Interregnum
Sunday 28 March 2010
by: Zygmunt Bauman, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

(Image: Lance Page / t r u t h o u t; Adapted: woodleywonderworks, Pink Sherbet Photography)
Editor's Introduction:
Zygmunt Bauman’s upcoming book, "44 Letters From the Liquid Modern World" (forthcoming: Polity), furthers his project of describing a new form of modernity that is challenging individuals and society. He describes a "liquid" modernity: a state of constantly changing circumstances and shifting priorities that make it difficult for individuals to have the time or frames of reference to organize their lives under conditions of extreme ambiguity. Today, Truthout will begin sharing excerpts from Bauman’s forthcoming "44 Letters From the Liquid Modern World" with Letter #30 from the volume, "Interregnum."
-Victoria Harper
Sometime in the late 1920s or early 1930s Antonio Gramsci recorded in one of the many notebooks he filled during his long incarceration in the prison in Turi di Bari: 'The crisis consists precisely in the fact that the old is dying and the new cannot be born; in this interregnum a great variety of morbid symptoms appear.'[1]
Also See: Zygmunt Bauman | On Languages of Power and Powerlessness
The term 'interregnum' was originally used to denote a time gap separating the death of one royal sovereign from the enthronement of a successor, those intervals being the main occasions on which past generations experienced (and customarily expected) a rupture in the otherwise dull, monotonous continuity of government, law and social order. Ancient Roman law put an official stamp on this understanding of the term (and its referent) by accompanying interregnum with the proclamation of justitium, that is (as Giorgio Agamben reminded us in his 2003 study Lo stato di eccezione) a transition period during which the laws that were binding under the deceased emperor are suspended (admittedly temporarily), presumably in anticipation that new and different laws would be proclaimed by the new sovereign. Gramsci infused the concept of 'interregnum' with a new meaning, however, embracing a wider section of the socio-political-legal order while simultaneously reaching deeper into the socio-cultural realities underlying it. Or rather (taking a leaf from Lenin's memorable definition of a 'revolutionary situation' as a condition in which the rulers no longer can rule in their old ways, while the ruled no longer wish to be so ruled), Gramsci detached the idea of 'interregnum' from its time-hallowed association with an interlude in a routine transmission of hereditary or elected power. He attached it instead to extraordinary situations: to times when the extant legal frame of social order loses its grip and can no longer keep burgeoning social life on track, and a new frame, made to the measure of the newly emerged conditions responsible for making the old frame useless, is still at the design stage, has not yet been fully assembled, or has not been made strong enough to be enforced and settled in place.
It can be said, following a recent suggestion by Keith Tester,[2] that the present-day condition of the planet bears many a mark of another interregnum. Indeed, just as Gramsci postulated, 'the old is dying'. The old order, founded on the close association, intertwining or blending (indeed a virtual unity) of territory, state and nation, and on power wedded seemingly forever to the politics of the territorial nation-state as its sole operating agency, -- the order recently seen and deployed as the principle of the planetary distribution of sovereignty and its imperturbable foundation, -- is now dying. Sovereignty is no longer glued to any of the elements of the territory/state/nation triad, let alone to a coordination and union between them; at the most, it is tied to them loosely and in part, with those parts much reduced in size, content and importance. Sovereignty is nowhere complete; it is also, openly or surreptitiously, contested and eroded everywhere, facing ever new pretenders and competitors. The allegedly unbreakable marriage of power and politics (once firmly settled together in the government buildings of nation-states) is, on the other hand, coming to an end in separation, with the likely prospect of divorce.
Sovereignty nowadays is, so to speak, underdefined and contentious, porous and poorly defensible, unanchored and free-floating. The criteria for its allocation tend to be hotly contested, while the customary sequence of the principle of the allocation of sovereignty and its application is very often reversed (that is, that principle tends to be retrospectively articulated in the aftermath of an allocating decision, or deduced from an already accomplished state of affairs). Nation-states find themselves sharing the conflict-ridden, quarrelsome and aggressive company of actual, aspiring or pretending, but always pugnaciously competitive, quasi-sovereign subjects, -- entities successfully evading the application of the hitherto binding principle of cuius regio, eius potestas, lex et religio (he who rules holds the power, makes the law and chooses the religion), and all too often explicitly ignoring or stealthily sapping and impairing its intended objects. The ever-rising number of competitors for sovereignty have already outgrown, if not singly then surely in combinations of several, the holding and constraining power of an average nation-state (according to John Gray, multinational financial, industrial and trade companies now account 'for about a third of world output and two-thirds of world trade').[3] Sovereignty, -- that right to proclaim the laws as well as to suspend them and to make exceptions to their application at will, and the power to render these decisions binding and effective, -- is, for any given territory and any given aspect of life, fragmented, dissipated and scattered between a multiplicity of centres. For that reason, it is eminently questionable and open to contest. Multinationals can easily play one agency against another, thereby avoiding their involvement or interference, and escaping the supervision of any of them. No decision-making agency is able to plead full (that is unconstrained, indivisible, unshared) sovereignty, let alone claim it credibly and effectively.
