Book Read Free

The Omnibus Homo Sacer

Page 161

by Giorgio Agamben


  slave can also be the one to dream: “I know of a slave who dreamt that he mastur-

  THE USE OF BODIES

  1043

  bated his master, and he became the companion and attendant of his children,

  for in his hands he held his master’s penis, which is the symbol of his children”;

  the prediction can, however, also be unfavorable: “I know another who, by con-

  trast, dreamed of being masturbated by his master; he was tied to a pillar and

  received many lashes” (Artemidorus, 1.78).

  What Artemidorus’s oneirocritical acumen seems to suggest here is that not

  only does the use of the slave’s body include the use of his sexual parts, but also

  that, in the indetermination of the two bodies, the “serviceable” hand of the

  master is equivalent to the service of the slave. Hence the striking promiscuity

  that always defines relationships with servants, whom masters (or mistresses)

  have bathe them, clothe them, and comb their hair without this corresponding

  to any real necessity.

  However, precisely for this reason and in confirmation of the personal and

  non-mercantile character of the use of the slave’s body, the master who prosti-

  tutes a slave dishonors himself and his household.

  1.10. The slave’s activity has often been identified with that which moderns

  have called “labor.” As is well known, this is the more or less explicit thesis of

  Arendt: the victory of homo laborans in modernity and the primacy of labor over

  all other forms of human activity (producing, Herstellen, which corresponds to

  the Aristotelian poiesis and acting, Handeln, which corresponds to praxis) in actuality implies that the condition of the slave, that is to say, of the one who is

  entirely occupied with the reproduction of bodily life, has, with the end of the

  ancien régime, been extended to all human beings. That the modern worker is

  more comparable to the slave than to the creator of objects (with whom mo-

  dernity tends, according to Arendt, to confound the worker) or the political

  man is unquestionable, and already Cicero affirmed that for those who sell their

  labor, the compensation is “a pledge of their slavery” ( auctoramentum servitutis;

  Cicero 1, 1, 42, 150). However, one must not forget that the Greeks were ignorant

  of the concept of labor and, as we have seen, conceived the activity of the slave

  not as an ergon but as a “use of the body.”

  If in Greece there can be no general notion of labor comparable to our own,

  this is because, as Vernant has shown, productive activities are not conceived in

  relation to the unitary referent that the market is for us, but with respect to the

  use value of the object produced.

  By means of the market, all labors effectuated in a society in their totality are

  put in relation with one another, compared among themselves, and equal-

  ized. . . . This universal equalization of the products of labor on the market, in

  1044

  HOMO SACER IV, 2

  the same instant that it transforms diverse labors, completely diverse from the

  point of view of their use, into merchandise comparable from the point of view

  of their value, also transmutes all human labors, entirely diverse and particular,

  into one same general and abstract labor activity. By contrast, in the sphere

  of ancient technique and economy, labor appears only in its concrete aspect.

  Every task is defined as a function of the product that it proposes to fabricate:

  the cobbler with respect to the shoe, the potter with respect to the pot. Labor is

  not considered in the perspective of the producer, as an expression of one same

  human effort that creates a social value. For this reason, in classical Greece there

  does not exist a single great human function, called labor, which includes all

  trades, but rather a plurality of diverse trades, each of which defines a particular

  type of activity that produces its own work. (Vernant and Vidal-Naquet, p. 28)

  It is in this context that one must situate Aristotle’s reflection on poiesis in the above-cited passage from the Metaphysics (1050a 21–1050b 1): while the one who

  acts or uses without producing possesses energeia in his very action, the artisan

  who produces an object does not possess in himself the energeia of his activity,

  which instead resides outside him in the work. For this reason his activity, consti-

  tutively submitted to an external end, is presented as inferior to praxis. Vernant

  can thus rightly affirm that

  in a similar social and mental system, the human being “acts” when he uses things

  and not when he makes them. The ideal of the free and active human being is

  to be always and universally a “user” and never a producer. The true problem of

  action, at least insofar as it concerns the relationship of the human being with

  nature, is that of the “good use” of things and not of their transformation through

  labor. (Vernant and Vidal-Naquet, p. 33)

  In this perspective, the interpretation of the slave’s activity in terms of labor

  appears, even aside from the anachronism, extremely problematic. Insofar as it

  seems to dissolve into an unproductive use of the body, it seems almost to consti-

  tute the other face of the good use of things on the part of the free person. That

  is to say, it is possible that the “use of the body” and the absence of work of the

  slave are something more or, at any rate, different from a labor activity and that

  they instead preserve the memory or evoke the paradigm of a human activity

  that is reducible neither to labor, nor to production, nor to praxis.

