Agonistics: Thinking the World Politically, by Chantal Mouffe
Below are my notes on the interview in the back of the book, which overviews Mouffe’s theories and provides sufficient groundwork for reading the rest of the book.
Antagonism: negativity is constitutive and cannot be overcome. Reveals that there is no rational solution to some conflicts. Leads to an understanding of pluralism that implies the impossibility of the final reconciliation of all views (like Nietzsche or Max Weber). This ineradicable dimension is called "the political" (as differing from "politics" - the practices aimed at organizing human coexistence).
Hegemony is present everywhere: the exercised power of one group over others. More specifically: "every social order is a contingent articulation of power relations that lacks an ultimate rational ground."
Post-structural critique of essentialism: Derrida, Lacan, Foucault (also Amer. Pragmatism and Wittingstein)
Theoretical approach called post-Marxist or "discourse theory"
"Every order lacks a final ground:" someone will always disagree. "Every order is predicated on the exclusion of other possibilities." "Every order is political." (contingent power relations)
Margaret Thatcher : neoliberal globalization. "There is no alternative."
"There are always alternatives that have been excluded by the dominant hegemony and that can be actualized."
Any hegemony can be challenged by counter-hegemonic practices, with the aim of disarticulating the current hegemony with another form of hegemony. Political struggle, then, is the constant duel of hegemonic practices and projects, competing and countering. There is no "perfect" political form, then, because one cannot be reached, in the essence of the theory of the political. The project of the Left is suggested to be a "radical and plural democracy." This has to be thought of as an unending process.
Chain of equivalences: all struggles must take into account others' struggles, so the whole front will be forwarded with each step of progress.
(This is what Black Lives Matter have been doing, and, I think, what Bernie's coalition involved. )
"The objective of the Left […] should be to create a collective will of all the democratic forces in order to push for the radicalization of democracy and to establish a new hegemony."
Revolution is not necessary under a modern pluralist democracy, because deep changes can occur from within via critique of existing institutions.
What Gramsci calls a "war of position" could lead to shifts within contemporary forms of democracy, leading to the creation of a new hegemony, though not through radical breaks. The bases of democracy - liberty and equality - are not what's at issue, but instead their enforcement. A radical break is not necessary, but rather a full support, a "war of position."
"Instead of struggling for a radicalization of democracy, we are forced to struggle against a further destruction of fundamental democratic institutions." This is how she describes the effects of the rise of Thatcherism and Reaganisms that led to the great momentum behind neoliberal globalization, thus dismantling social democracy and the welfare culture that went with.
She believes that the unified liberal front must work with the establishment to move forward, unlike those influenced by the ideas of Hardt and Negri, who believe that the Multitude (proleteriat) controls the now-immaterial labor, the power lies in the same place as the deterministic Marxism of the Second International. This didn't work the first time, and Mouffe asks: how does the Multitude become a political subject? They hold that the multitudinous struggles ought to remain independent and aim to the heart of Empire, rather than unify, which would be more difficult due to their respective radicalizations and thus independent mentalities and practices, etc. Mouffe argues that this difficulty is exactly what must be confronted: how to organize across differences so as to create a chain of equivalences among the different struggles.
Marxism falls short of a "theory of the political," as does liberalism (due to its rationalism and individualism, according to Mouffe, which are two points argued against by Nussbaum - have they ever clashed?). Rationalism ignores the realities of antagonistic ideas, and individuality ignores the creation of political identities, always collective, constructed in the form of a we/they relationship. Doesn't allow for "passions:" the affective dimension (i.e., nationalism). "For liberals, everything which implies a collective dimension is seen as archaic, something irrational that should not exist anymore in modern societies." See Schmitt's critique of liberalism. He argued that liberalism couldn't address politics, and, when it tried, it borrowed vocabulary from economics or ethics, which lines up with the two main schools of liberalism present in democracy today: the aggregative (economic) and the deliberative (Rawls & Habermas - ethical, not political). (Doesn't Nussbaum argue against both?) Schmitt saw liberalism and democracy as incompatible, whereas Mouffe promotes an introduction of politics to a pluralist democracy. Her answer is the agonistic model.
The political is constituted, in part, by the antagonistic, i.e., "the permanence of conflicts which cannot have a rational solution." Antagonism proper: friend v. enemy (Schmitt), which would mean the destruction of a political institution with both parties involved. Agonism: a relation "between adversaries who recognize the legitimacy of the demands of their opponent. While knowing that there is no rational solution to their conflict, adversaries nevertheless accept a set of rules according to which their conflict is going to be regulated." This sounds like social contract theory to me, mapped onto political social groups, expanded from individuals. Mouffe presents her agonistic model as an alternative to the aggregative and deliberative models of democracy: "the advantage of such a model is that by recognizing the role passions play in the creation of collective identities, it provides a better understanding of the dynamics of democratic politics, one that acknowledges the need for offering different forms of collective identification around clearly defined alternatives."
Mouffe is against the middle-ground politics which have risen in American politics, instead backing a well-defined left and right so that citizens can make actual choices (see 2017 presidential election, where the "alt-right" won over very middle "bland" politician, when a very left opponent - Bernie - would have won for radical democracy, providing a clear opposition to the "alt-right" politics that swelled under Trump). "Democratic politics must be partisan. In order to get involved in politics, citizens have to feel that real alternatives are at stake."
Everyone needs a collective identity - the fall of communist parties in France led to a rise in Muslim identities. The religious replaced the political, which, as we have seen in other places, can be very problematic. If the politics are too bland, some other identity will be sought - something that promotes the ideas of the citizen who feels abandoned by the political party unwilling to state their position in so many issues. Citizens must feel that they have a voice, they must feel that they have a representative in whatever fight they see as important. Religion "does not provide the terrain for agonistic debate," instead, I would think, promoting dogmatic oppositionalism. Has individualism made people eschew collective forms of identification, at least in part?
I would assume that the need for a we/they distinction and identity construction is the result of evolutionary psychology. As with almost every other problem in our human society, this would be resolved with the objectivity brought once we can separate our consciousness(es) from our bodies. All fear is rooted in the biological form, though so too are all pleasures and cultural creations.
Moral condemnation has replaced proper political struggles: wrong v. right, good v. evil, as opposed to right v. left. The "moralization of politics." "This is, of course, not good for democracy because when the opponents are not defined in a political but in a moral way, they cannot be seen as adversaries, but only as enemies. With the evil ones, no agonistic debate is possible. They have to be eliminated."
The media are a tool, but are not the final word, and are not all-powerful. Needs to be used as they were with ACT UP, highlighting political issues of race and homophobia around AIDS. "…the subversive re-appropriation of the dominant forms of communication." "To acknowledge the power of the media is also to become aware of the many possibilities of diverting this power. What the left needs is more imagination in their use of the media so as to transform it into a terrain of agonistic confrontation."
The struggle against neoliberalism is global and necessitates solidarity. The struggles need to be regionally contextualized (and that means different forms of democracy).
Since the fall of the Soviet Union, "we've been living in a unipolar world" in which the US' unchallenged hegemony imposes its model world-wide, accusing opponents as being "enemies of civilization". The increase in violent forms of reaction can be explained by the lack of "legitimate channels for resisting American hegemony" (see Mouffe's On the Political).