Theories of Ideology Historical Materialism Book Series Editorial Board Sébastien Budgen, Paris – Steve Edwards, London Marcel van der Linden, Amsterdam – Peter Thomas, London VOLUME 54 The titles published in this series are listed at brill.com/hm Theories of Ideology The Powers of Alienation and Subjection By Jan Rehmann LEIdEn • BOSTOn 2013 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication data Rehmann, Jan. Theories of ideology : the powers of alienation and subjection / by Jan Rehmann. pages cm. — (Historical materialism book series, 1570–1522 ; 54) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBn 978-90-04-25230-1 (hardback : alk. paper) — ISBn 978-90-04-25231-8 (e-book) 1. Ideology. I. Title. HM641.R44 2013 140—dc23 2013019486 This publication has been typeset in the multilingual “Brill” typeface. With over 5,100 characters covering Latin, IPA, Greek, and Cyrillic, this typeface is especially suitable for use in the humanities. For more information, please see www.brill.com/brill-typeface. ISSn 1570-1522 ISBn 978-90-04-25230-1 (hardback) ISBn 978-90-04-25231-8 (e-book) Copyright 2013 by Koninklijke Brill nV, Leiden, The netherlands. Koninklijke Brill nV incorporates the imprints Brill, Global Oriental, Hotei Publishing, IdC Publishers and Martinus nijhoff Publishers. All rights reserved. no part of this publication may be reproduced, translated, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior written permission from the publisher. Authorization to photocopy items for internal or personal use is granted by Koninklijke Brill nV provided that the appropriate fees are paid directly to The Copyright Clearance Center, 222 Rosewood drive, Suite 910, danvers, MA 01923, USA. Fees are subject to change. This book is printed on acid-free paper. Contents Introduction ................................................................................................................. 1 1. Twisted Preliminaries: The ‘Idéologistes’ and napoleon .......................... 15 1.1. Ideology as a ‘natural science’ of ideas .................................................. 15 1.2. A post-Jacobin state-ideology ................................................................... 17 1.3. napoleon’s pejorative concept of ideology .......................................... 18 2. Ideology-Critique and Ideology-Theory According to Marx and Engels ........................................................................................................................ 21 2.1. From ‘inverted consciousness’ to ‘idealistic superstructures’ ......... 22 2.1.1. The camera obscura and its critics ............................................ 22 2.1.2. A ‘naive sensuous empiricism’? .................................................. 23 2.1.3. Excursus to the young Marx’s critique of religion ................ 26 2.1.4. Camera obscura as metaphor for ‘idealistic superstructure’ ............................................................................ 29 2.1.5. ‘Ruling ideas’ and ‘conceptive ideologists’ .............................. 32 2.2. The critique of fetishism in the Critique of Political Economy ........ 34 2.2.1. From the critique of religion to the critique of fetishism ........................................................................................ 35 2.2.2. From ideology-critique to the critique of ‘objective thought-forms’ ............................................................................. 41 2.2.3. The wage-form and the ‘true Eden’ of human rights ........... 44 2.2.4. Capital-fetishism, the ‘trinity formula’ and the ‘religion of everyday life’ ........................................................................... 46 2.2.5. The ‘silent compulsion’ of economic rule as ideology? ....... 48 2.2.6. ‘Science’ between ideology and ideology-critique ................ 52 2.3. did Marx develop a ‘neutral’ concept of ideology? ........................... 55 2.4. Engels’s concept of ‘ideological powers’ ............................................... 58 3. The Concept of Ideology from the Second International to ‘Marxism-Leninism’ .............................................................................................. 61 3.1. The repression of a critical concept of ideology ................................ 61 vi • Contents 3.2. Lenin: bourgeois or socialist ideology? .................................................. 63 3.3. Lenin’s ‘operative’ approach: self-determination and hegemony .................................................................................................. 67 3.4. Ideology in ‘Marxist-Leninist’ state-philosophy .................................. 69 3.5. ‘Ideological relationships’ in the philosophy of East Germany ..... 72 4. The Concept of Ideology from Lukács to the Frankfurt School ............. 77 4.1. György Lukács: ideology as reification .................................................. 78 4.2. Horkheimer’s and Adorno’s critique of the ‘culture-industry’ ....... 84 4.3. Abandoning the concept of ideology? ................................................... 90 4.4. The ‘gears of an irresistible praxis’ .......................................................... 92 4.5. Ideology as ‘instrumental reason’ and ‘identitarian thought’ ......... 95 4.6. From Marcuse to Habermas – and back to Max Weber? ................ 99 4.7. Taking the sting out of critical theory ................................................... 104 4.8. ‘Commodity-aesthetics’ as ideological promise of happiness ........ 111 5. The Concept of Ideology in Gramsci’s Theory of Hegemony .................. 117 5.1. A significant shift in translation .............................................................. 118 5.2. Gramsci’s critical concept of ideology ................................................... 119 5.3. The critique of common sense as ideology-critique ......................... 126 5.4. Gramsci’s concept of ‘organic ideology’ ................................................ 132 5.5. ‘Ideology’ as a category of transition toward a theory of hegemony .................................................................................................. 134 5.6. The critique of corporatism and Fordism ............................................ 139 5.7. A new type of ideology-critique on the basis of a theory of hegemony .................................................................................................. 143 6. Louis Althusser: Ideological State-Apparatuses and Subjection ............. 147 6.1. The relationship to Gramsci ..................................................................... 147 6.2. The theory of ideological state-apparatuses (ISA) ............................. 149 6.3. A debate on ‘functionalism’ ...................................................................... 152 6.4. ‘Ideology in general’ and subject-constitution .................................... 155 6.5. The derivation of the ‘imaginary’ from Spinoza and Lacan ............ 160 6.6. Lacan’s universalisation of subjection and alienation ...................... 165 6.7. Can subjects talk back at interpellations? ............................................ 173 7. From the Collapse of the Althusser School to Poststructuralism and Postmodernism ...................................................................................................... 