The planet as a whole seems indeed to be in a state of interregnum these days. Extant political agencies bequeathed by the times before globalization are blatantly inadequate to cope with the new realities of planetary interdependency, while political tools potent enough to match the steadily rising capacities of powerful, though manifestly and self-admittedly non-political, forces are prominent mostly by their absence. Forces systematically escaping the control of established political institutions and recognizable as fully and truly global (such as capital and finances, commodity markets, information, criminal mafias, drug traffic, terrorism and the arms trade) are all of a kind: however much they may vary in other respects, they all stoutly, cunningly and astutely, -- encountering no effective (let alone intractable, impermeable or unpassable) obstacles, -- ignore or openly violate territorially enforced constraints, closely watched interstate borders and local (state-endorsed) statute books.
Where can new, universally (and that, for the first time in history, has to mean globally) respected and obeyed principles of human cohabitation come from, thereby marking the end of the 'interregnum'? Where can one look for likely agents to design them and put them into operation? In all probability, these quandaries constitute between them the greatest of the many challenges the current century will need to confront point-blank, dedicating most of its creative energy and pragmatic abilities to the search for an adequate response. Indeed, this is, one might say, a 'metachallenge', because, without confronting it, no other challenges, large or small, can conceivably be tackled. Whichever one of the countless dangers, risks and crises we consider, whether they are impending or already causing us trouble, the search for a solution invariably veers towards a truth we can ignore only at our, -- joint, shared, indivisible, -- peril: the truth that to global problems there can only be‚ -- if they exist at all, -- global solutions.
NOTES:
[1]. In Quaderni del carcere; here quoted after Antonio Gramsci, Selections from the Prison Notebooks, ed. and trans. Quintin Hoare and Geoffrey Nowell-Smith (Lawrence and Wishart, 1971), p. 276.
[2]. See Keith Tester, 'Pleasure, reality, the novel and pathology', Journal of Anthropological Psychology, no. 21 (2009), pp. 23–6.
[3]. Gray, Gray's Anatomy, p. 231.

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Comments
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This "eroding" of
Sun, 03/28/2010 - 09:25 — Jonathon (not verified)This "eroding" of soveriegnty of nation-states described by Mr. Bauman is nothing new. It existed in Gramsci's day as well. Lenin described it well in hs book Imperialism. And to the extent that it ever existed it was mostly illusion. Marx explained a century and a half ago that it was always the ruling class that held power and that that power always superseded national borders, even if the class chose to organize itself within them. The interregnum which Gramsci was referring to is the same we face today. The decline of the bourgeoisie, with the proletariat as yet unable or unwilling to seize the reins.
Bauman might have looked to
Sun, 03/28/2010 - 13:07 — Richard Cummings (not verified)Bauman might have looked to a poem by Matthew Arnold that stated this concept first: "Wandering between two worlds, one dead, the other powerless to be born." See my essay on Evergreen Review, "The Dead and the Powerless."
http://www.evergreenreview.com/118/22.html
Fine print from previous
Sun, 03/28/2010 - 13:17 — Jade Queen (not verified)Fine print from previous regimes tends to stay on the books in the U.S., sometimes even furtively hidden by the cunning who wish to use it to empower and enrich favorite groups and individuals, and to exclude and punish the inconvenient. This can encourage some to avoid contact with government because from their observation government only wants to take and punish and is uninterested in back-and-forth interaction. On the other hand, with enough individuals, a planned government, top-down meeting can go out of control. The most memorable example of this I can think of was a meeting in Los Angeles where Law Enforcement Against Prohibition and others met with one of Clinton's drug czars who seemed to be unaware of the source of much of the illegal drug supply on LA streets.
Ah, European scholarship,
Sun, 03/28/2010 - 13:29 — drosera (not verified)Ah, European scholarship, expressed as usual in dense prose (one of Bauman's sentences is 78 words long with three sets of parentheses included)... Who exactly is expected to read this stuff? Academic style is meant to display one's erudition to the world, to place the writer within a select group of intellectuals, not to communicate ideas to a broad public. I do not have patience for it. There are better things to do on a Sunday afternoon.
Divorced of its grammatical
Sun, 03/28/2010 - 14:37 — despicablemusic (not verified)Divorced of its grammatical complexity, I expect this kind of thinking from Utne Reader.
This chaotic interregnum
Sun, 03/28/2010 - 14:40 — Peter Edler (not verified)This chaotic interregnum will last until we have gone beyond the current terrestrial religions to a fresh view of spirituality that strives to include our galaxy and the cosmos.The way things are going on our planet this may happen sooner than may seem likely today. Peter Edler, Stockholm
Look, what this essay is
Sun, 03/28/2010 - 15:03 — Liced-Christ (not verified)Look, what this essay is pointing to is as much an organic as a political/cultural/governmental reality. Or you can apply the Hegelian theory of evolution if you like, which also may be rendered in organic terms. The old dies and the new comes to be. There is an interim in which nothing much happens to the visible eyes. But deep in the collective conscious lava boils and bubbles, ready to burst and change the outer landscape of human-structured-existence. Humans are always surrendered, a priori, to the movement of evolutionary forces which even dictate the objects of their choices.
