Chantal,
                                    what were your formative political 
experiences, and how did you first come to start to think about social 
and political theory?
Mouffe:
 Well,
                                    my formative political experiences 
were as a student in the 1960's, and it was very much the time of the 
imperialist struggle.
                                    I studied both in the University of 
Fluvain and in Paris; it was the time of the Algerian War in Paris. It 
was the time of
                                    the Cuban Revolution; it was the 
time of imperialist struggle. That's what really was important for me 
and I was very involved
                                    in that. And in fact, that's the 
reason why, at the end of the sixties, I went to Colombia, in Latin 
America, because all
                                    my generation, we went away to the 
so-called Third World - some people went to Algeria, some people took 
Africa, and I went
                                    to Latin America. Intellectually, I 
should say, that the main influence at that time was that I was a 
student of Althusser.
                                    And that, obviously, there was a 
very important link between my political commitment and my intellectual 
interest at that
                                    moment.
Was
 feminism
                                    important for you at that time? I 
know that later, you've written quite widely on feminist theory.
Mouffe:
 Well,
                                    feminism did not exist, really, at 
that time, because feminism, as you know, was something that was a 
consequence of the student
                                    movement at the end of the sixties. 
But, in the beginning of the sixties, in fact, there was no feminist 
movement. Obviously,
                                    I know that there was a very 
important feminist movement at the beginning of the century. But I 
became a feminist later. I
                                    first went through socialism, 
Marxism, and at the beginning of the seventies, that's when I began to 
know about feminism because
                                    that's the moment when feminism 
began to be organized, really.
Ernesto,
                                    what were your first political experiences?
Laclau:
 Well,
                                    my first political experiences were 
in Argentina. In fact, I only went to Europe in 1969. So, my first 
approach to Marxism,
                                    to socialism, took place both in the
 student movements and in the political struggles of the 1960's in 
Argentina. At that
                                    moment, these were the years 
immediately after the Cuban Revolution, when there was a radicalization 
of the student movement
                                    all over Latin America, and I was 
very active in it. I was a student representative to the Central Council
 of the University
                                    of Buenos Aires, president of the 
Center of the Student Union of Philosophy. And later on, I joined 
various left-wing movements
                                    in Argentina. Especially, I was part
 of the leadership of the Socialist Party of the National Left which was
 very active in
                                    Argentina in the 1960's. In terms of
 intellectual influences, I must say that I was never a dogmatic 
Marxist. I always tried
                                    to, even in those early days, to mix
 Marxism with something else. And a major influence at some point became
 Gramsci and Althusser,
                                    who, each of them in a different 
way, tried to recast Marxism in terms which approached more, the central
 issues of
contemporary
                                    politics.
One
 of
                                    the themes of your early work that's
 been quite influential, perhaps, primarily in Latin America, but also 
more widely, is
                                    your analysis of populism. How does 
that entail a revision of Marxist theory of the time?
Laclau:
 Well,
                                    let me say in the first place, that 
my interest in populism arose out of the experience of the Peronist 
movement in Argentina.
                                    The 1960's have been a period in 
Argentina of rapid radicalization and disintegration of the state 
apparatuses controlled
                                    by an oligarchy which had run the 
country since 1955. Now, it was perfectly clear, in that context, that 
when more and more
                                    popular demands coalesce around 
certain political poles, that this process of mass mobilization and mass
 ideological formation
                                    could not be conceived simply in 
class terms. So, the question of what we call the popular democratic, or
 national popular
                                    interpolation, became central in my 
preoccupation. Now, in terms of what you were asking me, about in what 
way this put into
                                    question some of the categories of 
Marxism, I would say that it did so in the sense that popular identities
 were never conceived
                                    as being organized around a class 
core, but on the contrary, were widely open. They could move in 
different ideological directions,
                                    and they could give a place to 
movements whose ideological characteristics were not determined from the
 beginning. So, it
                                    put into question in that sense, 
some of the tenets of classical Marxism.
So,
 both
                                    of you have actually mentioned the 
influence of Louis Althusser, the French structuralist-Marxist, and 
Antonio Gramsci, the
                                    founder of the thinking about 
hegemony in contemporary society as a reformation of common sense. These
 are really quite distinct
                                    influences, at least it seems to me 
that they are quite distinct currents of Marxist theory. And they seem 
to imply a very
                                    different attitude towards liberal 
democracy. Would you agree that an Althusserian position tends to regard
 liberal democracy
                                    in not a very positive light, whereas a Gramscian line of thought would, perhaps, see Marxism or socialism as more in continuity,
                                    or as an extension of liberal democracy? How did you work with these two influences?
Mouffe:
 Well,
                                    I must say, that the influences were
 not, for me at least, at the same time. I became a Gramscian when I 
ceased to be an Althusserian.
                                    And, in fact, Gramsci was for me, 
away to find a different approach, because I became very dissatisfied 
with the Althusserian
                                    kind of dogmatism which, I say of 
people that had been influenced by Althusser at that time, were putting 
into practice. And
                                    I must say, that the most important 
influence there was when I was in Colombia. I began to realize there, 
that all those categories
                                    that I had learned from Althusser, 
did not really quite fit with the Colombian situation. And there I began
 to look for something
                                    different. That's where I 
re-encountered Gramsci, because I had encountered Gramsci before, but it
 was a moment when I was
                                    not ready to accept it, because I 
was too much an Althusserian. So, it is something I agree with you, that
 make me change
                                    very much my outlook, with respect 
to liberal democracy. And that was also important in the context of the 
new conjuncture
                                    that was - we were meeting in the 
1970's. Because you were asking before about the question of feminism.
