUT.
Irresistible.

love satori

satori
mail e-mail: satori@virtual-lancaster.net
- Homepage: http://www.virtual-lancaster.net


The Structurelessness of Tyranny

28.10.2004 02:09

another excellent and importantly informative commment (the one above), although there is certainly no need to remind this generation of anything regarding the SWP - nothing is more blatantly obvious to anyone, and it is maybe even part of what keeps it all together: the identity of being against, sadly perhaps.

while it is good to know history, it is also important to allow acertain ignorance towards history - an aware ignorance, in order to avoid the typical leftist socalled intellectualism which is always in opposition to the right and therefore has per definition a reactionary philosophy (get the pun?), one which does not have its grounding in the practical and the experimental, but simply is a weeping whining attempt to get on board the power boat..

with all its problems, of course, the widespread use of ICT has provides a technostructural underpinning that allows for a range of organisational modes previously impossible (such as indymedia, free software etc.), meaning that the 70s debate around structurelessness requires rethinking. ..however, ICT is of course a white, male middle class dominated world....not to mention an ocean of other problems.....

KanDaddfi


lies damn lies and IndyMedia newswire comments?

28.10.2004 09:57

Can't let go unchallenged a whole bundle of distortions from 'satori':

Does anyone really believe the SWP are keen to confront the police? Doesn't really square with what people usually say about them on IndyMedia!

And come on, it's just silly to claim they don't have women members, you may see them as sell-outs from feminism or whatever but they exist.

As to what happened at Greenham Common etc, the point surely was that the majority of women there decided they wanted a women-only camp, which angered some men including some SWP but not only them, plenty of angry anarchist men too, lets be honest (many of whom have never got over it!)

type


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