If action (‘doing’) is—as Hegel says—negativity, the question poses itself of knowing if the negativity of someone who has ‘nothing left to do’ disappears or persists in the state of ‘unemployed negativity’ [négativité sans emploi].
Georges Bataille, “Letter to X, Instructor of a Class on Hegel” (1937)
We easily reconstruct the image: “burst,” by blow or pressure, following which a slow, progressive deflation; fullness that empties; walls whose tension slackens… In the very image, an idea of duration: what doesn’t stop leaning, emptying itself. It’s the paradoxical infinity of weariness: the endless process of ending.
Roland Barthes, The Neutral : Lecture Course at the Collège de France (1977-1978)(New York: Columbia University Press, 2005), 16.
What wearies then is not a particular form of our life… the weariness concerns existence itself… in weariness existence is something like the reminder of a commitment to exist […and] the impossible refusal of this ultimate obligation. In weariness we want to escape existence itself, and not only one of its landscapes.
Emmanuel Levinas, Existence et Existents (1978) (The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 1978), 24–25.
- Throughout this text, we will be using the term négativité sans emploi in its original French as opposed to its common translation “unemployed negativity,” which holds the connotation of redeemability (ie. that the negativity in question could potentially be employed). ↩
- Georges Bataille, Guilty, trans. Stuart Kendall (New York: State University of New York Press, 2011), 111. ↩
- A reference to spoon theory, an influential framework of bodily capacity among people with chronic illness as well as disability advocates, developed by Christine Miserandino. ↩
- Maurice Blanchot, The Infinite Conversation (Minneapolis: University Of Minnesota Press, 1993), xiv. ↩
- Blanchot, The Infinite Conversation, xvii. ↩
- Anson Rabinbach, The Eclipse of the Utopias of Labour (Fordham Univ Press, 2018), 6. ↩
- Anson Rabinbach, The Human Motor : Energy, Fatigue, and the Rise of Modernity (New York: Basic Books, 1990), 60. ↩
- Rabinbach, The Human Motor, 4. ↩
- “The term poetry, applied to the least degraded and least intellectualised forms of the expression of a state of loss, can be considered synonymous with expenditure; it in fact signifies, in the most precise way, creation by means of loss.” See Georges Bataille, “The Notion of Expenditure,” in Visions of Excess: Selected Writings, 1927-1939, ed. Allan Stoekl (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2008), 120. See also Ilse Aichinger, Bad Words (Seagull Library of German, 2022). ↩
- The absence of race as an analytics of energy and fatigue is an important shortcoming of our thinking and would require its own separate, lengthy analysis. For now, let us share some preliminary unpolished thoughts that we hope to deepen in a near future. Firstmost, the utopian project of social energeticism born in the heart of European empire — with its dreams of an indefatigable white working class — was itself borne on the back of “indefatigable” Black slave labour. If fatigue could be scientifically dreamed up in order to (unsuccessfully) be destroyed, it is because this operation — the elimination of fatigue, or, rather, the preemption of its birth altogether — had already taken place in the colonies, at home and abroad. For the reproduction of the plantation simultaneously relied on both the ennervation of the slave and the disavowal of her somatopsychic reality. The slave could not be afforded weariness; theirs could only be a physiological economy of weathering and exhaustion. It is also worth mentioning that much of the conceptual labour attributed to energy in terms of collapsing the distinctions between the inorganic and organic body was already at work by the forces of antiblackness which ushered the transatlantic slave trade. Tracing the porousness of the human/inhuman divide