 I say feminism
                                    is something that I encountered when
 I came back from Colombia, in Europe at the beginning of the seventies,
 and then I found
                                    that the panorama had changed very much and there was all those important new social movements. And that, of course, was
                                    something which by then I was already interested in Gramsci, and I was able to begin
 to understand and look at that in
                                    a very different way. And that's 
when we began, well I began, at that time, to work about the question of
 the conception of
                                    hegemony in Gramsci. And my first 
work that you mentioned was concerned with trying to show that we find 
in Gramsci a form
                                    of Marxism that was non-reductionist
 and that will give us theoretical tools to understand precisely the 
novelty of those
                                    movements which were beginning to 
develop in the seventies. But I think that at that moment, I already was
 very dissatisfied
                                    with the Althusserian model.
Ernesto,
                                    you mentioned before that you were 
very early dissatisfied with the emphasis on class in Marxist theory. 
Does that dissatisfaction
                                    for you, connect to the 
appropriation of Gramsci in your own work, and the category, 
particularly, of common sense in Gramsci?
                                    There's an attempt in Gramsci to not
 to dismiss the ordinary understandings of people in an everyday sense.
Laclau: Yes.
                                    Definitely with Gramsci. And let me also say something,
in this connection about Althusser. Because in fact, I think, there
                                    are two sides in Althusser who work. On the one hand, there is the notion of over-determination, which is very central in
                                    his book for Marx, which in fact allows, to a certain extent, one to break with classical reductionism because the class contradiction
                                    is an ultimate contradiction which never arrives. So, this idea of an over-determined contradiction was something which
                                    allows us, very much, to start moving in a non-reductionist direction. But, Althusser later on closed his system, starting
                                    with reading Capital into a much more structuralist framework and some of the base intuitions of his initial work, I
                                    think, were lost. But, this is precisely what we found in Gramsci, because, through the category of hegemony - not only
                                    common sense - we could see that the process of political re-aggregation is conceived as the process of linking around
                                    a certain core, which for Gramsci, still remains a class core, but should not be necessarily so, a plurality of element
                                    we do not have any kind of straight class connotation. 'Teguro Position' is conceived by him as a type of antagonistic struggle in which different forces try to articulate into their project a set of social elements
                                    whose class belonging is not determined from the beginning. This meant, on the one hand, a privileging of the political
                                    moment over the moment of structural determinism, which is something which helped to move away from the reductionism of
                                    classical Marxism. And, on the other hand, permitted to arrive to a theory of common sense as something which is constantly
                                    shaped and reshaped by the operation of these forces whose class belonging is not determined from the
beginning.
So there
                                    was an emphasis on the political moment, which started to come together with the influence of Gramsci. And in the early
                                    1980's, I suppose, you started to write Hegemony and
                                    Socialist Strategy, which, I believe, appeared for the first time in 1985. How would you look back,
                                    from the standpoint you have today, on this project of writing Hegemony and Socialist Strategy,
                                    what you wanted to achieve, and what you think you have achieved with it?
Mouffe: Well,
                                    it was a moment when, I don't know if you remember, there was a lot a talk about the crisis of Marxism. Of course, there
                                    has been a lot of talk about that since the beginning of the century really, but it was a particularly important moment, precisely
                                    because of the development of the new social movement, there was a feeling on the left, that there was a problem with
                                    Marxist theory. Marxist theory was not able to allow us to understand those movements. Also, it was politically, a moment
                                    when the critique of the Soviet model, and what was called totalitarianism began to emerge. So there was a very specific
                                    conjuncture, I will say, in which people felt that there was a need to reformulate the project of the left. That it
                                    was not only Marxism, but the project of the left, which was in crisis. It is in very much in that context that we began
                                    to think about this new project of the left, how it could be reformulated. We can take from Marxism, what was still
                                    valid and, in fact, we felt very much that a Gramscian approach to Marxism needed to be saved because there was a tendency
                                    to reject all of Marxism because of this dissatisfaction. So we wanted to take what was important in Gramsci and try
                                    to see how we could, on that basis, reformulate the left-wing project. I think there was two sides to that. There was,
                                    certainly, a theoretical aspect, which was concerning with the critique of economism, the critique of essentialism because,
                                    we felt that, obviously, the main impediment in Marxism was it was an economistic or, mainly an economistic view. And
                                    in fact, the interest in Gramsci that we found, was that Gramsci was allowing us to elaborate a non-economistic Marxism.
                                    And in fact, much of my first work on Gramsci was concerned with that. And there was also the other, more political
                                    aspect, which was to offer a left wing project, not only the theory, but to reformulate the left-wing project that would
                                    allow to articulate, to link together, the struggle of the working class with the struggle of the new social movement.
                                    And that, of course, is the part of the book which is concerned with radical and plural democracy, because there is
                                    the two aspects in the book, which is both reformulation, in terms of theory, and also reformulation in terms of the
                                    political project.
The shift
                                    from a more classical Marxist theory, perhaps we can call it, towards a Gramscian influence then, allowed you to develop
                                    a theory of the new social movements that would be both in continuity with Marxism but also involved a critique of Marxism.
                                    One of the things that came to be a central idea in this critique, is the concept of identity. I wonder if you could explain
                                    the importance that the concept of identity had in the theory of Hegemony
                                    and Socialist Strategy?
Laclau: Yes.
