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Holloway - Crack Capitalism.pdf - Libcom

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people forced into certain roles. We forget that there is a deeper<br />

conflict, the conflict that creates the theatre, that forces people<br />

to don their character masks. This is the struggle to impose<br />

abstraction upon the daily doing of active subjects, the struggle<br />

to subordinate concrete or creative doing to abstract labour (and<br />

therefore capital). This is not a struggle that was completed at the<br />

dawn of capitalism, but is a daily repeated struggle. The theatre<br />

is not a construction of the eighteenth or nineteenth century,<br />

but a construction of today, and a very fragile one. Behind the<br />

struggle on the stage, there is a prior one: the struggle not to go<br />

up on the stage, not to submit our doing to abstract labour, the<br />

desire of the actors even on the stage to throw off their masks:<br />

the struggle not of an identity but against identification. The<br />

revolution is a battle not between the characters on the stage,<br />

but between the actors and their character masks.<br />

In other words, there cannot be a complete identity between<br />

people and the structural position that they occupy in society,<br />

it cannot be that people are entirely subsumed within their<br />

character mask. The very idea of the one-dimensional man means<br />

that there is someone who is not one-dimensional, someone<br />

who can criticise one-dimensionality. The question, as always,<br />

is: where is that critic, who is that critic? Is it the privileged<br />

intellectual (as Adorno or Horkheimer would have it)! or is it<br />

the 'substratum of the outcasts and the outsiders' (as Marcuse<br />

argues)?2 The simplest answer is surely that we ourselves are the<br />

critics of our own one-dimensionality.<br />

We are not as one-dimensional as we seem: behind our onedimensionality<br />

stands a polyphonic, polymorphous critic. Behind<br />

(or in-against-and-beyond) the personification of abstract labour<br />

stands the doer, the daring dancing doer. Beneath the surface<br />

of domination is the seething of rebellion. Pushing against<br />

and beyond identity is the endless restlessness of anti-identity.<br />

Inside the savage-converted-into-Iabourer dances the savagein-rebellion.3<br />

The possibility of radical change depends not on people<br />

assuming their character masks (the proletariat assuming its<br />

revolutionary role), but on the contrary, on the ec-static distance<br />

between people and the masks they wear, on the fact that people<br />

exist not only in, but also against and beyond their social roles.<br />

213

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