{"id":5092,"date":"2016-09-12T18:03:24","date_gmt":"2016-09-12T22:03:24","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/c-scp.org\/?p=5092"},"modified":"2019-06-08T18:51:22","modified_gmt":"2019-06-08T22:51:22","slug":"drucilla-cornell-and-stephen-d-seely-the-spirit-of-revolution","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/c-scp.org\/fr\/2016\/09\/12\/drucilla-cornell-and-stephen-d-seely-the-spirit-of-revolution","title":{"rendered":"Drucilla Cornell and Stephen D. Seely, The Spirit of Revolution"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><b>Drucilla Cornell and Stephen D. Seely, <\/b><b><i>The Spirit of Revolution: Beyond the Dead Ends of Man<\/i><\/b><b>. Cambridge: Polity Press, 2016; 195 pages. ISBN: 978-0745690742. <\/b><\/p>\n<p><i>Reviewed by Tracey Nicholls, Lewis University.<\/i><\/p>\n<p>This book calls for a revolution that is urgent, necessary, and reminiscent of a slogan I walked past daily in Montr\u00e9al during the 2012 student debt protests that became a province-wide popular affirmation of the value of higher education in a democratic society. Written on a huge red blanket (the red square being the symbol of these student protests) and hung from a third floor balcony was a hand-lettered declaration that translates as: \u201cIt is not a sign of good mental health to be well-adapted to a sick society.\u201d After reading this book I think there is much to be said about the revolutionary value of that witty declaration. Like the pots-and-pans demonstrations of 1980s Chile that became <i>les casseroles<\/i> of 2012 Montr\u00e9al, it is a visible sign of resistance that has an unquantifiable capacity to inspire the solidarity required for transformation of the world into one in which we can all be more human <i>and<\/i> more humane.<\/p>\n<p>The argument Cornell and Seely offer as motivation for this transformation invokes commitments to revolution and to humanism that are\u2014mistakenly, they contend\u2014no longer seen as relevant in progressive circles. They reject the view that revolution is <i>pass\u00e9<\/i>, along with the equation of the death of revolution and the death of Man, the latter of which is understood as \u201cthe unmarked subject\u201d of European political philosophy: neither gendered nor racialized, possessed of ideal rationality, and perfectly equipped to take his place as the ruler of the natural and social worlds that exist by his authorization and for his benefit. Instead, Cornell and Seely assert the pressing need for a rethinking of our relationships with \u201cthe other forms of matter\u2026with which we share the universe.\u201d (3) This humility and respect for otherness is not, however, to be understood as a variant of currently fashionable post-humanism. Calling out that view as a form of quietism, they announce that they \u201chave had quite enough of \u2018contingent, fragile, insecure, and ephemeral lives\u2019 [which sound] not like the imagination of living beyond Man, but rather like a meticulous description of the lives of the majority of the world under conditions of advanced capitalism right now\u201d\u2014essentially, the social privilege of \u201csimplicity\u201d in the global North obscuring human rights crises in the global South. (5) Pointing to the hope and possibility offered by alternative visions from outside the system, Cornell and Seely insist on new relations within the human social world and across species and forms of life; an end to capitalism with its \u201crelentless pursuit of profit [and] dictates of surplus accumulation\u201d (6); and a new political imagination that links revolutionary politics to a robust spirituality drawn from readings that productively intersect or \u201ccreolize\u201d political thinkers in Western and non-Western traditions.<\/p>\n<p>In the first part of their argument, Cornell and Seely draw on a range of feminist socialist critiques of capitalism to assert that \u201cthe transition to socialism entails the possibility of loving differently, which demands nothing less than the complete reconfiguration of erotic relations.\u201d (15) Beyond making our conceptions of sexuality more human, this demands that we challenge the commodification of sexuality and the reduction of the erotic to sex that is normalized within a capitalist framework. Aligning themselves with 18th-century feminist philosophers Mary Wollstonecraft and Olympe de Gouges, they endorse the principle that there can be no truly ethical (let alone authentically erotic) relations between genders without overcoming the deforming and exploitative effects of sexual differentiation practiced by (capitalist) systems of phallocentric heterosexuality. The erotic transformation Cornell and Seely envision is drawn primarily from early 20th-century Marxist feminist Alexandra Kollontai, who understands love, sex, and eroticism as constitutive parts of a solidarity in which all are free to flourish, in creativity and in pleasure. If \u201cthe revolutionary struggle was to be a joyous affirmation of an empowered way of being-together\u201d (23), then women must be freed from the biological destiny of reproduction announced by Freud. Severing ourselves from capitalism\u2019s emphasis on the worker\u2019s production and woman\u2019s reproduction makes possible \u201ca new erotic <i>sensibility<\/i> in which we desire ourselves and others in a completely different way.