F. Jameson - Cognitive Mapping
F. Jameson - Cognitive Mapping
F. Jameson - Cognitive Mapping
Contents
Preface, ix
2345CP54
Cornel West
Marxist Theory and the Specificity of Afro-American Oppression, 17
Discussion, 30
Stuan Hall
The Toad in the Garden: Thatcherism among the Theorists, 35
Discussion, 58
Henri Lefebvre
Toward a Leftist Cultural Politics: Remarks Occasioned bV the
Centenary of Marx's Death, 75
Chantal Mouffe
HegemonV and New Political Subjects: Toward a New Concept of
Democracv, 89
Discussion, 102
Catharine A. MacKinnon
Desire and Power: A Feminist Perspective, 105
Discussion, 117
Paul Patton
Marxism and Bevond: Strategies of Reterritonalization, 123
Discussion, 137
A. Belden Fields
In Defense of Political Economv and Systemic Analvsis: A Critique of
Prevailing Theoretical Approaches to the New Social
Movements, 141
II
Oskar Negt
What Is a Revival of Marxism and Why Do We Need One TodaV?:
Centennial Lecture Commemorating the Death of Karl Marx, 21 1
Gajo Petrovic
Philosoph V and Revolution: Twenty Sheaves of Questions, 235
Fredric Jameson
Cognitive Mapping
Moretti
346
..
the great historical merit of the work of Darko Suvin to repeatedly insist
on a more contemporary formulation of this aesthetic value, in the sugges~
tive slogan of the cognitive, which I have made my own today_ Behind
Suvin's work, of course, there stands the immense, yet now partially insti~
tutionalized and reified, example of Brecht himself, to whom any cognitive
aesthetic in our time must necessarily pay homage. And perhaps it is no
longer the theater but the poetry of Brecht that is for us still the irrefutable
demonstration that cognitive art need not raise any of the old fears about
the contamination ofthe aesthetic by propaganda or the instrumentalization
ofCUltural play and production by the message or the extra~aesthetic (basely
practical) impulse. Brecht's is a poetry of thinking and reflection; yet no
one who has been stunned by the sculptural density of Brecht's language,
by the stark simplicity with which a contemplative distance from historical
events is here powerfully condensed into the ancient forms of folk wisdom
and the proverb, in sentences as compact as peasants' wooden spoons and
bowls, will any longer question the proposition that in his poetry at least
so exceptionally in the whole history ofcontemporary culture-the cognitive
becomes in and of itself the immediate source of profound aesthetic delight.
I mention Brecht to forestall yet another misunderstanding, that
it will in any sense be a question here of the return to some older aesthetic,
even that of Brecht. And this is perhaps the moment to warn you that I
tend to use the charged word "representation" in a different way than it has
consistently been used in poststructuralist or post~Marxist theory: namely,
as the synonym of some bad ideological and organic realism or mirage of
realistic unification. For me "representation" is, rather, the synonym of
"figuration" itself, irrespective ofthe latter's historical and ideological form.
I assume, therefore, in what follows, that all forms of aesthetic production
consist in one way or another in the struggle with and for representation
and this whether they are perspectival or trompe l'oeil illusions or the most
reflexive and diacritical, iconoclastic or form-breaking modernisms. So, at
least in my language, the call for new kinds of representation is not meant
to imply the return to Balzac or Brecht; nor is it intended as some valori
zation of content over form-yet another archaic distinction I still feel is
indispensable and about which I will have more to say shortly.
In the project for a spatial analysis of culture that I have been
engaged in sketching for the teaching institute that preceded this conference,
I have tried to suggest that the three historical stages of capital have each
generated a type of space unique to it, even though these three stages of
capitalist space are obviously far more profoundly interrelated than are the
spaces of other modes of production. The three types of space I have in
mind are all the result of discontinuous expansions or quantum leaps in
the enlargement of capital, in the latter's penetration and colonization of
hitherto uncommodified areas. You will therefore note in passing that a
certain unifying and totalizing force is presupposed here-although it is not
the Hegelian Absolute Spirit, nor the party, nor Stalin, but simply capital
itself; and it is on the strength of such a view that a radical Jesuit friend of
mine once publicly accused me of monotheism. It is at least certain that
the notion of capital stands or falls with the notion of some unified logic
of this social system itself, that is to say, in the stigmatized language I will
come back to later, that both are irrecoverably totalizing concepts.