to the laws of thermodynamics readily effaces racialisation’s role in creating intimacies between Blackness and inhuman matter—a process wherein Black flesh could be offered up for energetic extraction in much the same way the mineralised land—for which it was traded and which it served to mine—was. One must also examine the legacies of sugar; the consequences of industrialisation within the plantation (what some have termed second slavery); the deeply racist concept of energetic slaves abounding in the energetic humanities and its discussions of carbon footprints and much, much more. For an extremely preliminary overview of these matters, see Nicholas Fiori, “Plantation Energy: From Slave Labour to Machine Discipline,” American Quarterly 72, no. 3 (2020): 559–79, https://doi.org/10.1353/aq.2020.0035; Françoise Vergès, “On the Politics of Extraction, Exhaustion and Suffocation,” L’internationale, November 7, 2021, https://www.internationaleonline.org/research/politics_of_life_and_death/195_on_the_politics_of_extraction_exhaustion_and_suffocation/; Kathryn Yusoff, A Billion Black Anthropocenes or None (U of Minnesota Press, 2018). ↩
- Blanchot, The Infinite Conversation, xx. ↩
- M. Carrieu, De La Fatigue et de Son Influence Pathogénique (Paris, 1878), 3. ↩
- This is a generous description of the dominant paradigm of fatigue, which, despite framing fatigue as the depletion of energy, at the very least considers fatigue as the subject of energy’s depletion: the cause, not consequence, of energetic expenditure. ↩
- Bataille, “The Notion of Expenditure,” 123. ↩
- Blanchot, The Infinite Conversation, xix. ↩
- Blanchot, The Infinite Conversation, xx. ↩
- Bataille, “The Notion of Expenditure,” 119. ↩
- The Bataillean general economy is indeed a solar economy: “We are but an effect of the Sun… The Sun’s rays distinguish themselves by their unilateral character: it loses without counting, without counterpart. The solar economy is founded on this principle… The solar energy that we are is an energy that is spent.” See Georges Bataille, “L’Économie à La Mesure de L’univers,” in Oeuvres Complètes Volume VII (Gallimard, 1976) (translation my own). See also Oxana Timofeeva, Solar Politics (John Wiley & Sons, 2022). ↩
- Alain Milon, “La Dette Est Un Gain Non Quantifiable,” in Leçon d’Économie Générale : L’expérience-Limite Chez Bataille-Blanchot-Klossowski, ed. Alain Milon (Nanterre: Presses Universitaires De Paris Nanterre, 2019) (translation my own). ↩
- Bataille, “The Notion of Expenditure,” 123 (emphasis my own). ↩
- I borrow here the methodological movement traced by Alex Dubilet’s study of the self-emptying subject, which has greatly influenced this piece. See Alex Dubilet, The Self-Emptying Subject (Fordham Univ Press, 2018), 157. ↩
If action (‘doing’) is—as Hegel says—negativity, the question poses itself of knowing if the negativity of someone who has ‘nothing left to do’ disappears or persists in the state of ‘unemployed negativity’ [négativité sans emploi].
Georges Bataille, “Letter to X, Instructor of a Class on Hegel” (1937)
We easily reconstruct the image: “burst,” by blow or pressure, following which a slow, progressive deflation; fullness that empties; walls whose tension slackens… In the very image, an idea of duration: what doesn’t stop leaning, emptying itself. It’s the paradoxical infinity of weariness: the endless process of ending.
Roland Barthes, The Neutral : Lecture Course at the Collège de France (1977-1978)(New York: Columbia University Press, 2005), 16.
What wearies then is not a particular form of our life… the weariness concerns existence itself… in weariness existence is something like the reminder of a commitment to exist […and] the impossible refusal of this ultimate obligation. In weariness we want to escape existence itself, and not only one of its landscapes.
Emmanuel Levinas, Existence et Existents (1978) (The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 1978), 24–25.
