The Palestinian Question
the couple Symptom / Fetish
Islamo-Fascism, Christo-Fascism, Zionism
mieux vaut un désastre qu’un désêtre
Slavoj Žižek
Islamo-Fascism, Christo-Fascism, Zionism
mieux vaut un désastre qu’un désêtre
Slavoj Žižek
http://www.lacan.com/essays/?page_id=261
[…]
What
phenomena like Taliban demonstrate is that Walter Benjamin’s old thesis “every
rise of Fascism bears witness to a failed revolution” not only still holds
today, but is perhaps more pertinent than ever. Liberals like to point out
similarities between Left and Right “extremisms”: Hitler’s terror and camps
imitated Bolshevik terror, the Leninist party is today alive in al Qaida – yes,
but what does all this mean? It can also be read as an indication of how
Fascism literally replaces (takes the place of) the Leftist revolution: its
rise is the Left’s failure, but simultaneously a proof that there was a
revolutionary potential, dissatisfaction, which the Left was not able to
mobilize. And does the same not hold for today’s so-called (by some people)
“Islamo-Fascism”? Is the rise of radical Islamism not exactly correlative to
the disappearance of the secular Left in Muslim countries? Today, when
Afghanistan is portrayed as the utmost Islamic fundamentalist country, who
still remembers that, 30 years ago, it was a country with strong secular
tradition, up to a powerful Communist party which took power there
independently of the Soviet Union? Where did this secular tradition disappear?
In Europe, exactly the same goes for Bosnia: back in the 1970s and 1980s, Bosnia
and Herzegovina was (multi)culturally the most interesting and alive of all
Yugoslav republics, with an internationally-recognized cinema school and a
unique style of rock music; in today’s Bosnia, there are effectively strong
fundamentalist forces (like the Muslim fundamentalist crowd which brutally
attacked the gay parade in Sarajevo in September 2008). The main reason of this
regression is the desperate situation of Muslim Bosnians in the 1992-1995 war,
when they were basically abandoned by the Western powers to the Serb guns.
(And, as Thomas Frank has shown, the same goes for Kansas, the US homegrown
version of Afghanistan: the very state which was till the 1970s the bedrock of
radical Leftist populism, is today the bedrock of Christian fundamentalism [6] – does
this not confirm again Benjamin’s thesis that every Fascism is an index of a
failed revolution?)
[…]
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