I1
Fredric Jameson
Fredric Jameson
a new play ofabsence and presence that at its most simplified will be haunted
by the erotic and be tattooed with foreign place names, and at its most
intense will involve the invention of remarkable new languages and forms.
At this point I want to introduce another concept that is basic
to my argument, that I call the "play of figuration." This is an essentially
allegorical concept that supposes the obvious, namely, that these new and
,enormous global realities are inaccessible to any individual subject or con
sciousness-not even to Hegel, let alone Cecil Rhodes or Queen Victoria
lwhich is to say that those fundamental realities are somehow ultimately
ru:nrepresentable or, to use the Althusserian phrase, are something like an
, !absent cause, one that can never emerge into the presence of perception.
{Yet this absent cause can find figures through which to express itself in
\distorted and symbolic ways: indeed, one of our basic tasks as critics of
iliterature is to track down and make conceptually available the ultimate
!realities and experiences designated by those figures, which the reading mind
, (inevitably tends to reify and to read as primary contents in their own right.
Since we have evoked the modernist moment and its relationship
to the great new global colonial network, I will give a fairly simple but
specialized example of a kind of figure specific to this historical situation.
Everyone knows how, toward the end of the nineteenth century, a wide
range of writers began to invent forms to express what I will call "monadic
relati vism." In Gide and Conrad, in Fernando Pessoa, in Pirandello, in
Ford, and to a lesser extent in Henry James, even very obliquely in Proust,
what we begin to see is the sense that each consciousness is a closed world,
so that a representation of the social totality now must take the (impossible)
form of a coexistence of those sealed subjective worlds and their peculiar
interaction, which is in reality a passage of ships in the night, a centrifugal
movement of lines and planes that can never intersect. The literary value
that emerges from this new formal practice is called "irony"; and its phil
osophical ideology often takes the form of a vulgar appropriation of Ein
stein's theory of relativity. In this context, what I want to suggest is that
these forms, whose content is generally that of privatized middle-class life,
nonetheless stand as symptoms and distorted expressions ofthe penetration
even of middle-class lived experience by this strange new global relativity
of the colonial network. The one is then the figure, however deformed and
symbolically rewritten, of the latter; and I take it that this figural process
will remain central in all later attempts to restructure the form of the work
of art to accommodate content that must radically resist and escape artistic
figuration.
If this is so for the age of imperialism, how much more must it
hold for our own moment, the moment of the multinational network, or
what Mandel calls "late capitalism," a moment in which not merely the
older city but even the nation-state itself has ceased to playa central func
tional and formal role in a process that has in a new quantum leap ofcapital
prodigiously expanded beyond them, leaving them behind as ruined and
archaic remains of earlier stages in the development of this mode of pro
duction.
At this point I realize that the persuasiveness of my demonstra
tion depends on your having.$.Q!1!~.r~j!.ry vivid perceptual sense of what is
unique and original in os modernist spa -something I have been trying
to convey in my course, bu
1 is more difficult here to substitute
a shortcut. Briefly, I want to suggest that the new space involves the suppres-'
sion of distance (in the sense of Benjamin's aura) and the relentless satu- j
ration of any remaining voids and empty places, to the point where the;
postmodern body-whether wandering through a postmodern hotel, locked
into rock sound by means of headphones, or undergoing the multiple shocks
and bombardments of the Vietnam War as Michael Herr conveys it to us
is now exposed to a perceptual barrage of immediacy from which all sheltering layers and intervening mediations have been removed. There are, of
course, many other features ofthis space one would ideally want to comment
on-most notably, Lefebvre's concept of abstract space as what is simul
taneously homogeneous and fragmented-but I think that the peculiar dis
orientation of the saturated space I have just mentioned will be the most
useful guiding
Youthread.