- Throughout this text, we will be using the term négativité sans emploi in its original French as opposed to its common translation “unemployed negativity,” which holds the connotation of redeemability (ie. that the negativity in question could potentially be employed). ↩
- Georges Bataille, Guilty, trans. Stuart Kendall (New York: State University of New York Press, 2011), 111. ↩
- A reference to spoon theory, an influential framework of bodily capacity among people with chronic illness as well as disability advocates, developed by Christine Miserandino. ↩
- Maurice Blanchot, The Infinite Conversation (Minneapolis: University Of Minnesota Press, 1993), xiv. ↩
- Blanchot, The Infinite Conversation, xvii. ↩
- Anson Rabinbach, The Eclipse of the Utopias of Labour (Fordham Univ Press, 2018), 6. ↩
- Anson Rabinbach, The Human Motor : Energy, Fatigue, and the Rise of Modernity (New York: Basic Books, 1990), 60. ↩
- Rabinbach, The Human Motor, 4. ↩
- “The term poetry, applied to the least degraded and least intellectualised forms of the expression of a state of loss, can be considered synonymous with expenditure; it in fact signifies, in the most precise way, creation by means of loss.” See Georges Bataille, “The Notion of Expenditure,” in Visions of Excess: Selected Writings, 1927-1939, ed. Allan Stoekl (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2008), 120. See also Ilse Aichinger, Bad Words (Seagull Library of German, 2022). ↩
- The absence of race as an analytics of energy and fatigue is an important shortcoming of our thinking and would require its own separate, lengthy analysis. For now, let us share some preliminary unpolished thoughts that we hope to deepen in a near future. Firstmost, the utopian project of social energeticism born in the heart of European empire — with its dreams of an indefatigable white working class — was itself borne on the back of “indefatigable” Black slave labour. If fatigue could be scientifically dreamed up in order to (unsuccessfully) be destroyed, it is because this operation — the elimination of fatigue, or, rather, the preemption of its birth altogether — had already taken place in the colonies, at home and abroad. For the reproduction of the plantation simultaneously relied on both the ennervation of the slave and the disavowal of her somatopsychic reality. The slave could not be afforded weariness; theirs could only be a physiological economy of weathering and exhaustion. It is also worth mentioning that much of the conceptual labour attributed to energy in terms of collapsing the distinctions between the inorganic and organic body was already at work by the forces of antiblackness which ushered the transatlantic slave trade. Tracing the porousness of the human/inhuman divide to the laws of thermodynamics readily effaces racialisation’s role in creating intimacies between Blackness and inhuman matter—a process wherein Black flesh could be offered up for energetic extraction in much the same way the mineralised land—for which it was traded and which it served to mine—was. One must also examine the legacies of sugar; the consequences of industrialisation within the plantation (what some have termed second slavery); the deeply racist concept of energetic slaves abounding in the energetic humanities and its discussions of carbon footprints and much, much more. For an extremely preliminary overview of these matters, see Nicholas Fiori, “Plantation Energy: From Slave Labour to Machine Discipline,” American Quarterly 72, no. 3 (2020): 559–79, https://doi.org/10.1353/aq.2020.0035; Françoise Vergès, “On the Politics of Extraction, Exhaustion and Suffocation,” L’internationale, November 7, 2021, https://www.internationaleonline.org/research/politics_of_life_and_death/195_on_the_politics_of_extraction_exhaustion_and_suffocation/; Kathryn Yusoff, A Billion Black Anthropocenes or None (U of Minnesota Press, 2018). ↩
- Blanchot, The Infinite Conversation, xx. ↩
- M. Carrieu, De La Fatigue et de Son Influence Pathogénique (Paris, 1878), 3. ↩
- This is a generous description of the dominant paradigm of fatigue, which, despite framing fatigue as the depletion of energy, at the very least considers fatigue as the subject of energy’s depletion: the cause, not consequence, of energetic expenditure. ↩
- Bataille, “The Notion of Expenditure,” 123. ↩
- Blanchot, The Infinite Conversation, xix. ↩
- Blanchot, The Infinite Conversation, xx. ↩
- Bataille, “The Notion of Expenditure,” 119. ↩
- The Bataillean general economy is indeed a solar economy: “We are but an effect of the Sun… The Sun’s rays distinguish themselves by their unilateral character: it loses without counting, without counterpart. The solar economy is founded on this principle… The solar energy that we are is an energy that is spent.” See Georges Bataille, “L’Économie à La Mesure de L’univers,” in Oeuvres Complètes Volume VII (Gallimard, 1976) (translation my own). See also Oxana Timofeeva, Solar Politics (John Wiley & Sons, 2022). ↩
- Alain Milon, “La Dette Est Un Gain Non Quantifiable,” in Leçon d’Économie Générale : L’expérience-Limite Chez Bataille-Blanchot-Klossowski, ed. Alain Milon (Nanterre: Presses Universitaires De Paris Nanterre, 2019) (translation my own). ↩
- Bataille, “The Notion of Expenditure,” 123 (emphasis my own). ↩
- I borrow here the methodological movement traced by Alex Dubilet’s study of the self-emptying subject, which has greatly influenced this piece. See Alex Dubilet, The Self-Emptying Subject (Fordham Univ Press, 2018), 157. ↩