  1.11. Hannah Arendt has recalled the difference that separates the ancient

  concept of slavery from that of the moderns: while for the latter the slave is a

  means of procuring labor-power at a good price with the goal of profits, for the

  ancient it was a matter of eliminating labor from the properly human life, which

  THE USE OF BODIES

  1045

  was incompatible with it and which slaves, by taking it upon themselves, ren-

  dered possible. “Since human beings are subjected to the necessities of life, they

  can be free only if they subject others, forcefully constraining them to endure

  those necessities for them” (Arendt, p. 78).

  It is necessary to add, however, that the special status of slaves—at once

  excluded from and included in humanity, as those not properly human beings

  who make it possible for others to be human—has as its consequence a can-

  cellation and confounding of the limits that separate physis from nomos. Both artificial instrument and human being, the slave properly belongs neither to

  the sphere of nature nor to that of convention, neither to the sphere of justice

  nor to that of violence. Hence the apparent ambiguity of Aristotle’s theory of

  slavery, which, like ancient philosophy in general, seems constrained to justify

  what it can only condemn and to condemn that of which it cannot deny the

  necessity. The fact is that the slave, although excluded from political life, has

  an entirely special relation with it. The slave in fact represents a not properly

  human life that renders possible for others the bios politikos, that is to say, the truly human life. And if the human being is defined for the Greeks through a

  dialectic between physis and nomos, zo�
� and bios, then the slave, like bare life, stands at the threshold that separates and joins them.

  א The anthropology that we have inherited from classical philosophy is modeled on

  the free man. Aristotle developed his idea of the human being starting from the paradigm

  of the free man, even if this latter implies the slave as his condition of possibility. One can imagine that he could have developed an entirely other anthropology if he had taken

  account of the slave (whose “humanity” he never intended to negate). This means that, in

  Western culture, the slave is something like the repressed. The reemergence of the figure

  of the slave in the modern worker thus appears, according to the Freudian scheme, as a

  return of the repressed in a pathological form.

  1.12. How are we to understand the peculiar sphere of human acting that Ar-

  istotle calls “use of the body”? What does “using” mean here? Is it really a matter,

  as Aristotle seems to suggest, possibly through distinguishing it from production,

  of a sort of praxis (the slave is a “practical instrument”)?

  In the Nicomachean Ethics, Aristotle had distinguished poiesis and praxis on the basis of the presence or absence of an external end ( poiesis is defined by an

  external telos that is the object produced, while in praxis “acting well [ eupraxia]

  is in itself the end”; 1140b 6). Aristotle unreservedly affirms many times that the

  use of the body does not belong to the productive sphere of poiesis; nor does it

  seem possible to simply inscribe it in the ambit of praxis. The slave is indeed

  assimilated to an instrument and defined as an “instrument for life [ zoè]” and

  1046

  HOMO SACER IV, 2

  “assistant for praxis”: but precisely for this reason, it is impossible to say of his

  actions that, as happens in praxis, acting well is in itself the end.

  This is so true that Aristotle explicitly limits the possibility of applying to

  the action of the slave the concept of virtue ( aretè) that defines the acting of the free man: insofar as the slave is useful for the necessities of life, “it is clear that

  he needs some small virtue, such as will prevent him from abandoning his work

  through cowardice or lack of self-control” ( Politics 1260a 35–36). There is not an aretè of the slave’s use of the body, just as (according to the Magna Moralia, 1185a 26–35) there cannot be an aretè of nutritive life, which is for this reason excluded from happiness.

  And just as it seems to escape the opposition between physis and nomos, oikos and polis, neither is the activity of the slave classifiable according to the dichotomies poiesis/ praxis, acting well/acting badly that would seem, according to Aristotle, to define human operations.

  א In the above-cited passage from the Magna Moralia (1185a 26–35), Aristotle asks if a virtue of nutritive life is possible (that is to say, that part of human life that human beings have in common with plants and that, beginning with late-ancient commentators,

  will be defined as “vegetative”): “What happens if we ask if there is a virtue for that part of the soul? For if it does, it is clear that there will be here also a being-at-work [ energeia]

  and happiness is the being-at-work of a perfect virtue. Now whether there is or is not a

  virtue of this part is another question; but, if there is, it has no being-at-work.”

  It is interesting to reflect on the analogy between a human activity deprived of ergon and virtue, which that of the slave is, and vegetative life, as human life excluded from

  virtue. And just as Aristotle seems to suggest for this latter the possibility of a virtue without being-at-work (“if it even exists, there is no being-at-work of it”), in the same way

  one could think for the body of the slave an aretè that knows neither ergon nor energeia and nevertheless is always in use. Perhaps one of the limits of Western ethics has been

  precisely the incapacity to think an aretè of life in all its aspects.