                                    Concerning the question of the new social movement, I would question the assertion that we were simply moving from class
                                    analysis to new social movements. Because that would have been simply to change the privileged agent of history, which
                                    was conceived originally, in class terms, from one group to another group. So, what we did, and this is central for
                                    your point concerning identity, is to put into
question the notion of an identifiable agency. That is to say, what we
                                    conceived is that the subject is constructed through a plurality of subject position, that there is an essential unevenness
                                    between this position and, that there are constant practices of re-articulation. So, the social movements were simply
                                    a symptom; a symptom of a dispersion of the position from which politics started and a transition to a situation in
                                    which a variety of issues were organized around relatively homogenous social agencies, to a moment in which there was
                                    some kind of dispersion of identities and the process of political articulation became more and more important. For
                                    instance, the social movements of which people spoke so much about in the 1980's have become comparatively less important
                                    in the 1990's. But this does not change the validity of our approach, because our approach was not concerned with finding
                                    a new privileged agent of historical change. It was concerned with how to conceive politics when you start from fragmented social
                                    identities. Now, in this is connected with the question of identity. Political identities, for us, are never immediately given.
                                    Political identities are always constructed on the basis of complex discursive practices. That is a reason why the psychoanalytic
                                    category of identification is central for us. Let's suppose if you have something like there was in America some years
                                    ago, the Rainbow Coalition of Jesse Jackson, there you see an attempt to put together a dispersion of social positions,
                                    an issue politics, around some kind of unified historical-political intervention. It didn't work. But, it gives some
                                    picture of what we have, into account. So, to summarize the point, I think what we are dealing with is a retreat from
                                    agency as a homogeneous identity to conceive agency as a result of a pragmatic articulation of a plurality of issue
                                    politics and political intervention, and as a result of this required political identification, which profoundly changed
                                    the notion of agency and identity. 
 
So while
                                    identity appears as a kind of a solution, perhaps initially, it's actually a name for a whole series of problems. 
Laclau: I
                                    think so. No simple notion of identity can be accepted today
in any, more or less, sophisticated analysis of contemporary politics.
Well,
                                    Hegemony and Socialist Strategy attempted to deconstruct the received political categories, on the one hand, of Marxism, but also of liberal
                                    democratic thought, and to allow a reinterpretation of these categories in a way that could allow you to comprehend
                                    contemporary politics somewhat better, and also to understand the different kinds of interventions that seem to be going
                                    on through the 1980's and also the 1990's. I notice that one way in which this reconceptualization takes place, is that
                                    you tend to speak of what you call 'political space.' And I wonder, it seems to me that the traditional political category
                                    would be the public sphere, or something like that - 'the public.' Do you see your concept of political space as a reformulation
                                    of the traditional concept of the public sphere? 
Mouffe: Well,
                                    I should point out that, at the moment when we began to develop that, we were not thinking, so much, in terms of the
                                    relation with the liberal view. When we are speaking of the need to multiply the political space, I think it is very much linked
                                    to what is the central approach in hegemony, to which Ernesto has already referred, the need to understand that there
                                    are different sides of antagonism; that one cannot just think that class antagonism is the only one. In fact, the older struggle,
                                    around the new social movement, indicate that there are many other forms of domination or forms of oppression and that
                                    those need to be put into a question too, and because they are also a sight in which specific forms of identities are
                                    constructed in subordination. And in fact, the way in which we were imagining this project of radical and plural democracy,
                                    which was to extend the democratic struggle to all those areas in which the relation of domination existed, was why,
                                    by multiplying what we call the political space, and thinking that it was not, for instance, strictly limited to either
                                    the traditional public sphere or, as Marxists will have it, around the question of class, but that there was, in fact,
                                    a multiplicity of locus of power in society that needed to be put into question. And I must say that, at least as far
                                    as I am concerned, its only later on that I began to think about what the liberals were saying about that and try to
                                    see what was the relation between our view and the one of the liberal. And I began, probably at that time, to valorize
                                    more this liberal 'art of separation' - the distinction between the public and the private - because, I think probably
                                    there, the most important aspect has been the way in which, at least in France, the critique of totalitarianism, by
                                    people on the left, has showed that it was very important to maintain this distinction between the public and the private,
                                    because any attempt to blur the distinction was, in fact, opening the way to some kind of complete control of society
                                    by, for instance, the state, and the liberal tradition provided us with a possibility to, at least, establish barriers
                                    in order to impede that. Of course, once I say that, the question is, what are the limitations of this liberal conception?
                                    I think that the limitations, for instance, has been very well put to the fore by the feminist critique. I think that the feminist
                                    critique has shown that the way the public/private distinction was created by the liberals had been by relegating sayers
                                    of issues to the sphere of the private, and impeding, precisely by that move, that many forms of domination would
be
                                    put into question. So, then, of course, one can see why
the idea of a multiplicity of political space is important to
correct
                                    this liberal way in which the public/private have been
constructed. So, I think that probably, we'll need to insist that,
contrary
                                    to some feminism who believe that because it has
been constructed in that way, by relegating for instance, all
the questions
                                    which have got to do with women
subordination, to the private, this distinction need to be
abandoned. I don't think
                                    so. I think that it is a very important
distinction, but it needs to be redrawn. It needs to be
problematized, in the
                                    sense that we need to think of a
multiplicity of public sphere or political space, and a
multiplicity that will allow
                                    precisely not to have all
particularities kept in the private, and then the creation of
some kind of public sphere in
                                    which consensus or a more
rational agent or more homogeneous agent could be created.
So, you
                                    see contemporary politics as involving a multiplicity of
struggles and a multiplicity of political identities. On the other
hand,
                                    the traditional concept of the citizen has tended to be a
rather unified, or unifying conception. So, what rethinking of
the
                                    concept of the citizen and citizenship is implied in this new
conception of politics?