\u201d (29) This new way of understanding the erotic, as a bridge between spirituality and politics, is grounded by Cornell and Seely in an \u201cintrinsic connection between sensory experience and the imagination,\u201d between bodies and minds\u2014neither of which are free of the ideological conditioning of late-stage capitalism. (30) To buttress Kollontai\u2019s vision, Cornell and Seely draw also on the work of Luce Irigaray, whose ethics of desire offers a conception of \u201cbetween-us\u201d that moves beyond questions of sameness and difference to richer considerations of how we support each other\u2019s creative forces of desire. Embracing this erotic transformation \u201ccalls us to nothing more, but also nothing less, than a constant striving for a more <i>joyful<\/i> shared world.\u201d (51) It is a transformation of \u201c<i>all<\/i> ways of being together beyond simply \u2018sex.\u2019\u201d (161)<\/p>\n<p>Their ongoing commitment to synthesizing canonical and marginal texts is perhaps most provocative in the second chapter\u2019s discussion of political spirituality through Michel Foucault\u2019s radical, albeit often misunderstood, call for new arrangements of \u201cbodies and pleasures.\u201d (55) His work is important for their project because bringing about the conditions in which we can have these revolutionary bodies and minds effectively entails the political spirituality they read through a synthesis of <i>History of Sexuality<\/i> and Foucault\u2019s less well known writings and interviews on the Iranian Revolution of 1979. Challenging a standard reading of Foucault as pessimistic about our possibilities for liberation, Cornell and Seely argue that when his call for care of the self is considered alongside his commentaries on the Iranian Revolution, Foucault emerges as passionately and thoughtfully engaged with a non-commodified conception of the erotic, the link between politics and spirituality. On their reading, the case of Iran showed Foucault that \u201crevolution was not only fighting for another world, but rather fighting for a <i>new truth<\/i> and for how to be a different subject in <i>this world<\/i>.\u201d (66) In Foucault\u2019s view, caring for the self is a positive and desirable confrontation with power: \u201c[his] point is not that everything is bad, but that everything is dangerous.\u201d And if everything is dangerous, then, as Foucault put it, \u201c<i>we always have something to do<\/i>.\u201d (72) The erotic transformation that requires political spirituality \u201cis not simply \u2018sexual\u2019.\u201d Revolutionary change in our relations to our bodies and the bodies of others \u201cdemands constant ethical and spiritual work precisely because of the horrific toll that revolutionary struggles can take on individuals and collectives. Such a transformation demands\u2026new forms of conducting ourselves individually and with others through new ways of relating to who we imagine ourselves to be.\u201d (79)<\/p>\n<p>From Foucault, Cornell and Seely introduce Derrida\u2019s intergenerational ethics\u2014based on the principle of \u201crespect for those others who are no longer [and] for those others who are not yet <i>there<\/i>\u201d (81)\u2014as a framework for synthesizing the work of Caribbean philosophers Frantz Fanon and Sylvia Wynter. At the same time, the authors creolize Derrida, situating his work around Fanon and Wynter\u2019s analyses of the harms and wounds of colonization and the obligations this psychic damage poses to all of us. While Fanon calls for the assertion of the full agency of the oppressed and colonized, Wynter provides resources for working through mourning and trauma in the narratives of decolonization.<\/p>\n<p>Drawing on Fanon, Cornell and Seely argue that the damnation that colonization visits on the societies it purports to civilize \u201cis a form of enforced psychotic reaction, because \u2018sanity\u2019 demands a projected future, which might be different and which might be ours.\u201d (95) Colonization, in essence, forecloses the ethical world of the colonized, because the Manichean dichotomy of settler and native refuses to the latter any status beyond that of an \u201cobject to be dominated.\u201d And it forecloses the social world, because the social is, in essence, a shared world of meaning, and sharing a world that contains \u201csettlers\u201d and \u201cnatives\u201d is impossible in colonial relations. At best, a subordinated agency might be conferred upon the colonized native who tries to reconcile him- or herself to the dominant caste\u2014but authentic and fully human agency is possible only from \u201cthe very moment of standing up to the colonizer.\u201d (112) On Cornell and Seely\u2019s reading of Fanon, \u201ceven [to] begin to heal the horrific wounds of living in that nightmare world\u2026demands a full confrontation with the profound trauma of what has been imposed by colonization.\u201d (109) The transformation that is required, then, is a return to an ethical and social world in which the colonized subjects could be seen as human beings. \u201cFanon\u2019s insistence on erotic transformation\u2014collective erotic transformation,\u201d according to Cornell and Seely, \u201cshows that the armed struggle is the beginning of new forms of collectivity, including those in which [<i>contra<\/i> Lacan] Woman is not there as a Thing to be cut\/out as the only way to become a man,\u201d but as an equal, fully human person. (112) Through the interplay and interrogation of canonical and subaltern texts, this book\u2019s thesis emerges as a categorical rejection of the colonial world of <i>les damn\u00e9s de la terre<\/i>, in favour of embracing an ethico-spiritual and political obligation to become \u201cchildren of the revolution.