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Laboratory of Nano-Fascism

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Gary Genosko

Review of Zafer Aracagök, Non-Conceptual Negativity: Damaged Reflections on Turkey, Goleta, CA: Punctum Books, 2019. 134pp.

Non-fascist living, inspired by Deleuze and Guattari’s Anti-Oedipus, typically draws from anarchists, punks, beatniks, Rastafarians, Black Panthers, eco-defenders, and queer cultures. [1]Zafer Aracagök’s study of Turkey as a nano-fascist laboratory for the first quarter of the 21stcentury
adds a new weapon to the non-fascist’s toolkit: non-conceptual
negativity aimed at contemporary forces of implosion. Non-conceptual is
equivalent to non-dialectical and thus is the affirmative in the thought
of Deleuze, in its anti-Hegelian and anti-Platonic elaborations.
Nano-fascist forces implode the separation of worshipper and worshipped,
identifier and identified, in supporting Neanderthal capitalism. This
is endlessly appropriative and incorporative, and supported by those
countries prepared to violently regain their apparently previous
greatness (the White nationalist MAGA-type), whereas nano-fascism is
akin to an aggressive Leibnizian monad:  instead of each monad’s
imperfect holographic mirroring of the universe, the nano-fascist wages
war against those who would deny its right to perfect its incorporation
of the entire universe.  

Aracagök draws upon a clinical term Walking Corpse Syndrome (Cotard’s
Delusion) to describe those subjects who have succumbed to the reign of
undifferentiation: a subject agrees to be dead and submits easily in
this state to the demands of the dictator.  Although this relationship
to death was once thought to belong originally to punk, expressed
specifically in the funeral sculptures of Joy Division covers such as Closer and Love Will Tear Us Apart, and PIL’s Death Disco,
it has been repurposed by Neanderthal capital in order to zombify the
world. Under these conditions, it is maintained, non-fascist living must
not only embrace a non-conceptual negativity that negates what the
dictator wants to impose on everyone, but redeploy the saga of an Ian
Curtis figure as already dead, as if singing from within a coffin like
Screaming Lord Sutch, before his (and the horror rocker’s) suicides.

Non-Conceptual Negativityconsists of 72 short
philosophical reflections, lists, quotations, and Aracagök’s paintings
and drawings in black and white.  Many are highly reflexive,
autobiographical, confessional. This is an “anarchism of thought”
itself, a truly Deleuzean attempt to become free.[2]But
across the diverse array of encounters, interventions, and
provocations, there is the nano, the key modifier of this thought. The
deployment of the nano is one of the most provocative and rich aspects
of this book. There are two nuances worth exploring in some detail,
without downplaying the rich offerings in the other sections.

“Nano-fascism is distinguished from micro-fascism in the sense that
it is not based on mimesis.” (24) Nano-fascism does not require any
model or figure. This move calls into question the role of historical
examples of micro-fascism. Although the molecular perspective never
reduces fascism to history, it cannot do without it, either, because
fascism leaps trans-historically between generations and mutates along
the way. In “Un-Mimetic” Aracagök draws upon Heinrich von Kleist, one of
his stable of authors, for Penthesilea’s destabilization of
representation, shaking the Enlightenment foundations. This reference to
the 18thcentury German dramatist segues into a
Guattari-inspired typology of fascisms, in “Macro/Micro/Nano” that
reshuffles the types: macro-historical models like Nazism are continued
by micro-fascist types like the authoritarian personality, and the
molecular proliferation of capitalism. Finally, the phase of
nano-fascism is announced: this is Turkey today understood in terms of
its mobilization of Neanderthal capital, along with its hetero-power.
There is poetry here as well, not merely typology:

If you repeat the metaphors a thousand times you end up in fascism;
If you repeat them ten thousand times you end up in micro-fascism;
If you repeat them a hundred thousand times you end up in nano-fascism.
“Repetition” (123)

Nano-fascism requires neither institutional repression nor
internalization. Rather, “the nano-fascist is the pre-individual
non-singularity of post-enlightenment whose world is dissolved into
obedience without even knowing what obedience is.” (43) One is born to
be nano-fascist, in other words. The section “Torn to Pieces But Still
Standing” (40) tells us that it is only a simulated univocity that
forces the nano-particles to hold together, robbing them of
heterogeneity, and having the subjects forced into existence mouth
inanities in unison. One cannot force the negative in Deleuze’s thought,
we are reminded, otherwise you get a dialectical solution (“The
Subject,” 49). Against these forced subjects, there are only subjectless
subjectivities bound by non-conceptual negativity.

