Pirate Utopias
By Hakim Bey
(excerpted from The Temporary Autonomous Zone)
...this time however I come as the victorious Dionysus, who
will turn the world into a holiday...Not that I have much time...
--Nietzsche (from his last "insane" letter to
Cosima Wagner)
THE SEA-ROVERS AND CORSAIRS of the 18th century created an
"information network" that spanned the globe: primitive and devoted
primarily to grim business, the net nevertheless functioned admirably.
Scattered throughout the net were islands, remote hideouts where ships could be
watered and provisioned, booty traded for luxuries and necessities. Some of these
islands supported "intentional communities," whole mini-societies
living consciously outside the law and determined to keep it up, even if only
for a short but merry life.
Some years ago I looked through a lot of secondary material
on piracy hoping to find a study of these enclaves--but it appeared as if no
historian has yet found them worthy of analysis. (William Burroughs has
mentioned the subject, as did the late British anarchist Larry Law--but no
systematic research has been carried out.) I retreated to primary sources and
constructed my own theory, some aspects of which will be discussed in this
essay. I called the settlements "Pirate Utopias."
Recently Bruce Sterling, one of the leading exponents of
Cyberpunk science fiction, published a near-future romance based on the
assumption that the decay of political systems will lead to a decentralized
proliferation of experiments in living: giant worker-owned corporations,
independent enclaves devoted to "data piracy," Green-Social-Democrat
enclaves, Zerowork enclaves, anarchist liberated zones, etc. The information
economy which supports this diversity is called the Net; the enclaves (and the
book's title) are Islands in the Net.
The medieval Assassins founded a “State” which
consisted of a network of remote mountain valleys and castles, separated by
thousands of miles, strategically invulnerable to invasion, connected by the
information flow of secret agents, at war with all governments, and devoted
only to knowledge. Modern technology, culminating in the spy satellite, makes
this kind of autonomy a romantic dream. No more pirate islands! In the future
the same technology-- freed from all political control--could make possible an
entire world of autonomous zones. But for now the concept remains precisely
science fiction--pure speculation.
Are we who live in the present doomed never to experience
autonomy, never to stand for one moment on a bit of land ruled only by freedom?
Are we reduced either to nostalgia for the past or nostalgia for the future?
Must we wait until the entire world is freed of political control before even
one of us can claim to know freedom? Logic and emotion unite to condemn such a
supposition. Reason demands that one cannot struggle for what one does not
know; and the heart revolts at a universe so cruel as to visit such injustices
on our generation alone of humankind.
To say that "I will not be free till all humans (or all
sentient creatures) are free" is simply to cave in to a kind of
nirvana-stupor, to abdicate our humanity, to define ourselves as losers.
I believe that by extrapolating from past and future stories
about "islands in the net" we may collect evidence to suggest that a
certain kind of "free enclave" is not only possible in our time but
also existent. All my research and speculation has crystallized around the
concept of the TEMPORARY AUTONOMOUS ZONE (hereafter abbreviated TAZ). Despite
its synthesizing force for my own thinking, however, I don't intend the TAZ to
be taken as more than an essay ("attempt"), a suggestion, almost a
poetic fancy. Despite the occasional Ranterish enthusiasm of my language I am
not trying to construct political dogma. In fact I have deliberately refrained
from defining the TAZ--I circle around the subject, firing off exploratory beams.
In the end the TAZ is almost self-explanatory. If the phrase became current it
would be understood without difficulty...understood in action.
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