agonistic
and subject
to discursive procedures and technologies of power, rather than consti-
tuting an “essential antagonism.”
17
It is less, he explains, “a face-to-face
confrontation which paralyzes both sides than a permanent provoca-
tion.”
18
This implies that the immanence of resistance to power does
not reside in a subjectivity whose autonomy precedes its articulation by
the discursive terrain, but in an unmasterable excess produced by the
totalizing procedures of power that slips through the interstices of its
articulated binaries. This ambiguity and “complicated interplay”
19
of
power and resistance that cannot be accommodated by the pendulum of
the Hegelian dialectic is represented in the novel by the narrator’s abey-
ant differential position in the hierarchies of power and identity that
belies the binary orthodoxies of racial absolutism and identity politics
through which his visibility is established. The epiphany of the novel,
as we shall see, is the epiphany of
différance
that reveals racialized
identities in the irst two stages of subject formation as displacements
of subjectivity’s constitutive multiplicities whose suppression is articu-
lated in the affective experience of racial shame. Subject formation, as
Rancière argues, taking Foucault a step further, is not the formation of
“a one” that is a self, “but is the
relation
of a self to an other.”
20
For
Rancière, the process of subjectivization is the political, emancipatory
process of deconstruction, of “disidentiication or declassiication”
21
of
identities to which we are consigned by the modalities of power. Subject,
he writes, is
the name of anyone, the name of the outcast: those who do not
belong to the order of castes, indeed, those who are pleased to undo
this order (the class that dissolves classes, as Marx said). In this
way, a process of subjectivization is a process of disidentiication
Black and Ashamed
115
or declassiication. Let me rephrase this: a subject is an outsider or,
more, an
in-between
… between several names, statuses, and identi-
ties… Political subjectivization is the enactment of equality… It is a
crossing of identities… In sum, the logic of political subjectivization,
of emancipation, is a heterology, a logic of the other … it is never
the simple assertion of an identity; it is always, at the same time, the
denial of an identity given by an other, given by the ruling order of
policy.
22
Rancière’s emancipatory heterology of subject formation constitutes
resistance precisely to the extent that it is not simply a refusal of subjec-
tion that articulates political agency but a refusal of the binary orders of
identiications within which that agency is inscribed. To destabilize the
strategies of power and its rules of formation, “we could act as political
subjects in the interval or the gap between two identities, neither of which
we could assume.”
23
In this active slippage of identiicatory signiiers
that Rancière refers to as a “demonstration of equality,” the structural
binarism that determines for social visibility is deeply “intertwined with
the paratactic logic of a ‘we are
and
are not,’”
24
which, for Ellison, in
fact, constitutes the insuperable condition of our democratic existence,
“our oneness-in-manyness.”
25
The differential excess produced by the process of subjectivization
that legislates for an unassumable identiication and where “the life of
political
subjectivization” or resistance “is made out of the
difference
between the voice and the body, the interval between identities”
26
is revealed in Ellison’s novel as a prophetic intervention in the racial
imaginary of his time, and an exigent call for the transformation of
political structures that will allow for the emergence of new forms of
subjectivities and cultural enunciations from the threshold of social visi-
bility. Deconstruction of identity structures, the enactment of equality in
the rip currents of difference is, however, what renders the narrator truly
invisible in a regime of truth that reduces all social life to a skein Du
Bois claims deines our age: “the problem of the color-line.”
27
Ellison’s
nameless narrator is driven underground not because of his initial ap-
propriation of the racial hierarchies that constitute him as invisible, as “a
phantom in other people’s minds” (
IM
4), nor because of his subsequent
fetishization of black identity in essentialisms of racial difference, but i-
nally due to his rejection of both. At the same time, this invisibility, as we
shall see, opens up a heterotopic space for the narrator with unsuspected
emancipatory energies that invert the order of truth and detach it from
the restrictive regimes within which its effects are disseminated. The
hierarchies of power which regulate the forms within which we are able
to recognize ourselves as subjects are effectively undermined in Ellison’s
writing by an inscription of alterity that, as yet, has no political constitu-
ency and cannot be articulated within the oppositions that structure the
116
Zlatan Filipovic
terrain of social visibility in the novel. Ellison is thus looking beyond the
blockages of his present, anticipating alternate forms of enunciation that
have yet to be realized.
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