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Music As An Organizational Principle
By Hakim Bey
(excerpted from The Temporary Autonomous Zone)
MEANWHILE, HOWEVER, WE TURN to the history of classical
anarchism in the light of the TAZ concept.
Before the "closure of the map," a good deal of
anti- authoritarian energy went into "escapist" communes such as
Modern Times, the various Phalansteries, and so on. Interestingly, some of them
were not intended to last "forever," but only as long as the project
proved fulfilling. By Socialist/Utopian standards these experiments were
"failures," and therefore we know little about them.
When escape beyond the frontier proved impossible, the era
of revolutionary urban Communes began in Europe. The Communes of Paris, Lyons
and Marseilles did not survive long enough to take on any characteristics of
permanence, and one wonders if they were meant to. From our point of view the
chief matter of fascination is the spirit
of the Communes. During and after these years anarchists took up the practice
of revolutionary nomadism, drifting from uprising to uprising, looking to keep
alive in themselves the intensity of spirit they experienced in the moment of
insurrection. In fact, certain anarchists of the Stirnerite/Nietzschean strain
came to look on this activity as an end in itself, a way of always
occupying an autonomous zone, the interzone
which opens up in the midst or wake of war and revolution (cf. Pynchon's
"zone" in Gravity's Rainbow). They declared that if any socialist revolution succeeded, they'd be the first to turn against it. Short of
universal anarchy they had no intention of ever stopping. In Russia in 1917
they greeted the free Soviets with joy: this was their goal. But as soon as the Bolsheviks
betrayed the Revolution, the individualist anarchists were the first to go back
on the warpath. After Kronstadt, of course, all anarchists condemned the "Soviet Union" (a
contradiction in terms) and moved on in search of new insurrections.
Makhno's Ukraine and anarchist Spain were meant to have duration, and despite the exigencies of continual war both
succeeded to a certain extent: not that they lasted a "long time,"
but they were successfully organized and could have persisted if not for
outside aggression. Therefore, from among the experiments of the inter-War
period I'll concentrate instead on the madcap Republic of Fiume, which is much
less well known, and was not
meant to endure. Gabriele D'Annunzio, Decadent poet, artist, musician,
aesthete, womanizer, pioneer daredevil aeronautist, black magician, genius and
cad, emerged from World War I as a hero with a small army at his beck and
command: the "Arditi." At a loss for adventure, he decided to capture
the city of Fiume from Yugoslavia and give it to Italy. After a necromantic ceremony with his mistress in a
cemetery in Venice he set out to conquer Fiume, and succeeded without any
trouble to speak of. But Italy turned down his generous offer; the Prime
Minister called him a fool.
In a huff, D'Annunzio decided to declare independence and
see how long he could get away with it. He and one of his anarchist friends
wrote the Constitution, which declared music to be the central principle of
the State. The Navy (made up of deserters
and Milanese anarchist maritime unionists) named themselves the Uscochi, after the long- vanished pirates who once lived on
local offshore islands and preyed on Venetian and Ottoman shipping. The modern
Uscochi succeeded in some wild coups: several rich Italian merchant vessels
suddenly gave the Republic a future: money in the coffers! Artists, bohemians,
adventurers, anarchists (D'Annunzio corresponded with Malatesta), fugitives and
Stateless refugees, homosexuals, military dandies (the uniform was black with
pirate skull-&-crossbones--later stolen by the SS), and crank reformers of
every stripe (including Buddhists, Theosophists and Vedantists) began to show
up at Fiume in droves. The party never stopped. Every morning D'Annunzio read
poetry and manifestos from his balcony; every evening a concert, then
fireworks. This made up the entire activity of the government. Eighteen months
later, when the wine and money had run out and the Italian fleet finally showed up and lobbed a few shells at the Municipal
Palace, no one had the energy to resist.
D'Annunzio, like many Italian anarchists, later veered
toward fascism--in fact, Mussolini (the ex-Syndicalist) himself seduced the
poet along that route. By the time D'Annunzio realized his error it was too
late: he was too old and sick. But Il Duce had him killed anyway--pushed off a
balcony--and turned him into a "martyr." As for Fiume, though it
lacked the seriousness of the free
Ukraine or Barcelona, it can probably teach us more about certain aspects of
our quest. It was in some ways the last of the pirate utopias (or the only
modern example)--in other ways, perhaps, it was very nearly the first modern
TAZ.
I believe that if we compare Fiume with the Paris uprising
of 1968 (also the Italian urban insurrections of the early seventies), as well
as with the American countercultural communes and their anarcho-New Left
influences, we should notice certain similarities, such as:--the importance of
aesthetic theory (cf. the Situationists)--also, what might be called
"pirate economics," living high off the surplus of social
overproduction--even the popularity of colorful military uniforms--and the
concept of music as revolutionary social
change--and finally their shared air of impermanence, of being ready to move
on, shape-shift, re- locate to other universities, mountaintops, ghettos,
factories, safe houses, abandoned farms--or even other planes of reality. No
one was trying to impose yet another Revolutionary Dictatorship, either at
Fiume, Paris, or Millbrook. Either the world would change, or it wouldn't.
Meanwhile keep on the move and live intensely.
The Munich Soviet (or "Council Republic") of 1919
exhibited certain features of the TAZ, even though--like most revolutions--its
stated goals were not exactly "temporary." Gustav Landauer's
participation as Minister of Culture along with Silvio Gesell as Minister of
Economics and other anti- authoritarian and extreme libertarian socialists such
as the poet/playwrights Erich Mahsam and Ernst Toller, and Ret Marut (the
novelist B. Traven), gave the Soviet a distinct anarchist flavor. Landauer, who
had spent years of isolation working on his grand synthesis of Nietzsche,
Proudhon, Kropotkin, Stirner, Meister Eckhardt, the radical mystics, and the
Romantic volk-philosophers, knew from
the start that the Soviet was doomed; he hoped only that it would last long
enough to be understood. Kurt
Eisner, the martyred founder of the Soviet, believed quite literally that poets
and poetry should form the basis of the revolution. Plans were launched to
devote a large piece of Bavaria to an experiment in anarcho-socialist economy
and community. Landauer drew up proposals for a Free School system and a
People's Theater. Support for the Soviet was more or less confined to the
poorest working-class and bohemian neighborhoods of Munich, and to groups like
the Wandervogel (the neo-Romantic youth movement), Jewish radicals (like
Buber), the Expressionists, and other marginals. Thus historians dismiss it as
the "Coffeehouse Republic" and belittle its significance in
comparison with Marxist and Spartacist participation in Germany's post-War
revolution(s). Outmaneuvered by the Communists and eventually murdered by soldiers
under the influence of the occult/fascist Thule Society, Landauer deserves to
be remembered as a saint. Yet even anarchists nowadays tend to misunderstand
and condemn him for "selling out" to a "socialist
government." If the Soviet had lasted even a year, we would weep at the
mention of its beauty--but before even the first flowers of that Spring had
wilted, the geist and the spirit
of poetry were crushed, and we have forgotten. Imagine what it must have been
to breathe the air of a city in which the Minister of Culture has just
predicted that schoolchildren will soon be memorizing the works of Walt
Whitman. Ah for a time machine... |