Mouffe: Well,
                                    I will say two things with respect to the concept of the
citizen. First, the way in which I began to think about that,
because
                                    once we had finished writing Hegemony and
Socialist Strategy and we had put into question the
                                    idea of
the class subject as the unifying subject. Nevertheless, we
began to insist on the fact that this critique of
                                    the class did not
mean that we were going to ask some kind of extreme
postmodern diversified position in which we were
                                    putting into
question any need for some kind of common identity. And of
course, I will say the very project of hegemony,
                                    the project of
articulation, implied that there was some kind of collective
subject that was needed or collective form
                                    of identity that was
needed. And then I began to wonder, where could we find
this? I became interested in examining
                                    how the concept of the
citizen could be reformulated in a way in which it could
provide this common identity. And part
                                    of my work, in fact,
has been concerned with that. For instance, what I've tried to
do is propose the idea of what I
                                    call a 'radical democratic
conception' of citizenship. Because the point I think I want to
emphasize here is that there
                                    are many problems with
liberalism. One, obviously, is the fact that it's not a citizen
which is going to act to participate;
                                    it’s very much a citizen
which has got rights which it's going to use against the state.
So, there is something
                                    there basically lacking. But from the
point of view that we are discussing here, probably the main
problem is that the
                                    citizen is seen as being abstracted from all
its other determinations, and then it’s the way we act in the
public
                                    but without taking account at all of our other insertion.
And also, the idea that once we act as 'citizen', we should act
all
                                    in the same way. And I think that this is the main problem. I
think that we should accept that the category of citizenship
                                    is
a very disputed one and there are many different ways in
which the relationship is going to be conceived: there is
                                    a
neo-liberal, a neo-conservative, a social democratic way. And
I was proposing to think, also, about the possibility
                                    of a radical
democratic citizenship, which means that, if it is a relationship
in which we are going to try to articulate
                                    in a common identity
this multiplicity of political space, and, for instance, when we
are acting as a radical democratic
                                    citizen, we will
automatically be concerned about the struggle of feminism,
the struggle against racism, and so on,
                                    not just a citizen which
is not concerned about all the other struggles.
Yes. Through
                                    the conception of hegemony then, you try to
rethink the political as a realm of antagonism, a realm of a
plurality of
                                    struggles. And this seems to imply, on a more
philosophical level, a rethinking of the relationship between
particularity
                                    and universality, which, Ernesto, the recent
essays you've been writing, a lot of them have focused on this
problem.
                                    How do you suggest that a new conception or a new
relationship between particularity and human universality
might be
                                    involved with a conception of the public?
Laclau: Ok.
                                    Two things. Firstly, I think the notion of universality is
linked, basically, to the expansion of logic of equality within
society,
                                    through the logic of equivalence - what we have
called logic of equivalence - which presupposes the extension
of the
                                    principle of equality to a larger variety of social relations
that the certain relative, pragmatic universality is created
                                    in
society. For instance, the notion of human equality started
with Christianity in religious discourses: all men are
                                    equal
before God. The achievement of the Enlightenment was the
extension of this logic of equivalence of equality, to
                                    the public
sphere. And there is where the public space of citizenship
was created. Now, I see, since that point, the
                                    art of the
democratic revolution as the progressive extension of the
principle of equality to a larger area. For instance,
                                    in socialist
discourses in the 19 century, this pure equality in the public
space of citizenship is extended to economic
                                    relations, and
we can see the social movements of our present age as the
extension of this principle to the areas of
                                    racial relations,
sexual relations, institutional relations, and so on. So, I see in
the first movement, this hegemonic
                                    process of extension of
the logic of equality as the very condition for creating new
forms of universality. Now, in
                                    the second movement, I would
say that this always depends on the extension of democratic
power in society. I think this
                                    is not simply the recognition of
something which was always there, but is a process of actual
creation. If we are breaking
                                    with the essentialist conception of
the subject, we are not saying that the social movements are
discovering an idea
                                    ­ an inequality - which was always there,
they are actually creating the terrain of that equality, and the
equality
                                    as such. In this sense, I think that we have to break
with purely representational theories of human equality and
we
                                    have to insist much more in this performative dimension,
which is the very condition of equality.
So, the
                                    history of human universality is a logic of extension, or
the moving of the idea of to whom this universality applies,
                                    to
larger and larger spheres. But each time it expands, this is a
creative movement, it’s not something that is
                                    given
beforehand.
Laclau: That's it. Even more. I would say that this creation starts from
an
                                    increasing plurality. Let's compare the notion of equality
that you can find in Marxism with the one we can find in
radical
                                    democracy. In Marxism, human equality had as a
precondition the obliteration of all differences. That is to say,
the
                                    historical process of capitalism was leading towards the
proletarization of the middle classes and the peasantry, so
that
                                    there was an increasing unification in the sense of
homogenization of the vast mass of the exploited who would
carry
                                    out, finally, the social revolution. So, the precondition of
human equality for Marxism was the increasing simplification
of
                                    social structure under capitalism. In the sense that we are
advocating, what happens is the opposite. That is to say,
equalization
                                    starts from an increasing diversity, recognition of
plurality, difference, and so on and so forth. But in that case,
the
                                    logic of equality cannot be a logic of homogenization. It
has to be a logic of what we call 'equivalence,' because in a
relation
                                    of equivalence, you are not simply discovering
identity, you are discovering something which is identical
within the
                                    realm of differences. This alludes to a much more
subtle form of political logic.
So, there's
                                    a rethinking of the relationship between the
particular and the universal, and we've really placed the
emphasis on the
                                    expansion of the notion of universality. Is
there an implication for the other side of this relationship, for
how we
                                    conceive of the particular, which was probably
traditionally conceived of simply that which was left out, and
perhaps
                                    personal, or idiosyncratic? Do you conceive of the
particular in a different way also?