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Cornell and Seely see the political spirituality required by this shift from oppression to revolution as analogous to the \u201cnew ceremony\u201d theorized by Wynter: a taking up of an ethical obligation of mourning and, through this mourning, acknowledging the humanity of lives that (European) colonization refused to see as human, e.g., the millions of people who died in the trans-Atlantic slave trade. Recognition of the humanity that has been stripped from the victims is a collective revolutionary obligation, a constitutive part of \u201cthe new practice of being human together\u201d that is theorized in both Fanon\u2019s and Wynter\u2019s blueprints for decolonization. (117) To rethink \u201cMan\u201d in more human terms is a necessarily shared project, on this view, and a crucial part of it is an understanding of the power of mythic narrative through which we can reconstitute the stories that allow us to make sense of our social world and our human possibilities. In Wynter\u2019s work, this rethinking of how our cultural stories shape us shows putatively neutral conceptions of reason, science, and technology to have been embedded all along in colonial projects of dehumanization of the West\u2019s others. In both Fanon and Wynter, Cornell and Seely find a sharpened and more detailed consideration of expansive intergenerational obligations: a fuller account of how to construct revolutionary solidarity, and more diverse visions of justice in a post-revolutionary future.<\/p>\n<p>As evidenced by their analyses of Fanon, Foucault, and Wynter (among others), Cornell and Seely reject the privileged and sheltered world constituted and imposed by a particular and predominant vision of European Man, of \u201cthe unmarked subject.\u201d The practice of creolization that is Cornell and Seely\u2019s method of reading texts\u2014a hybridity that sharpens the concepts of eroticism, spirituality, and social revolution and, at the same time, demonstrates their widespread appeal to theorists of human liberation\u2014is testimony to the growing influence of Caribbean philosophical discourses that develop and celebrate creolization as a decolonizing <i>episteme<\/i>. And their commitment to the truly collaborative writing that produced this book further illustrates Cornell and Seely\u2019s philosophical allegiance to \u201ca thoroughly decolonized democratic socialist common world.\u201d (146) This is a book that does what it urges: it builds new collective practices and perspectives that move us forward to a vantage point from which we can start to see the outlines of a world in which fully human flourishing is each person\u2019s basic right and the entire human community\u2019s shared project.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Drucilla Cornell and Stephen D. Seely, The Spirit of Revolution: Beyond the Dead Ends of Man. Cambridge: Polity Press, 2016; 195 pages. ISBN: 978-0745690742. Reviewed by Tracey Nicholls, Lewis University. This book calls for a revolution that is urgent, necessary, and reminiscent of a slogan I walked past daily in Montr\u00e9al during the 2012 student [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":11,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_et_pb_use_builder":"","_et_pb_old_content":"","_et_gb_content_width":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[4],"tags":[47,46,21,123],"class_list":["post-5092","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-reviews","tag-deconstruction","tag-derrida","tag-foucault","tag-political-philosophy","et-doesnt-have-format-content","et_post_format-et-post-format-standard"],"publishpress_future_action":{"enabled":false,"date":"2026-05-07 11:04:05","action":"Draft","newStatus":"draft","terms":[],"taxonomy":"category"},"publishpress_future_workflow_manual_trigger":{"enabledWorkflows":[]},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/c-scp.org\/fr\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/5092","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/c-scp.org\/fr\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/c-scp.org\/fr\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/c-scp.org\/fr\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/11"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/c-scp.org\/fr\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=5092"}],"version-history":[{"count":2,"href":"https:\/\/c-scp.org\/fr\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/5092\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":6955,"href":"https:\/\/c-scp.org\/fr\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/5092\/revisions\/6955"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/c-scp.org\/fr\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=5092"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/c-scp.org\/fr\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=5092"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/c-scp.org\/fr\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=5092"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}