  The reason why Aristotle cannot admit an energeia and a virtue in an act of vege-

  tative life is that it is, according to him, deprived of hormè, of impulse or conatus. “For those things that have no hormè,” continues the cited passage, “will not have any energeia either; and there does not seem to be any impulse in this part, but it seems to be on par

  with fire. For that also will consume whatever you throw in it, but if you do not throw

  anything in, it has no impulse to get it. So it is also with this part of the soul, for if you give it food, it nourishes, but if you fail to throw in food, it has no impulse to nourish.

  There is no being-at-work of that which has no impulse. So that this part in no way

  contributes to happiness.”

  By all indications, it is the will to exclude nutritive life from ethics (to say that something does not contribute to happiness means, for a Greek, to exclude it from ethics)

  that leads Aristotle to deny to it anything like a conatus. An ethics that does not want

  THE USE OF BODIES

  1047

  to exclude a part of life will have to be in a position not only to define a conatus and an aretè of life as such but also to rethink from the very beginning the very concepts of

  “impulse” and “virtue.”

  1.13. Let us attempt to fix in a series of theses the characteristics of the activity

  that Aristotle defines as “use of the body.”

  1. It is a matter of an unproductive activity ( argos, “inoperative,” “without

  work” in the terminology of the Nicomachean Ethics), comparable to the

  use of a bed or a garment.

  2. The use of the body defines a zone of indifference between one’s own

  body and the body of another. The master, in using the body of the slave,

  uses his own body, and the slave, in using his own body, is used by the

  master.

  3. The body of the slave is situated in a zone of indifference between the

  artificial instrument and the living body (it is an empsychon organon, an

  animate organ) and, therefore, between physis and nomos.

  4. The use of the body is, in Aristotelian terms, neither poiesis nor praxis, neither a production nor a praxis, but neither is it assimilable to the labor

  of moderns.

  5. The slave, who is defined by means of this “use of the body,” is the human

  being without work who renders possible the realization of the work

  of the human being, that living being who, though being human, is

  excluded—and through this exclusion, included—in humanity, so that

  human beings can have a human life, which is to say a political life.

  Yet precisely insofar as the use of the body is situated at the undecidable thresh-

  old between zoè and bios, between the household and the city, between physis and nomos, it is possible that the slave represents the capture within law of a

  figure of human acting that still remains for us to recognize.

  א From Aristotle on, the tradition of Western philosophy has always put at the

  foundation of the political the concept of action. Still in Hannah Arendt, the public

  sphere coincides with that of acting, and the decadence of the political is shown by the

  progressive substitution, in the course of the modern era, of making for acting, of homo faber and, later, of homo laborans for the political actor.

  The term actio, however, from which the word “action” derives and which, beginning with the Stoics, translates the Greek praxis, originally belongs to the juridical and religious sphere and not to the political. Actio designates in Rome first of all a trial. The Justinian Institutes thus begin by dividing the sphere of law into three great categories: the personae

/>   1048

  HOMO SACER IV, 2

  (personal laws), the res (property law), and the actiones (trial law). Actionem constituere therefore means “to start proceedings,” just as agere litem or causam means “to conduct a trial.” On the other hand, the verb ago originally means “to celebrate a sacrifice,” and, according to some, it is for this reason that in the most ancient sacramentaries the mass

  is defined as actio and the Eucharist as actio sacrificii (Casel, p. 39; Baumstark, pp. 38–39).

  It is a term that comes from the juridico-religious sphere that has furnished to the

  political its fundamental concept. One of the hypotheses of the current study is, by calling into question the centrality of action and making for the political, that of attempting to think use as a fundamental political category.

  2

  Chresis

  2.1. In March 1950, Georges Redard discussed before the École pratique

  de hautes études a mémoire on the meaning of the Greek words chre, chresthai. The committee was presided over by Émile Benveniste, who was also

  the supervisor for this research. The mémoire, which the subtitle defines as “a

  study of semantics,” was conceived as a chapter of a fuller study on mantic termi-

  nology (the words in question, which we normally refer to the sphere of use, be-

  long originally in Greek, according to Redard, to the family of “oracular words”).

  What is most surprising when one first examines the ample lexical material

  collected by Redard is that the verb chresthai does not seem to have a proper

  meaning but acquires ever different meanings according to the context. Re-

  dard thus lists twenty-three meanings of the term, from “to consult an oracle”

  to “have sexual relations,” from “to speak” to “be unhappy,” from “to punch

  someone” to “feel nostalgia.” The common strategy in our dictionaries, which

  consists in distinguishing the “different” meanings of a term, in order then to

  defer to the etymology the attempt to lead them back to a unity, here shows its

  insufficiency. The fact is that the verb in question seems to draw its meaning

  from that of the term that accompanies it, which is not normally, as we mod-

  erns would expect, in the accusative but in the dative or, at times, the genitive.

 

‹ Prev