should understand that 1 take such spatial peculiarities of
postmodernism as symptoms and expressions of a new and historically
original dilemma, one that involves our insertion as individual subjects into
a multidimensional set of radically discontinuous realities, whose frames
range from the still surviving spaces of bourgeois private life all the way to
the unimaginable decentering of global capital itself. Not even Einsteinian~
relativity, or the multiple subjective worlds of the older modernists, is ca
pable of giving any kind of adequate figuration to this process, which in
lived experience makes itself felt by the so-called death of the subject, or,
more exactly, the fragmented and schizophrenic decentering and dispersion
of this last (which can no longer even serve the function of the Jamesian
reverberator or "point of view"). And although you may not have realized
it, 1 am talking about practical politics here: since the crisis of socialist
internationalism, and the enormous strategic and tactical difficulties of co
ordinating local and grassroots or neighborhood political actions with na
tional or international ones, such urgent political dilemmas are all imme
diately functions ofthe enormously complex new international space 1 have
in mind. Let me here insert an illustration, in the form of a brief account
of a book that is, I think, not known to many of you but in my opinion of
the greatest importance and suggestiveness for problems of space and pol
itics. The book is nonfiction, a historical narrative of the single most sig
nificant political experience of the American 1960s: Detroit: I Do Mind
Dying, by Marvin Surkin and Dan Georgakis. (I think we have now come
to be sophisticated enough to understand that aesthetic, formal, and nar
rative analyses have implications that far transcend those objects marked
as fiction or as literature.) Detroit is a study of the rise and fall 1of the League
of Black Revolutionary Workers in that city in the late 1960s. The political
formation in question was able to conquer power in the workplace, partic
ularly in the automobile factories; it drove a substantial wedge into the
media and informational monopoly of the city by way of a student news
paper; it elected judges; and finally it came within a hair's breadth ofelecting
the mayor and taking over the city power apparatus. This was, of course,
a remarkable political achievement, characterized by an exceedingly so
phisticated sense of the need for a multilevel strategy for revolution that
involved initiatives on the distinct social levels of the labor process, the
media and culture, the juridical apparatus, and electoral politics.
III
Fredric Jameson
Boston, then, with its monumental perspectives, its markers and monu
ments, its combination ofgrand but simple spatial forms, including dramatic
boundaries such as the Charles River, not only allows people to have, in
rest of the city, but in addition gives them something of the freedom and
..
society class consciousness as a cultural event, and class analysis as a mental
operation); the idea that this society is no longer motored by production
but rather reproduction (including science and technology)-an idea that,
in the midst of a virtually completely built environment, one is tempted to
greet with laughter; and, finally, the repudiation of representation and the
stigmatization of the concept of totality and of the project of totalizing
thought. Practically, this last needs to be sorted into several different prop
ositions-in particular, one having to do with capitalism and one having to
do with socialism or communism. The French nouveaux philosophes said
it most succinctly, without realizing that they were reproducing or rein
venting the hoariest American ideological slogans of the cold war: totalizing
thought is totalitarian thought; a direct line runs from Hegel's Absolute
Spirit to Stalin's Gulag.
As a matter of self-indulgence, I will open a brief theoretical
parenthesis here, particularly since Althusser has been mentioned. We have
already experienced a dramatic and instructive melt-down of the AIthus
, serian reactor in the work of Barry Hindess and Paul Hirst, who quite
, consequently observe the incompatibility of the AIthusserian attempt to
secure semiautonomy for the various levels of social life, and the more
. desperate effort of the same philosopher to retain the old orthodox notion
ofan "ultimately determining instance" in the form of what he calls "struc
tural totality." Quite logically and consequently, then, Hindess and Hirst
I simply remove the offending mechanism, whereupon the Althusserian ed
collapses into a rubble of autonomous instances without any necessary
jlifice
relationship to each other whatsoever-at which point it follows that one
Ican no longer talk about or draw practical political consequences from any
conception of social structure; that is to say, the very conceptions of some
thing called capitalism and something called socialism or communism fall
of their own weight into the ash can of History. (This last, of course, then
vanishes in a puff of smoke, since by the same token nothing like History
as a total process can any longer be conceptually entertained.) All I wanted
to point out in this high theoretical context is that the baleful equation
f between a philosophical conception of totality and a political practice of
totalitarianism is itself a particularly ripe example of what AIthusser calls
"expressive causality," namely, the collapsing of two semiautonomous (or,
now, downright autonomous) levels into one another. Such an equation,
then, is possible for unreconstructed Hegelians but is quite incompatible
with the basic positions of any honest post-Althusserian post-Marxism.