Laclau: Well,
                                    let me differentiate in the first place, the particular from
the private, because you can have many identities which are
particular
                                    and they are very public in their type of intervention.
For instance, many movements created around ethnicity are
extremely
                                    particularistic, but on the other hand, they are
definitely not private. What I would say, and this is something
which
                                    I think Chantal can develop some of the dimensions -
she has worked on that more than I did - is the following. We
have,
                                    as against universalism today, an ideology of extreme
particularism. Now, I think extreme particularism is something
which
                                    is self defeating because let's suppose, you have a
particularity within society - an ethnic group, a national
minority,
                                    a sexual minority, et cetera, et cetera - that is
defending its right within global society. If they say, for
instance,
                                    the right of nation to self determination, what are
they doing but enunciating a universal principle? The very
discourse
                                    of rights on which the defense of particularity is
based, presupposes some kind of universal difference. Now,
when you
                                    say the right of national minorities to self
determination, there you are presenting a principle in which
the logic
                                    of equivalence is operating, because you have the
particularities of all these demands, and on the other hand,
you have
                                    a right which has to be formulated in universal
terms. Now, how this universality can be conceived, which is
no longer
                                    the universality of an instance, of an underlying
ground, as in classical philosophy, is one of the main
problems of
                                    contemporary political theory.
So, Ernesto
                                    has suggested, Chantal, that you regard the
particularisms that have traditionally been left out of the public
as potentially
                                    capable of influencing the public in the
contemporary sphere, or as involving some kind of new
relationship between
                                    the public right and a particular position.
How have you worked on this problem recently?
Mouffe: Well,
                                    the question, I will pose it in a slightly different way.
Because, it is true the I have been interested in this, what
                                    I
call this new articulation between the universal and the
particular, but it has come in the context of my reflection
about
                                    citizenship. My reflection about how can we think of a
form of commonality that does not erase differences. But I
feel
                                    today, we are faced with a false dilemma. On one side,
there are those who, because they realize that something is
basically
                                    wrong and missing in the liberal conception - which
is the idea of a common bond and, of course, that's a
reflection
                                    of the communitarians - one to reintroduce this
commonality, but they introduce it in a way which tends to not
leave
                                    space for differences for particularities. On the other
side, there are those who, because they want to make room
for
                                    differences for particularity, believe they cannot accept
any form of commonality because any form of commonality is,
in
                                    fact, a different form of violence. I think that what we should
really try to find is a way of conceiving commonality that
leaves
                                    space for differences and for particularities. Because
that's the way in which we could, today, take account and
reformulate,
                                    in a way which is compatible with the radical
democratic project, what I take to be the most important
contribution
                                    of liberalism to modern democracy, which is the
idea of pluralism. But of course, the problem is that the
liberals insist
                                    on pluralism, but they are very bad about
thinking about community. The communitarians are good
about thinking about
                                    community, but they are bad at thinking
about pluralism. In a sense, my position will be to try to take
the best of
                                    the communitarians and the liberals and try to
imagine a way in which we can have a form of commonality
that does not
                                    erase differences. That's very much what the
idea of radical and plural citizenship is concerned, because,
of course,
                                    the idea of citizenship basically implies
commonality - we are in it together as members of a political
community. But,
                                    of course, we are in it together, but we are
different. You know, and this togetherness cannot be just
limited to what
                                    we have in common. There must be a way in
which our particularities also are going to be taken into
account in that
                                    common bond. But I think it's really not an
easy thing to imagine. I'm not certainly able to give you the
solution already,
                                    but that's the way in which we need to be
thinking about those questions. And I think that's very
important, in fact,
                                    for the problems that are posed today in
contemporary societies - the whole question of
multi-culturalism or political
                                    identity, and all that - that is the
question that they really pose.
Laclau: If
                                    I can add something to that. Also, we have to be very
sensitive to the way in which the emphasis on universality and
on
                                    particularity is present in different political cultures. For
instance, in America today, many democratic struggles have
taken
                                    the from of a struggle against the cannon, in the
characteristic of multiculturalist struggle, in which the
emphasis
                                    on particularism has been very much at the
forefront. If we move to a country like South Africa, which I
have visited
                                    recently, you find there a completely different
type of discourse, because discourse of ethnicity are
immediately suspicious.
                                    For instance, are the discourses of
Quazulu, the Brutalesi discourse and so. And the official
ideology of Apartheid
                                    was the notion of separate
development and respect for cultural identities, while the
demand of the resistance movement
                                    was a demand for
equalization of conditions, and the idea of non-racialism took
a universalist dimension which was much
                                    more present. So, I
would take universalism and particularism as the two
extremes in a relation of tension which allows
                                    many different
political projects to take place within it.
That's
                                    a very good point. One of the things I've noticed is that
quite often with foreign visitors coming to Canada and talking
about
                                    multiculturalism, there is a tendency to assume that any
talk about ethnicity necessarily leads in the direction of ethnic
particularism,
                                    or ethnic cleansing, something of that sort. Of
course it depends very much on the way in which these things
have come
                                    together in a particular history. This reworking of
the relationship between the particular and the universal can
take
                                    many different forms. You've mentioned Chantal, in your
working through these problems, with regards to a critical
appropriation
                                    of the liberal tradition, you've tried to avoid the
liberal individualism on the one side, and liberal
communitarianism
                                    on the other side, and are in the process
of developing a theory of your own which you call radical
democracy. What
                                    does the term 'radical' mean when applied
to democracy in this way? What is it, particularly, about this
theory that
                                    distinguishes it from liberalism of the normal
variety.
