December 03, 2008
In Defense of Lost Causes?
The curious thing about the Zizek phenomenon is that the louder he applauds violence and terror--especially the terror of Lenin, Stalin, and Mao, whose "lost causes" Zizek takes up in another new book, In Defense of Lost Causes--the more indulgently he is received by the academic left, which has elevated him into a celebrity and the center of a cult. A glance at the blurbs on his books provides a vivid illustration of the power of repressive tolerance. In Iraq: The Borrowed Kettle, Zizek claims, "Better the worst Stalinist terror than the most liberal capitalist democracy"; but on the back cover of the book we are told that Zizek is "a stimulating writer" who "will entertain and offend, but never bore." In The Fragile Absolute, he writes that "the way to fight ethnic hatred effectively is not through its immediate counterpart, ethnic tolerance; on the contrary, what we need is even more hatred, but proper political hatred"; but this is an example of his "typical brio and boldness." And In Defense of Lost Causes, where Zizek remarks that "Heidegger is 'great' not in spite of, but because of his Nazi engagement," and that "crazy, tasteless even, as it may sound, the problem with Hitler was that he was not violent enough, that his violence was not 'essential' enough"; but this book, its publisher informs us, is "a witty, adrenalinfueled manifesto for universal values."more from TNR here.
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Comments
Zizek, with his Slavo-Wildean paradoxes, does nothing more offensive than show that the "left" and the "right" are the same place on a vicious circle. Without the beard he'd just be tic-ridden philosotainment for a grammatically correct subset of YouTube (ie, imagine a bald BHL). With beard, he's the guilty conscience of ten thousand "The Wire"-irradiated dissertations and a huggable morph between DFW and OBL and if I *never* read his name over at The Valve again... (laugh)
Having said all that: Kirsch is just jealous. *He* wants followers, too!
Posted by: Steven Augustine | Dec 3, 2008 10:28:08 AM
This review is dishonest garbage. In the first five paragraphs, I counted three times when the reviewer inserts a quote from Zizek and ties it to an entirely different context. A thoguhtful and highly circumspect exploration of the potential benefits of religious sentiment, up to and including "fanaticism", becomes a direct endorsement of terrorist violence, and so on.
Posted by: Picador | Dec 3, 2008 11:21:23 AM
"Better the worst Stalinist terror than the most liberal capitalist democracy...."
Wow. That's not taken out of context or anything...
Posted by: Michael Drake | Dec 3, 2008 12:06:22 PM
Besides the distortions and quotations taken out of context, the article is especially infuriating for propagating a tired myth: that anything line of thinking that strays from liberal-democratic orthodoxy must inevitably lead to fascism. This is dishonest and demonstrably false.
Posted by: Ross K. | Dec 3, 2008 12:48:48 PM
Steven:
"Philosotainment" is good. I do not understand the semiotics of Zizek's beard though.
Posted by: Vicki Baker | Dec 3, 2008 1:59:21 PM
leave it to the National Review oops! I meant the New Republic to 'reconstruct' Zizek for the intellectually gullible 'liberals'.
@Vivki re: the semiotics of the beard: the gray beard might index a mans age as well as a certain academic style i.e. looking professorial etc. But I think the writer just meant you could see Zizek's facial tics better without the beard. Sometimes a pipe is just a pipe.
Posted by: anechoic | Dec 4, 2008 9:00:08 AM
"Better the worst Stalinist terror than the most Liberal capitalist democracy.." liberal capitalist democracy is non-existent. Like the old Holy Roman Empire there is an agreeemnt that creates and sustains the illusion of something Holy, Roman and Imperial. So glossing the quote-Stalin is legitimated by the crimes of his adversaries for his defense of revolutionary speech.
However the paradox is that Stalin of course was no hero and did not defend revolutionary speech but instead saved the Anglo-Saxon-American Capitalist system from the Hun.
Which is a paradox since it was Wall Street and London that created Hitler's Nazi party as a potent political force. Which is a paradox since Wall Street and London also financed Trotsky.
Posted by: Publius | Dec 4, 2008 6:42:52 PM
Zizek at face value is a persistent advocate of tyranny in the name of utopia. Zizek NOT at face value could mean almost literally anything. Take your pick. Either way, it has no practical consequence. Outside the realm of self-indulgent twaddlers he has no influence; it is merely annoying to see that there are so many self-indulgent twaddlers who take his piffle seriously, when the world is in such dire straits.
Posted by: dave | Dec 5, 2008 11:17:30 AM
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