To close the parenthesis, all of this can be said in more earthly
terms. The conception of capital is admittedly a totalizing or systemic con
cept: no one has ever seen or met the thing itself; it is either the result of
scientific reduction (and it should be obvious that scientific thinking always
reduces the multiplicity of the real to a small-scale model) or the mark of
an imaginary and ideological vision. But let us be serious: anyone who
believes that the profit motive and the logic ofcapital accumulation are not
the fundamental laws of this world, who believes that these do not set
absolute barriers and limits to social changes and transformations under
taken in it-such a person is living in an alternative universe; or, to put it
more politely, in this universe such a person-assuming he or she is pro
gressive-is doomed to social democracy, with its now abundantly docu
mented treadmill of failures and capitulations. Because if capital does not
,:!1;i1
Fredric Jameson
exist, then clearly socialism does not exist either. I am far from suggesting
that no politics at all is possible in this new post-Marxian Nietzschean world
of micropolitics-that is observably untrue. But I do want to argue that'
without a conception of the social totality (and the possibility of transform
ing a whole social system), no properly socialist politics is possible.
About socialism itselfwe must raise more troubling and unsolved
dilemmas that involve the notion of community or the collective. Some of
the dilemmas are very familiar, such as the contradiction between self
management on the local level and planning on the global scale; or the
problems raised by the abolition ofthe market, not to mention the abolition
of the commodity form itself. I have found even more stimulating and
problematical the following propositions about the very nature of society
itself: it has been affirmed that, with one signal exception (capitalism itself,
which is organized around an economic mechanism), there has never existed
a cohesive form of human society that was not based on some form of
transcendence or religion. Without brute force, which is never but a mo
mentary solution, people cannot in this vein be asked to live cooperatively
and to renounce the omnivorous desires of the id without some appeal to
religious belief or transcendent values, something absolutely incompatible
with any conceivable socialist society. The result is that these last achieve
their own momentary coherence only under seige circumstances, in the
wartime enthusiasm and group effort provoked by the great blockades. Inl
other words, without the non transcendent economic mechanism of capital, .
all appeals to moral incentives (as in Che) or to the primacy of the political
(as in Maoism) must fatally exhaust themselves in a brief time, leaving only
the twin alternatives ofa return to capitalism or the construction of this or
that modern form of "oriental despotism." You are certainly welcome to
believe this prognosis, provided you understand that in such a case any
socialist politics is strictly a mirage and a waste of time, which one might
better spend adjusting and reforming an eternal capitalist landscape as far
as the eye can see.
In reality this dilemma is, to my mind, the most urgent task that
confronts Marxism today. I have said before that the so-called crisis in
Marxism is not a crisis in Marxist science, which has never been richer, but
rather a crisis in Marxist ideology. If ideology-to give it a somewhat dif
ferent definition-is a vision of the future that grips the masses, we have to
admit that, save in a few ongoing collective experiments, such as those in
Cuba and in Yugoslavia, no Marxist or Socialist party or movement any
where has the slightest conception of what socialism or communism as a
social system ought to be and can be expected to look like. That vision will
not be purely economic, although the Marxist economists are as deficient
as the rest of us in their failure to address this Utopian problem in any
serious way. It is, as well, supremely social and cultural, involving the task
oftrying to imagine how a society without hierarchy, a society offree people,
a society that has at once repudiated the economic mechanisms of the mar
ket, can possibly cohere. Historically, all forms of hierarchy have always
been based ultimately on gender hierarchy and on the building block of the
family unit, which makes it clear that this is the true juncture between a
feminist problematic and a Marxist one-not an antagonistic juncture, but
the moment at which the feminist project and the Marxist and socialist
project meet and face the same dilemma: how to imagine Utopia.
._____ ._.
--,'m
Q
Fredric Jameson
KeVin Lynch, The Image of the City (Cambndge: MIT Press, 1960).
Notes
1
Dan Georgakis and Marvin Surkln, Detroit I 00 Mmd Dying, A Study in Urban Revolution
(New York: St. Martin's Press, 1975)
2
3
Ouoted in Kenneth Frampton, Modern Archllecture A Cntical Hls/olY (New York Oxford
UniverSity Press, 1980). pp 276-77
Fredric Jameson
hegemonic social democratic discourse finds its content withdrawn from it so that,
finally, those things that used to be legitimate are no longer legitimate and nobody
believes in them. Our task, I think, is the opposite of that and has to do with the
legitimation of the discourses ofsocialism in such a way that they do become realistic
and serious alternatives for people. It's in the context of that general project that
mY more limited aesthetic project finds its place.