179 7.1. Michel Pêcheux’s discourse-theoretical development of Althusser’s ideology-theory .................................................................. 180 7.2. The post-Marxist turn of Ernest Laclau and Chantal Mouffe ........ 185 Contents • vii 7.3. Stuart Hall: bridging the theory of hegemony and discourse-analysis .................................................................................... 187 7.4. Michel Foucault’s neo-nietzschean trajectory from ideology to discourse to power .................................................................................. 190 7.4.1. A peculiar nietzschean-Heideggerian strand of ‘anti-humanism’ ......................................................................... 191 7.4.2. The dissolution of Althusser’s concept of ideology into ‘knowledge’ .................................................................................. 195 7.4.3. The substitution of ideology-critique by ‘fictionalism’ ....... 198 7.4.4. The introduction of a neo-nietzschean concept of power ............................................................................................. 201 7.4.5. ‘Relational power’ or ‘phagocytic essence’? ............................ 204 7.4.6. Foucault’s ‘dispositif ’ and the ‘technologies’ of power – a re-interpretation ..................................................................... 207 7.5. Poststructuralism and postmodernism ................................................. 210 7.5.1. Questions of definition ................................................................. 210 7.5.2. Postmodernism’s essentialist definition of modernity ........ 211 7.5.3. A component of neoliberal ideology? ...................................... 214 7.5.4. Theoretical loss: the dematerialisation of social life ........... 217 8. Pierre Bourdieu: ‘Field’, ‘Habitus’ and ‘Symbolic Violence’ ...................... 221 8.1. The development of the concept of field from the German Ideology ....................................................................................................... 223 8.2. Field against apparatus? ............................................................................. 225 8.3. Ideology, symbolic violence, habitus – disentangling a confused arrangement .............................................................................................. 229 8.4. Bourdieu’s contribution to the development of Althusser’s model of interpellation .......................................................................... 233 8.5. A new determinism? ................................................................................... 236 9. Ideology-Critique with the Hinterland of a Theory of the Ideological: The ‘Projekt Ideologietheorie’ (PIT) ................................................................... 241 9.1. The resumption of Marx and Engels’s critical concept of ideology ...................................................................................................... 241 9.2. The ideological at the crossroads of class-domination, state and patriarchy .......................................................................................... 245 9.3. ‘Vergesellschaftung’ – vertical, horizontal, and proto-ideological 248 9.4. The dialectics of the ideological: compromise-formation, complementarity and antagonistic reclamation of the common ..................................................................................................... 254 9.5. Fascistic modifications of the ideological ............................................. 261 viii • Contents 9.6. Policies of extermination and church-struggle in nazi Germany ..................................................................................... 266 9.7. Further ideology-theoretical studies ................................................ 268 10. Friedrich Hayek and the Ideological Dispositif of neoliberalism ........ 271 10.1. The formation of neoliberal hegemony ........................................... 272 10.2. Hayek’s frontal attack on ‘social justice’ ......................................... 275 10.3. Overcoming ‘economy’ by the game of ‘catallaxy’ ....................... 277 10.4. Hayek’s construct of ‘negative’ justice ............................................. 279 10.5. The religious structure of Hayek’s market-radicalism ................ 283 10.6. A symptomatic contradiction between market-destiny and subject-mobilisation ......................................................................... 286 10.7. State and liberty: neoliberal discourse is permeated by its opposite ................................................................................................ 287 10.8. The road to ‘disciplinary neoliberalism’ .......................................... 292 10.9. Is the hegemony of neoliberal capitalism exhausted? ................ 296 11. The Unfulfilled Promises of the Late Foucault and Foucauldian ‘Governmentality-Studies’ ................................................................................ 301 11.1. Foucault’s mediation of the techniques of domination and of the self ............................................................................................. 302 11.2. The enigmatic content of the concept of governmentality ...... 305 11.3. Eliminating the inner contradictions of neoliberal ideology ..... 310 11.4. A problematic equation of subjectivation and subjection ........ 314 11.5. Towards an ideology-theoretical re-interpretation of ‘governmentality-studies’ ................................................................ 316 References ..................................................................................................................... 319 Person Index ................................................................................................................. 339 Subject Index ................................................................................................................ 344 Introduction I When the economic crisis hit in September 2008, neoliberal ideology – with its holy trinity of deregula- tion, privatisation and free trade – seemed completely discredited. As the US government initiated huge bail- outs of big banks and financial institutions, granting them a support that the working and middle classes would never receive, public wrath turned immediately against both the financial heroes of previous years and the politicians bailing them out. Thomas Frank described this as a ‘populist moment’, which was how- ever missed by the new Obama administration, which followed the bailout-course of its predecessor and turned over economic policy to two friends of Wall Street – Larry Summers and Tim Geithner.1 Lacking any independent and viable leftist forma- tion (and with Occupy Wall Street still two years away), the terrain was immediately occupied by the Tea Party, which articulated and simultaneously redirected peo- ple’s anger. What manifested itself in innumerable rattlesnake-flags reading ‘Don’t Tread on Me’, was a different kind of populism, whose target had shifted from Wall Street to Washington: ‘an uprising against government and taxes and federal directives’, and one ‘in favour of the very conditions that had allowed Wall Street to loot the world’.2 1. T. Frank 2012, pp. 34, 39, 167–8. 2. T. Frank 2012, pp. 41–2.
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