{"title":"Žižek's Pandemic","authors":"M. Featherstone","doi":"10.1215/17432197-8797613","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In the first part of this article on Žižek's recent book Pandemic! I show how he develops a political theology of the spirit through a discussion of social distancing In this argument Žižek connects the idea of physical distance to the biblical story of the resurrection, in which Jesus says to Mary Magdalene “noli me tangere” (“touch me not”), in order to imagine the emergence of a community of spirit from the social, political, and economic ruin caused by the COVID-19 pandemic Contrasting this community of spirit to the Chinese Communist Party's Foucauldian response to the outbreak of the virus, Žižek suggests a turn away from Prometheanism and the logic of domination toward a new posthuman humanitarianism based on a recognition of human weakness, vulnerability, and fragility In Žižek's view, this turn toward a new form of humility would emerge from the final disenchantment of the spirit of capitalism and a recognition of the difference between human work, which contributes to a meaningful world, and bestial labor that dehumanizes and means nothing Thus, the article shows how Žižek thinks about the pandemic in terms of a crisis of late capitalism and the possibility of a new spirit of communism While the presexual nonlife of the virus is comparable to the drive of capitalism in respect of its unthinking will to replication and reproduction, Žižek founds the basis of humanity in our (human) mortality and being toward death that open out onto a new horizon of releasement (Gelassenheit) beyond biotechnoeconomic nihilism The conclusion of the article, therefore, shows how Žižek imagines that the pandemic presents humanity with an existential choice about the way we organize social life This choice is between the biopolitical domination of Chinese authoritarianism that seeks to control every aspect of life, American disaster capitalism that accepts the brutality of the state of nature, and finally Žižek's utopian spirit of communism based on a recognition of human and planetary finitude","PeriodicalId":413879,"journal":{"name":"Cultural Politics: An International Journal","volume":"364 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-03-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Cultural Politics: An International Journal","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1215/17432197-8797613","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
In the first part of this article on Žižek's recent book Pandemic! I show how he develops a political theology of the spirit through a discussion of social distancing In this argument Žižek connects the idea of physical distance to the biblical story of the resurrection, in which Jesus says to Mary Magdalene “noli me tangere” (“touch me not”), in order to imagine the emergence of a community of spirit from the social, political, and economic ruin caused by the COVID-19 pandemic Contrasting this community of spirit to the Chinese Communist Party's Foucauldian response to the outbreak of the virus, Žižek suggests a turn away from Prometheanism and the logic of domination toward a new posthuman humanitarianism based on a recognition of human weakness, vulnerability, and fragility In Žižek's view, this turn toward a new form of humility would emerge from the final disenchantment of the spirit of capitalism and a recognition of the difference between human work, which contributes to a meaningful world, and bestial labor that dehumanizes and means nothing Thus, the article shows how Žižek thinks about the pandemic in terms of a crisis of late capitalism and the possibility of a new spirit of communism While the presexual nonlife of the virus is comparable to the drive of capitalism in respect of its unthinking will to replication and reproduction, Žižek founds the basis of humanity in our (human) mortality and being toward death that open out onto a new horizon of releasement (Gelassenheit) beyond biotechnoeconomic nihilism The conclusion of the article, therefore, shows how Žižek imagines that the pandemic presents humanity with an existential choice about the way we organize social life This choice is between the biopolitical domination of Chinese authoritarianism that seeks to control every aspect of life, American disaster capitalism that accepts the brutality of the state of nature, and finally Žižek's utopian spirit of communism based on a recognition of human and planetary finitude
本文的第一部分是关于Žižek的新书《Pandemic!》我展示了他是如何通过对社会距离的讨论来发展精神的政治神学在这个论证中Žižek将身体距离的概念与圣经中复活的故事联系起来,在这个故事中,耶稣对抹大拉的马利亚说" noli me tangere "("不要碰我")为了想象从社会,政治,将这种精神共同体与中国共产党对病毒爆发的福柯式反应进行对比,Žižek表明,从普罗米修斯主义和统治逻辑转向一种新的后人类人道主义,这种人道主义基于对人类弱点、脆弱性和脆弱性的认识。对资本主义精神的最终觉醒,以及对人类劳动(它有助于创造一个有意义的世界)与使人失去人性、毫无意义的兽性劳动之间的区别的认识,将产生这种向一种新形式的谦逊的转变。文章展示了Žižek是如何从晚期资本主义的危机和新共产主义精神的可能性的角度来看待这场大流行的,而病毒的性行为前的无生命可以与资本主义的冲动相媲美,因为资本主义对复制和繁殖的无意识意志,Žižek在我们(人类)的死亡和走向死亡的基础上,发现了超越生物技术经济虚无主义的释放(Gelassenheit)的新视野。因此,文章的结论显示了Žižek如何想象疫情向人类提出了关于我们组织社会生活方式的存在主义选择,这种选择是在试图控制生活的方方面面的中国威权主义的生物政治统治,美国灾难资本主义,它接受自然状态的残酷,最后是Žižek的共产主义乌托邦精神,它基于对人类和地球有限性的认识