Blackspot

Revolutionary Time

Averting disaster means accepting its inevitability.

In his most recent book, First as Tragedy, Then as Farce, Slavoj Zizek blames the failure of contemporary activism on our assumption that time is a one-way line from past to future. He argues that activism is failing to avert the coming catastrophe because it subscribes to the same notions of linear time as industrial society. According to Zizek, a regeneration of activism must begin with a change in our understanding of temporality. Paraphrasing Jean-Pierre Dupuy, Zizek explains that “if we are to confront adequately the threat of (social or environmental) catastrophe, we need to break out of this ‘historical’ notion of temporality: We have to introduce a new notion of time.” This new notion of time is a shift of perspective from historical progress to the timelessness of a revolutionary moment.

The new role of the activist should not be to push history in the right direction but instead to disrupt it altogether. “This is what a proper political act would be today: not so much to unleash a new movement, as to interrupt the present predominant movement. An act of ‘divine violence’ would then mean pulling the emergency cord on the train of Historical Progress,” writes Zizek. Accomplishing this act of revolutionary violence involves a switch of perspective from the present looking forward to the future looking backward. Instead of trying to influence the future by acting in the present, Zizek argues that we should start from the assumption that the dreaded catastrophic event – sudden climate catastrophe, a “gray goo” nano-crisis, the widespread adoption of cyborg technologies – has already happened and then work backwards to figure out what we should have done. “We have to accept that, at the level of possibilities, our future is doomed, that the catastrophe will take place, that it is our destiny – and then, against the background of this acceptance, mobilize ourselves to perform the act that will change destiny itself and thereby insert a new possibility into the past.” Only by assuming the feared event has already happened, can we imagine what actions would be necessary to prevent its occurrence. We could then take these steps. “Paradoxically,” Zizek concludes, “the only way to prevent the disaster is to accept it as inevitable.”

Zizek is right to suggest that activism is at a crossroads. Any honest culture jammer will admit that our signature moves have lately failed to arouse more than a few tepid responses. The fact is that our present is being swallowed by the future we dreaded: a dystopian sci-fi nightmare of enforced consumerism and planet-wide degradation. Activism now faces the dilemma of how to walk the line between false hope and pessimistic resignation. It is no longer tenable to hold the nostalgic belief that educating the population, recycling and composting and advocating for “green capitalism” will save us from the brink. Likewise, it is difficult to muster the courage to act when the collapse of civilization seems unavoidable, imminent and, in our most misanthropic moments, potentially desirable. Zizek’s shift in temporality offers us a way to balance the paralyzing realization that our demise is inevitable with the motivating belief that we can change our destiny. By accepting that we are doomed, we free ourselves to break from normalcy and act with the revolutionary fervor needed to achieve the impossible.

Micah White is a contributing editor at Adbusters and an independent activist. He is writing a book on the future of activism. www.micahmwhite.com or micah (at) adbusters.org

22 comments on the article “Revolutionary Time”

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pablo k

Also along the lines we have to accept our mortality that one day we are going to die that we start to do something...only a nothing can desire to become everything. Great article finally a 'bright guy' in adbusters. tee hee.

pablo k

Also along the lines we have to accept our mortality that one day we are going to die that we start to do something...only a nothing can desire to become everything. Great article finally a 'bright guy' in adbusters. tee hee.

Sappho

"look at esoteric and other occult movements and ideas through out history and how they have impregnated and disrupted many societal and political happenings through out history"

Look at religion in general.

Sappho

"look at esoteric and other occult movements and ideas through out history and how they have impregnated and disrupted many societal and political happenings through out history"

Look at religion in general.

goblin

something is totally needed to kick start some kind of revolution or extreme change in the way we all live at the moment (its not sustainable, everyone knows it) but the enormity of the change needed puts people off even thinking about it. anything that could kick start is worth trying and i reckon this is a really good way of looking at it (if kind of mind warping).

its hard to change the way we live because everything about capitalism is geared to make our lives quick and easy so we feel we dont have time to do the things we should be doing, the stuff that matters and will ultimately change stuff, so if we can start viewing time differently then maybe we'll have opportunity to do something more than just the small actions we try and cram in to, if we're honest, fairly conformist lifestyles

someone invent bernards watch!

goblin

something is totally needed to kick start some kind of revolution or extreme change in the way we all live at the moment (its not sustainable, everyone knows it) but the enormity of the change needed puts people off even thinking about it. anything that could kick start is worth trying and i reckon this is a really good way of looking at it (if kind of mind warping).

its hard to change the way we live because everything about capitalism is geared to make our lives quick and easy so we feel we dont have time to do the things we should be doing, the stuff that matters and will ultimately change stuff, so if we can start viewing time differently then maybe we'll have opportunity to do something more than just the small actions we try and cram in to, if we're honest, fairly conformist lifestyles

someone invent bernards watch!

Anonymous

This is big! This is a great new perspective. It reminds me of Otto Scharmer´s Theory U. But instead to lead the change from your best possible future, you lead it from the sense that the catastrophe has happened. Have a closer look at Scharmer.

Anonymous

This is big! This is a great new perspective. It reminds me of Otto Scharmer´s Theory U. But instead to lead the change from your best possible future, you lead it from the sense that the catastrophe has happened. Have a closer look at Scharmer.

Anonymous

When reading the description of Zizek's position I am reminded of the revolutionary arrogance of times past which itself brought about the disaster it claimed to be doing away with. Past revolutionaries broke the system believing they had a higher truth. But it was because they thought they had the truth that they failed so completely. Calls to just break the system, as if we could know what is coming, show an inability to deal with the helplessness we feel at what "might" be coming. None of us knows, and life has a way of being surprising in the turns it takes. It may be bad, but we will just have to deal with it. The last thing we need in a global crisis is some fool acting out his fear through unthinking destruction, and al the while imagining his nihilism is justified as a kind of higher activism.

Anonymous

When reading the description of Zizek's position I am reminded of the revolutionary arrogance of times past which itself brought about the disaster it claimed to be doing away with. Past revolutionaries broke the system believing they had a higher truth. But it was because they thought they had the truth that they failed so completely. Calls to just break the system, as if we could know what is coming, show an inability to deal with the helplessness we feel at what "might" be coming. None of us knows, and life has a way of being surprising in the turns it takes. It may be bad, but we will just have to deal with it. The last thing we need in a global crisis is some fool acting out his fear through unthinking destruction, and al the while imagining his nihilism is justified as a kind of higher activism.

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