Aracagök is perhaps best known for his book and performance I Want to be a Suicide Bomber.[3]His
is an intellectual ambition: “Here is my suggestion, comrades: against
those fascist, anti-sharing, anti-life, anti-becoming, and at the same
time anti-hauntological repressions, the only way to resist is to become
a suicide bomber on an intellectual level – not in order to give up
life but to force those who are forcing us to give up life to give up
life.” (41) Readers of Franco ‘Bifo’ Berardi, who wrote the foreword to Non-Conceptual Negativity,
may recall that he underlined the smooth integration of suicide and the
Neoliberal will, and just Aracagök argues that obedience to
nano-fascism is inoculated in the human nervous system For Bifo, the
“thanato-political rationale” of mass suicide takes hold of the
collective consciousness under capitalist absolutism.[4]The question becomes in both examples: how to resist?

Situationist Agitation
This isn’t your grandfather’s Situationist International, the
Guy Debord worshipper guide to drifting, indolence, and upscale,
theoretical loucheness. No automatic repurposing machines here. The
resistance will be a somnambulist Situationism. Constantinople (‘the
City’) is its headquarters. When drifting into Tophane Park,
Situationists release “spectres of non-resemblance” into the central
torpedo boat sculpture, troubling its realism, fraying its borders, in
the name of pleasure and not fear of “the ghouls of representation.”
(54) And, asks Aracagök, “When Will They [the Neanderthals, the
nano-fascists] Come to An End”? He makes a list, like a Surrealist
shopping for pieces for a collage, beginning with: “1. When everyone
except them starts speaking a bird language.” (55)  The unitary urbanism
espoused by the Situationists required daydreams and playful
adventures. There was never a one-to-one correspondence between the
urbanism of Situationism and the urban terrain from which it sprang. In
“Maps and Coordinates,” Aracagök reminds us of the Borges fable about
the map that once covered the entire Empire, and how it fell into ruins,
its representational qualities diminished and replaced by simulations
in which no pre-existing reality or territory was required. Today,
Aracagök claims, the Neanderthals have reconstructed the map and
constituted the reality in a one-to-one lie!  The determinability of
location ensures that everyone is “already surrendered to the police.”
(69) City-creation comes to the forefront under these circumstances.
Aporia is a tactic for avoidance; psychasthenia is a relief; space-time
coordinates are a bad hangover. The eyes of the secret police and their
web of informers and finks, cast castrating glances over the population
and sort desire into cramped cubby-holes. Conversely, drifting and
passional pursuits foil static coordinates and cannot be later
recovered. Borrowing from Surrealist Roger Caillois, psychathenia
describes how an insect’s body tends to disappear through assimilation
to its surroundings. Progressive indistinction, this assimilation of the
insect to its surroundings, was Caillois’s route toward the analysis of
human-insect (and mineral) similarities, and for Aracagök it is a facet
of the neologism he coined a few years ago “Cutupidité” (103), a
gathering place for somnambulism, becoming gaseous, a non-ground, the
desire to get lost. It is a choice weapon of anti-fascists.

A lingering problem is that, as Aracagök explains, his own youthful
lust for English pop, for tartan threads, and teeny bopper magazines,
was smeared by castrating super-egos as the shopkeepers size up his
mother and his friends as just more sweets in the Kemeralti market
district of Izmir. These “Castrators of Desire” (77) haunt his dreams;
they choke off his breathing (“The Dream” 85) and they try to make his
life impossible, like bad fathers, bad translators of Turkish
literature, and those who do not heed and give their meta-narratives
over to the chirps, neighs and buzzing of “Birds, Horses, Insects” (91),
among other wondrous minoritarian languages.

This may very well be the first book of Deleuzean Surrealism, but
there is ample material devoted to rethinking the negative in the spirit
of Adorno where the strangeness of negativity and positivity
productively collide.  The two longest philosophical sections, “Adorno:
Negative Dialectics,” (114-16) and “Non-Conceptual Negativity” (127-29)
provide welcome reflections on how to preserve difference by rereading
Adorno as Deleuze in order to recover the resistant non-conceptual
negativity that survives as a residue in the form of a strange
positivity.

This fascinating collage of a book twists and turns until the
“Somnambulist Situationist Manifesto” (126) arrives. Sleepwalking – a
nod to poet Robert Desnos’ experiments in self-hypnotic states – through
Situationist texts today is to drive towards an “un-negotiable,
short-circuiting, non-identitarian, and especially critically perverted
position.” (216) Here hypnosis, a bad object of psychoanalysis, is
regained and put to work in the service of a making drowsy
– “drowsy-Hegel” and “hypnotized Freud” (126) – with queer desire. A
less-than-subject, an “undecidable subject” (94) is what Aracagök is
trying to concoct in order to live an anarchical life in contemporary
Turkey.

NOTES
[1]See Rolando Perez, On An(archy) and Schizoanalysis, New York: Autonomedia, 1990.
[2]Jernej Kaluza, “Anarchism in Deleuze,” Deleuze and Guattari Studies13/2 (2019): 268.
[3]I Want to be a Suicide Bomber, San Francisco: Little Black Cart, 2013.
[4]Franco Berardi, Heroes: Mass Murder and Suicide, New York: Verso, 2015, taken from here

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