Mouffe: Well,
                                    you probably need to reach a distinction between
radical democracy and what I call agonistic pluralism.
Because, in
                                    fact, the project of radical democracy is a political
project. In that sense, the term 'radical' means the
radicalization
                                    of the democratic revolution by its extension to
more and more areas of social life. Because I stand from the
point
                                    of view that, in fact, if we take the ethical political
principal of modern democracy, which for me is pluralist
democracy,
                                    liberal democracy, and that those principals are
the assertion of liberty and equality for all, I don't think there is
anything
                                    wrong with those principles. I can't imagine how we
could find more radical principles than that. I feel that the
problem
                                    with those principles is not their nature, but the fact
that they are not implemented, or they are very little
implemented
                                    in societies that claim to put those ideas into
practice. So, in fact, the project of radical democracy consists
of
                                    taking those ideals and radicalizing them by giving a more
radical interpretation of liberty, of democracy, of equality,
                                    and
of the whole. Because, I think that much of the struggle which
is taking place in politics, in liberal democratic
                                    society, is
concerned with what I call the interpretation of those
principles. Because, of course, liberty, equality,
                                    and the
whole, can be interpreted in many different ways. And by the
way, I think that the struggle that I envisaged
                                    around different
forms of citizenship, I was mentioning before a neo-liberal
one, a neo-conservative, a social democratic,
                                    is about
different interpretations of those principles. And I take it that a
really vibrant democratic society needs
                                    to have this debate
and confrontation about those interpretations. And that's
where the conception of agonistic pluralism
                                    comes in to its full
development. Because what I am trying to oppose to the
liberal conception is a model of agonistic
                                    pluralism. It's not
opposing radical democracy to liberalism, because in fact,
radical democracy we could also have
                                    called "radical liberal
democracy." In fact, the idea of radical and plural democracy
does not imply to take into question
                                    the constitutional principal
of liberal democracy, but radicalizing them by applying them,
really, and to more
                                    and more areas. But there is also a more
theoretical problem and that's where, I think, that the liberal
conception
                                    of politics has also been very defective. Because
liberals understand politics mainly, either under the model of
economics,
                                    or under the model of ethics. That is, when I
speak in terms of economics - and that's the dominant model
of interest
                                    group pluralism, for instance - they conceive the
political terrain as if it was a market, a political market, in
which
                                    there are people with their different interests and which
compete and we are going to make, you know, kind of deals.
But
                                    basically it's in terms of economics. Recently, there have
been a series of liberals, like John Rawls and all the so-called
ontological
                                    liberals, who have become very dissatisfied with
this model, which is, obviously, very instrumentalist view of
politics.
                                    And they have proposed to develop what is now
called a model of deliberative democracy, which, basically,
tried to reintroduce
                                    morality into it. So it's not only about a
question of interest. There are things which are more
important to that.
Chantal,
                                    you've described your critique of liberalism as
leading towards a theory of agonistic pluralism. How would
you explain
                                    that?
Mouffe: What
                                    I have in mind here is a critique of the way in which
politics is conceived in liberalism, either, as I was just saying,
in
                                    terms of economy, or in terms of ethics. But in both cases,
the dimension of what I call "the political", that is, a dimension
of
                                    antagonism, is erased from liberalism. In fact, I will say that
there is no theory of politics in liberalism, and that
                                    even the
recent, so-called political liberalism, there really is nothing
political about that because it's an attempt
                                    to apply, to
introduce, morality in the sphere of the public, but the
dimension of conflict and antagonism is, in fact,
                                    erased. So,
against that, what I am proposing is to see the struggle which
should take place inside a moral democratic
                                    society in terms
of what I call agonistic pluralism. A pluralism that is not like, in
the case of Rawls or Habermas,
                                    relegated to the sphere of
the private in order for a rational political consensus to be
possible in the sphere of the
                                    public, but recognizing that it is
very important for people to have a possibility to identify in the
public sphere
                                    with really different positions. One of the
problems, which has happened recently in Europe, but I
suppose to some extent
                                    here in North America too, is that
with the blurring of the left-right distinction, there has been
some kind of consensus
                                    model in which there is not really
much difference between the right wing democratic parties
and the socialist parties.
                                    So, there is no real agonism, there is
no possibility for people to identify with other positions - there
is no real
                                    alternative which is offered to them. And that, I
think, has lead to some kind of lack of interest in politics, or a
passivity,
                                    which is not good for vibrant democratic life. And I
think that it's important to realize that it's not by proposing a
model
                                    of deliberative democracy and say that people should
sit together and discuss and try to understand an argument
that
                                    we are going to put back a real participatory level in
politics. I think that in order to have a vibrant democratic life,
we
                                    need to have a real struggle against different positions.
And that's what I call agonistic pluralism. And of course,
radical
                                    democracy will be one of the forms in which the
struggle could take place, because this agonistic pluralism, I
see as
                                    taking place between different conceptions of
citizenship. The radical democratic project is just one way
which strives
                                    to become hegemonic in this agonistic pluralism.
But the difference at that level is not so much in terms of
different
                                    political projects, how far we are going to extend the
principal of liberty and equality, but the way in which politics
                                    is
conceived in a liberal democratic society and the place that
antagonism occupies in that theoretical project.
This concept
                                    of antagonism that you've introduced here in the
context of radical democracy is a key concept, both in the
work that
                                    you've written together and in the recent work of
both of you. How would you explain the concept of
antagonism?
Laclau: Well,
                                    I would say that antagonism had been considered by
classical sociological theory as something to be explained
within
                                    the social, within society. The way we conceive
antagonism is that antagonism is the limit of social objectivity.
