Monday, March 25, 2019

Nietzsche, Heidegger, and the Extreme Right: from Interpretation to Politics




Despite their profound differences, it’s clear that a political turn to either Nietzsche or Heidegger amounts to a radical break with what has been called the Atlantic Republican tradition, and so a radical break with American politics itself. Years ago the right and left in America both agreed that we should have a democratic republic. The right were mostly conservatives, who favored leaning toward the republican side of the equation, the left were liberals who leaned toward the democratic side. Their debates were about how best to maintain our system, not about whether to radically transform it. Now there are Americans who are against democracy and who wish to revert to a more authoritarian or tribal political life. The philosophical ground of the radical right’s position here can be found in the anti-Enlightenment thinking of figures like Nietzsche and Heidegger, because Atlantic Republicanism is just the political face of Enlightenment philosophy. The Founding Fathers of the United States were themselves key participants in that movement, so much so that classical American political philosophy is, quite simply, a child of the Enlightenment.

We see the gravity of such a fundamental turn, such a fundamental break with what counts as the American tradition in political thought. The American culture wars have shifted as the polarization of political positions has become more extreme, and are waged no longer on the restricted territory defined by liberals and conservatives, nor within the irrelevant confines of the academy, but in the wide open space that separates Nazis and Anarchists, and on the streets of the nation. The Alt-Right’s political readings of Nietzsche and Heidegger are, among other things, a symptom of how extremely polarized our discourse has become. For example, Nietzsche was against the principle of “equality” that figures so strongly in Enlightenment political theory, and against the role played by Christianity in propagating and supporting that principle. It’s one thing for Americans to argue what’s meant by “equality;” it’s another thing if Americans simply reject equality as a value altogether.
 
So the question for our interpretation of Nietzsche’s politics is to understand how both the left and the right could appropriate his work so sincerely (a question that also applies to Hegel, though for a completely different reason). But the question for an interpretation of Heidegger’s politics is how the left could ever have taken him up at all, let alone absorbed his philosophy so completely. Think of Sartre, Derrida, Foucault etc., and of today’s Heideggerian Ecofeminists, for example. What the Heidegger affair of the 1990’s meant was that philosophy, especially French philosophy, would never be the same. The depth and truth of Heidegger’s Naziism was undeniable, and there was a mixture of confusion and horror, accompanied by a kind of scrambling back to a more Kantian approach to ethics. The heyday of Poststructuralism was over. The question for us is not to worry about the French philosophers here. The question is, if the Heidegger affair had revealed this horrifying truth of his politics, why has it been taken up by Americans? Why did it happen, and how is it done? The answer here lies not just in Hermeneutics, but in ideology critique. Neither Nietzsche nor Heidegger can be integrated into native American political thought. Neither supports ANYTHING LIKE a democratic republic. So what is the Alt-Right doing, exactly, with these imperfect icons of the leftist philosophical tradition?

We should be honest and admit that there always was a strain of American culture that was too racist to be compatible with true democracy or republicanism, too racist for the liberty, equality, fraternity of the French Revolution. There were always a few Americans who were attracted to Fascism. The interaction between American and European racism now, with the Alt-Right taking up Nietzsche and Heidegger, is just the latest phase of an established pattern. Why would any American find the anti-Enlightenment convictions of Heidegger, or the pre-Enlightenment politics of Nietzsche, appealing? The case forces us to learn from history: to learn that ideas matter, that Americans can and do depart radically (both ideologically and in practice) from the Atlantic republican tradition, and that extremism like this must be spotted early and dealt with before it builds momentum. “In 1928, Hitler remarked, approvingly, that white settlers in America had gunned down the millions of redskins to a few hundred thousand. When he spoke of Lebensraum, the German drive for ‘living space’ in Eastern Europe, he often had America in mind.”
 




Sunday, March 24, 2019

Nietzsche and the Alt-Right 1: the Conflict of Interpretations





The extreme right has picked up Nietzsche as an inspiration-again.  Richard Spencer, a leader of the Alt-Right movement in the United States, says he was awakened, “red pilled” by his study of the philosopher; “to ‘red-pill’ is the slang in the Alt-Right movement that refers to the moment when people see that all the ideals of liberal democracy--equality, liberty, pluralism, and peace--are delusional, and that the true reality of life is the racial and ethnic struggle for cultural dominance.”[1] In our last post, we mentioned the key political difference between Nietzsche and Heidegger, which is that Nietzsche was not a Nazi or any kind of anti-Semite, and Heidegger was. That means that while Heidegger can simply be appropriated by the very worst of the Alt-Right, Nietzsche may to be selectively appropriated, interpreted, and recovered according to the distortions of both his earliest publishers and of later readings. Or not.
 
To Spencer we can say that Nietzsche "red pills" everyone who reads him, whatever their political convictions. That effect is deliberate, rhetorical; Nietzsche writes in a way that gives the reader a sense of being directly, urgently, personally addressed by a brilliant friend who wants to awaken us from our dogmatic slumber. The question is, what's the right interpretation? How should we respond to the appropriation of Nietzsche by the Alt-Right?

Nietzsche was a provocateur. That was his intention, and he succeeded brilliantly at it. Much of his great success as a philosopher lies in that provocation. But the fact is that people take what politics they already had from these deliberately polemical, inconsistent, contradictory writings. He himself warned his readers about these risks, always inherent in language, always inherent in truth itself: “Truth is a mobile army of metaphors, metonyms, anthropomorphisms, in short a sum of human relations which have been subjected to poetic and rhetorical intensification, translation and decoration…”[2] We are faced with the need both to interpret a very difficult philosopher, a deliberately difficult philosopher, whose writings while provocative and even inspirational are famously recalcitrant to clear interpretaton, and to address the history of political readings and misreadings of his work. A hermeneutic task.


So it is that the extreme right must ignore the scholarship of Walter Kaufmann and others like him who showed that Nietzsche’s use by the Nazis required a distortion of his philosophy, one already underway during his sister’s editing and publication.  It’s as if Nietzsche had been rehabilitated and put to work by America’s leftist intellectuals, and must now be retaken by the extreme right. Of course, the fact is that either left or right can make use of any philosopher they wish, especially one whose political implications are as wide-ranging and ambiguous as those of Nietzsche. This is all a continuation of the culture wars of the 80s. And what's at stake here is how elements of Nietzsche's philosophy are deployed in the framing of the far-right narrative and program and what it means for politics; “…it would appear that ‘bad Nietzsche’ is back, and he looks a lot like he did in the early 20th century when his ideas were unjustly appropriated by the (original) Nazis. So now’s a good time to reengage with Nietzsche’s ideas and explain what the alt-right gets right and wrong about their favorite philosopher.”


[1]. "‘Red-pilled’ refers to a famous scene in the movie The Matrix, in which Keanu Reeves's character swallows a  red pill that allows him to see that he and all of his fellow humans have been plugged into a delusional dream, and that he must free them from their dream.” 
[2]. Friederich Nietzsche, “On Truth and Lying in an Extra-Moral Sense” (1873) https://archive.org/stream/NietzscheOnTruthAndLying/nietzsche%20on%20truth%20and%20lying_djvu.txt

Nietzsche and the Alt-Right 3: Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche and the Origins of Misreading

The Nazi appropriation of Nietzsche begins with Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche, the phi l osopher’s sister, who took contro l of her broth...