The eurozone crisis has sparked a vibrant debate among the European Union鈥檚 supporters and critics. Costas Douzinas, professor of law and director of Birkbeck, University of London鈥檚 Institute of the Humanities, is a prominent critic of the EU; here, he examines the effects of the crisis in his native Greece.
Douzinas cites and discusses authors such as Michel Foucault, Giorgio Agamben, Alain Badiou, Slavoj 沤i啪ek and others whose work is often called 鈥渞adical philosophy鈥 and is mostly obscure, allusive and mystical. In contrast, his own prose is for the most part lucid and direct. The book is often moving and captures well the current Greek mood of anger and despair. At the core of Douzinas鈥 argument lies a moral requirement for 鈥渞esistance鈥: 鈥淎lways act according to a maxim which, universally applied, attacks and cancels the causes that exclude and condemn to symbolic and physical death large numbers of people.鈥 This 鈥渦niversal moral command鈥 neatly divides the world between oppressors and victims.
Capitalism is the villain and ordinary people are its targets. But Douzinas accepts this without any evidence. He often relies on a聽simplified history of ideas to present an argument. There is no discussion of what amounts to 鈥渟ymbolic death鈥, nor why we need large numbers of such 鈥渄eaths鈥 to have a duty of resistance according to the 鈥渦niversal moral command鈥. Strangely, he does not deal with widely available research showing that European societies are among the most prosperous, equal and happy in the world.
For Douzinas, European democracy is an abject failure. Late capitalism, for him, comes with the exercise of 鈥渂iopolitics鈥, the direct or indirect 鈥渃ontrol鈥 of thought and action by impersonal forces aimed at domination. It used to be that Left and Right had different policies, says Douzinas, but this is no longer true. Europe鈥檚 鈥渢wo major socio-political models鈥, namely classical liberalism and social democracy, have now converged into 鈥渘eoliberalism鈥, which 鈥渆xtends the market mechanism to the social state, privatizing public utilities and social amenities鈥, where the strong social state of social democracy disappears and becomes a 鈥渟tate of behavioural controls, extensive surveillance and emergency powers deemed necessary to uphold order and keep resistance in check鈥.
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What are the victims to do? Douzinas is under no doubt: insurrection. He believes that the 鈥渨ill to change the world brings together radical equality and democracy鈥, which in today鈥檚 world finds its best expression in the 鈥渋dea of communism鈥. For Douzinas, 鈥渄emocratic disobedience combats the atrophy of democracy and the decay of 鈥榩ost-democracy鈥欌ollowing republican theory [democratic disobedience] prioritizes the democratic will of the people ahead of fundamental rights.鈥 Democracy, for Douzinas, must be extended 鈥渋nto all aspects of the social fabric, from home to work to social and cultural life鈥. He argues that in Greece the political vehicle of resistance is the Coalition of the Radical Left, or Syriza. The task of the Greek Left, he says, is: 鈥渢o develop the idea of communism for an age of capitalist crisis and violent social rearrangement鈥.
It is unclear what the aim is. Douzinas has no proposals for social, economic or institutional reform. Perhaps more surprisingly, he ignores the economy. He offers no discussion of how to maintain a functioning economy and a stable banking system in circumstances of sovereign insolvency, the position that Greece, the Republic of Ireland and Portugal found themselves in in 2010-12. One assumes he would have preferred a break with international markets and the EU but, surprisingly, he never discusses these possibilities. His only proposal is pure majoritarianism.
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It is a very meagre harvest. Political philosophy has dealt with Douzinas鈥 arguments ever since they were made by Marx and Lenin. The Jacobin plan for total control of social life has been shown to lead to a totalitarian nightmare. Philosophers around the world are close to unanimous in considering rights and the rule of law as necessary protections of the private sphere against humiliations deriving from private and public sources. Most if not all of them believe that democracy is to ensure that we do not live our lives for the convenience of others. The book simply ignores this literature.
One is inclined to paraphrase the other Marx, Groucho. 鈥淩adical philosophy鈥 is to philosophy what military music is to music. It cultivates confrontation. It does not seek understanding.
Philosophy and Resistance in the Crisis: Greece and the Future of Europe
By Costas Douzinas
Polity, 200pp, 拢50.00 and 拢14.99
ISBN 9780745665436 and 665443
Published 29 March 2013
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