What
                                    I mean by this, for instance, there is an antagonism
between two social forces, we can find that these none of
these
                                    two forces have a discourse which is commensurable
with the other. Now, there are two ways of reacting, visavis,
this
                                    antagonism. Either to say, well, the antagonism is a mere
appearance of some kind of objective underlying process
which
                                    can be explained in its own terms. Or, we can say
antagonism goes down to the bottom: any kind of social
objectivity
                                    is reached simply by limiting antagonism. Now,
what we have to do in our work is to give to antagonism this
fundamental
                                    constitutive role in establishing the limits of the
social, while most sociological theories, on the contrary,
present
                                    antagonism as something which has to be explained
in terms of something different. To give you an example,
classical
                                    Marxism said, well, history is a history of struggle. In
antagonistic societies you have suffering, social process for
the
                                    social agents are conceived of as irrational. But, if we see
history from the privileged point of the end of history, the
rationality
                                    of all these processes is shown. For instance, we
see that passing through the hell of all the antagonistic
societies
                                    was necessary in order to reach a higher form,
which is communism. In this case, the moment of distress,
opposition,
                                    and so on, is reduced to a mere superstructure
the way people live this. For example, Hegel used to say,
"Universal
                                    history is not the terrain of happiness." Now, on the
contrary, you can say antagonism is actually constitutive:
there
                                    is no underlying logic of history which is expressed
through itself, it goes down to the bottom. Now, this second
view,
                                    which I think, can in many ways lead to more
democratic outcomes, because it takes more into account the
actual feelings
                                    and perceptions of historical actors, is closer to
our view.
Mouffe: Yeah,
                                    I want to add something here because I think that it's
more political aspect of antagonism and its link with the
problem
                                    of liberalism but also of Marxism. I think that, there is
something, even if, as Ernesto was saying, theoretically,
Marxism
                                    was not really adequately grasped by Marxists, but
they at least, recognized the space of antagonism in society,
but
                                    they located it exclusively at the level of the classes.
While, of course, for liberalism, there is no antagonism in
society.
                                    So, Marxism was a process, with respect to liberalism
on that aspect, they recognized the place of antagonism but,
they
                                    limited it to the question of class. So, they believed that
eventually, antagonism could be eradicated once the class
struggle
                                    will have finished. In a sense, what we are doing is to
radicalize Marxism, so to speak. To say, well, the question of
antagonism,
                                    first, cannot be located exclusively at the level of
class; there are many more antagonisms. And, of course,
that's
                                    where the question of social movements is important,
because they are an expression of antagonism. And also, we
are
                                    saying, and those antagonisms, well, certain antagonisms
can be eradicated, but Antagonism can never be eradicated
of
                                    society. So, while Marxism and liberalism believe the
possibility of society without antagonism, of course, you know,
there
                                    are different kinds of societies, but there is this
possibility, we are saying that there is no possibility of society
without
                                    antagonism.
But isn't
                                    there a problem here? The project of socialism is to
relieve the systemic suffering of the working classes, to do
away
                                    with hunger and poverty. If you say that antagonism is
systemic and constitutive of human society and it can't be
done
                                    away with, does that mean that we can't involve
ourselves in struggles against poverty and suffering and
inhumane working
                                    conditions and things of this sort?
Laclau: I
                                    don't think one has to simply reduce antagonism to
economic exploitation. I think you can supersede economic
exploitation
                                    in a variety of ways. This does not mean that
antagonism, as some basic ontological condition of society,
will be ultimately
                                    eliminated. And I think that it's good that its
not ultimately eliminated. Because if antagonism was
eliminated, if
                                    the principal of social division was no longer
there, we would have reached a fully reconciled society. And
in this
                                    fully reconciled society there would be no freedom at
all, because everybody would think exactly the same kind of
thing.
                                    The very notion of a plurality of point of view requires
the presence of antagonism. Now, this does not mean that
economic
                                    exploitation will have always to be there.
Antagonism can take many forms. But, the basic point is that
the supersession
                                    of a particular antagonistic form does not,
as Chantal said, involve the supersession of Antagonism, as
such. And in
                                    this connection, I would say, Marxism presents
two perfectly contradictory theories. The first one, according
to which,
                                    history is the process of development of the
contradiction between forces and relation of production, and
objective
                                    processes, which reduce antagonism to
superstructure. The other theory, according to which, the
mortar of history is
                                    class struggle. Now, these two theories
are incompatible because, if class struggle is the actual
engine of historical
                                    change, in that case, there can not be a
rational positive logic, which is what the first theory presented.
There is
                                    where Chantal, I think, has quite rightly characterized
our intellectual project as the radicalization of these
antagonistic
                                    moments which, I think, retrieves the best
dimensions within Marxism.
Is there
                                    a new conception of politics in what you're proposing
here through the notion of antagonism? There seems to be a
sense
                                    in which political struggles still have a point and a
purpose, but yet the notion of a goal, the final goal of political
activity,
                                    seems to be reconceptualized. Is that close to the
mark?