Question (Darko Suvin)
First of all, I would like to say, also for the record, that I
agree with your refusal to equate totality with totalitarianism. I want to remind
people of the strange origins of the connotations of the word "totalitarianism." They
arose after the war, propagated by the Congress of Cultural Freedom, which was
associated with such names as Stephen Spender and Irving Kristol and with journals
such as Encounter, funded by the CIA as it turns out. This is admittedly not a
conclusive argument; even people funded by the CIA can come up with intelligent
ideas now and then. But it should make us wary of such an equation. So I think
Ihab Hassan's. I would like to try to suggest a way out of this problem. Rather than
ads subsequent to each other in time, so that at some point (around 1910 or 1960)
one begins and the other ends, couldn't we think of capitalism as a whole (beginning
whenever you wish), and then a series of movements (such as realism, modernism,
that do not necessarily disappear. After all, most literature and painting today is still
realistic (e.g., Arthur Hailey). In other words, we have shifting hegemonies, although
I think it is still a question of how one proves that a shift of such major dimensions
(e.g., the shift associated with the names Picasso, Einstein, Eisenstein, and Lenin)
really occurred in the 1960s. But in that case, postmodernism could emerge as a
style, even become hegemonic in the United States and Western Europe, but not in
India and Africa, and then lose its dominant position without our having to shift
into a new episteme and a new world-historical monad. And you would have a
different culture. By the same token, I trust that people who have some discursive
stake in other terms, such as totality or its refusal, do not take my remarks on the
subject too narrOWly. For example, I consider the work of Chantal Mouffe and
Emesto Laclau an extremely important contribution to thinking about a future so
cialist politics. I think one has to avoid fighting over empty slogans.
Comment 'Comel West,
The question of totality signals an important theoretiCal
struggle with practical implications. rm not so sure that the differences between
your position and Perry Anderson's, and those put forward by Stanley AronOwitz,
Chantal Mouffe, Emesto Laclau, and a host of others can be so easily reconciled.
And it seems to me that if we continue to formulate the question in the way that
you formulate it, we are on a crash course, because I think that holding on to the
conception oftotality that you invoke ultimately leads toward a Leninist or Leninist
like politics that is basically sectarian, that may be symptomatic of a pessimism
(though that is a question). Ifwe opt for the position that Mouffe, LacIau, Aronowitz,
and others are suggesting, the results are radically anti-Leninist as well as radically
critical ofa particular conception oftotality. It is important to rememberthat nobody
here has defended a flat, dispersive politics. Nobody here has defended a reactionary
politics like that of the nouveaux philosophes. Rather, their critiques of totality are
enabling ones; they are critiques ofa totality that is solely a regulative ideal we never
achieve, never reach. And if that is the case, I really don't see the kind of reconcil
iation that you are talking about. I think you were very comradely in your ritualistic
gestures to Chantal and Emesto and others, but I am not so sure that we are as close
as you think. Now that means we're still comrades within the Left in the broad
sense, but these are significant differences and tendencies within the Left, and I
didn't want to end the discussion with a vague Hegelian reconciliation of things
when what I see is very significant and healthy struggle.
Jameson
have really proposed an aesthetics. Both of those seem to be all in the future. Let
1total class/party politics for the politics of new social movements. That would be
ridiculous and self-defeating. The question is how to think those local struggles,
involving specific and often different groups, within some common project that is
ed, for want ofa better word, socialism. Why must these two things go together?
Because without some notion of a total transformation of society and without the
sense that the immediate project is a figure for that total transformation, so that
/everybody has a stake in that Particular struggle, the success of any local struggle is
;doomed, limited to reform. And then it will lose its impetus, as any number of issue
movements have done. Yet an abstract politics that only talks socialism on SOme
global level is doomed to the sterility of sectarian politics. I am trying to suggest a
way in which these things always take place at two levels: as an embattled struggle
of a group, but also as a figure for an entire systemic transformation. And I don't
see how anything substantial can be achieved without that kind of dual thinking at
every moment in all of those struggles.
th
360
Andrew Ross