Long before Arnold Toynbee,
Sun, 03/28/2010 - 15:27 — Leo Ray Ingle (not verified)Long before Arnold Toynbee, historians and analysts have been trying to fit particular historical facts into Grand Schema, to suit their individual psychological need for order and advance academic fortunes. The motive of the change-phobic, like Zygmunt Bauman, is to identify homeostatic stable states, from which Interregnum Disorder is a transient phenomenon.
Bless you, Zygmunt, but it just isn't so.
Even in the most stable of stable states, like the European Middle Ages, there was plenty going on.
Cultural and social change is unpredictable and messy.
Professor Bauman has more in common with the sign-carriers "Armageddon is Near" than he realizes.
This article is nothing more
Sun, 03/28/2010 - 16:49 — Anonymous (not verified)This article is nothing more then a justification for the blatant disregard and abuse of power by the wealthy. I as a citizen of the United States did not relinquish my belief in the core principals as stated in the United States Constitution and the Bill of Rights...as inconveniant as these principals may be for the wealthy in their never ending appetite for more wealth.
The "educated" should be careful when spouting their theories . This article is ethically neutral and promotes a nebulous conclusion ignoring the majority of human beings and how we feel.
Please don't speak for me Mr. Bauman. Your predictions are sterile and dead.,
Dear People... get out of
Sun, 03/28/2010 - 18:59 — Nancy Jakeman (not verified)Dear People... get out of your heads and into your hearts. Therein lie the changes and the stabilisation in a new dimension that will delight you.
Crap! I've got no trouble
Sun, 03/28/2010 - 22:00 — victor (not verified)Crap!
I've got no trouble recognizing evil.
Bauman is a flunkey for the globalist exploiter class.
I seem to recall books from
Mon, 03/29/2010 - 02:15 — rbe1 (not verified)I seem to recall books from Alvin Toffler on this subject.
Bauman's conclusion is a
Mon, 03/29/2010 - 16:13 — Kalosar (not verified)Bauman's conclusion is a teaser. Does he--or does he not--somewhere propose or point to the "global solutions" without which nothing can be done about anything?
I have the uneasy sensation that we are expected to consume several thousand pages of murky oeuvre that will end with us noticeably closer to death and none the wiser. Perhaps Bauman himself will pass on without attempting the synthesis to which he may be pointing. Shades of Mr. Casaubon!
In the American political system, at least, control always winds up in the hands of the ruling classes. These ruling classes have no fundamental loyalty to the people or even the constitution of the United States except to the extent that these serve their interests.
If this is an "interregnum" it is one that has existed for a very long time. Nothing about it has changed fundamentally in recent years. Nor is it obvious that a global attack on the system can't begin with local initiatives.
Why do we need Bauman to add another layer of possibly unresolved abstraction to something we can see clearly enough for ourselves?
Without theory, common sense is the helpless prey of ideology. But there is no end of theorists and theories. We should not over-interpret the world when the task is to change it.
Worthwhile reading, thanks
Mon, 03/29/2010 - 16:42 — Maggie (not verified)Worthwhile reading, thanks Truthout.
Reading the work of
Wed, 03/31/2010 - 21:33 — OrwellWasAnOptimist (not verified)Reading the work of intellectuals requires effort, people, it is not like watching TV. Often they have developed a terminology which is difficult to grasp at first, but which rewards the persistent reader with fresh insights. To criticize Bauman because he uses big or unfamiliar words just shows the intellectual laziness of the complainer.
This is like all the nuclear
Mon, 04/12/2010 - 01:28 — Anonymous (not verified)This is like all the nuclear non-proliferation problems: the US will NEVER disarm. Ever.
The ONLY way to stop the nuclear arms race is for the US to UNILATERALLY disarm.
But, the US will never disarm.
So it goes with multinationals: Multinational corporations own —OWN— and thus control the government(s) of any and every nation on Earth. Multinational corporations ARE the economy. Multination corporations ARE globalization.
Globalization is not any some-such 'state of affairs' —it is THE visage, THE incarnation, of multinational corporations. It is THEY who rule the world.
That is why there IS NO SOVEREIGNTY. None. The notion of sovereignty is utterly absurd.
However: Control the multinational activity of multinational corporations *rigidly,* mercilessly, and sovereignty will again be real. Multinationals are like cancer: they obey NO ONE. They are powers unto themselves.
With no oversight, I might add. No transparency.
And which act with *impunity.*
End the multinational capability of any and all multinationals globally, and you have made the first real step toward FREEDOM, and liberty.
This is NOT about profit. Anyone can, and should be able to, make a profit. But not as a multinational corporation. Corporations MUST be chartered inside national boundaries, and must NEVER be chartered beyond a 5 or 10 year leasehold. Charters must *always* be revisited, and must always be renewed.
Curtail the multinational corporation, and humanity regains its dignity. War will cease!
Refuse to do this, and humanity DIES.
It. is. as. simple. as. that.