Mouffe: Well,
                                    probably I will say what we are abandoning is the idea
of a final goal that could ever be realized. Because, the idea
of
                                    radical and plural democracy implies that this fully
reconciled society, that was the goal of Marxism and of many
socialist
                                    struggles, can never be reached. And as I was
saying, this in fact, is not something that we should see as
negative,
                                    and there is no reason to be sad about that. In fact,
it's something to celebrate, because it means that it's the
guarantee
                                    that the democratic pluralist process will be kept
alive. Because if we start from the idea that there is a
possibility
                                    of realizing an harmonious society - completely
harmonious society - even when that is conceived as a
regulative idea,
                                    there is some danger in it. Because it means
that, in fact, the ideal of a democratic society will be a society
in which
                                    there will not be any more pluralism, because
pluralism implies the possibility of putting into question the
existing
                                    arrangement of contesting, constantly, the relation of
power. But if you accept that there is a possibility of an end
point,
                                    of a goal, in which there will not be any more form of
power or of domination, I mean, at that moment people
cannot,
                                    of course, put into question the existing institutions,
because those institutions will be the instantiation of justice
                                    or
of democracy. I think that is precisely what I have been
criticizing, for instance, in liberals like John Rawls or
                                    in the
work of Habermas, showing that, contrary to their goal, which
in fact, is to try to think of the condition of
                                    pluralism, they in
fact, are presenting a self-defeating argument, because by
postulating the possibility of a rational
                                    consensus, they are
undermining the very conception of the democratic pluralist
process. And of course, they are also,
                                    and that's a point
which is theoretically important, imagining a society from
which relation of power will have disappeared,
                                    in fact, is
impossible because if we, as we have argued, must accept
that relations of power are constitutive of the
                                    social, you
cannot imagine a society in which there will be no relation of
power. And this, in fact, is a very important
                                    aspect of our
argument about antagonism and about politics - this
recognition that power is constitutive of the social.
Your theory
                                    of antagonism, then, is a radicalization of the
focus on conflict in Marxism, and suggests that there is no
final point
                                    at which conflict will be eliminated. The question I'd
like to ask you, how do you, you theorize antagonism through
the
                                    notion of the limit of the social. Can you give me an
example of how the limit of the social can become an actual
phenomenon
                                    within someone's experience?
Laclau: Ok.
                                    Let me pose the problem in the following terms. There
are many social situations in which some kind of decision
about
                                    the collective life of the community have to be taken.
Now, these decisions, I would argue, are never decisions
which
                                    are entirely rational, because if they were decisions
which are entirely rational, they would be totally obvious, and
no
                                    decision, actually, would be needed. If a decision is
needed, this means that one has to determine the course of
events
                                    by less than fully rational motives. Now, in that case,
many people would have taken decisions which are different
ones.
                                    In that case, when a decision is taken, this decision will
conflict, necessarily, with the decision of other groups. So,
you
                                    cannot say that society as a whole, the social process as
a whole, is moving in one direction, which is determined by its
underlying
                                    structures. What you have is that an external
intervention is there needed. So, social objectivity there finds
its limits.
                                    And I would argue that the limits of the social are the
political. Because we have had a perverted notion of society,
which
                                    is the result of almost one century of sociological
approaches to the social. Since the decline of political
philosophy
                                    at the end of the 18th century, we have a
tendency which goes in the direction of explaining the political
as a moment
                                    within the social - the political would by either a
superstructure, a sub-system, depending on the theoretical
view
                                    point, and so on - but society is considered as some kind
of universal explaining principal according to its own laws.
                                    If
you are speaking about the limit of the social as being internal
to society, we are creating the basis for a re-emergence
                                    of
the political as the institutive moment of the social. And this
requires, as I said before, that the antagonistic
                                    moment is
present there - social conflict is there, as a grounding
moment, it's not a result of anything else.
Mouffe: Yeah,
                                    it is in that context, in fact, that I have proposed to
distinguish between "the political" and politics. And that takes
to
                                    what you were asking before, I think, if there is a new
theory of politics in our work. Well, in fact, I will argue that,
                                    for
the first time in many contexts of liberal theory, there is a
theory of politics - I wouldn't say its a new one,
                                    because there
was not an old one, and that has been the problem with
liberalism. This distinction consists in, one thing,
                                    to make
room for the recognition of this antagonistic dimension that
we were speaking about before. Because by the political,
                                    I
propose that we understand this dimension of antagonism
that is an ever-present possibility in social relations. I'm
                                    not
saying that all social relations are always constructed
antagonistically. That's certainly not the case, but it's
                                    always
an ever-present possibility. And this is this dimension which is
called "the political." And "politics" consists,
                                    then, in trying to
create an order, organize human coexistence, in conditions
which are always potentially conflictual,
                                    because there is this
dimension of the antagonism. I think once you begin to pose
the question in that way, of course,
                                    it requires to understand
democratic struggle in a very different way, because
democratic struggle will be, as I say
                                    sometime, trying to see
how one can transform an antagonism into an agonism. By
that I mean, in fact, how can we tame
                                    an antagonism, how
can we make it compatible with a democratic struggle. Or,
another way to say it, will be how can
                                    we transform a
friend-enemy relation into an adversarial relation, because
the adversary is the one which is considered,
                                    in a certain
respect, equal in the sense that we will not put into question
his right or her right to defend their own
                                    position. They are
part of the democratic community and they are part of the
confrontation, while an enemy, of course,
                                    is somebody to
which you negate the right to express his differences. That, of
course, is also linked to the idea of
                                    agonistic pluralism:
agonistic pluralism being something that takes place among
adversaries.
Your own
                                    work has been developed partly as a critique of
Marxism, partly as an appropriation and radicalization of
Marxism through
                                    the notion of antagonism, yet, in recent
years, the great political success stories are not success
stories of the left,
                                    but of the right. I'm wondering if the recent
successes of the right, both in Europe and in America, have
caused you
                                    to revise your thinking. How do you understand
the rise of the right? Do you see it as a social movement?
Mouffe: Well,
                                    here I want to, in fact, deconstruct so to speak, this
category of the right, because I'm not sure that we are
meaning
                                    the same thing. What I am concerned with today is
not the right, but the extreme right. I think this is really the
danger
                                    in Europe today. And I will not see the recent situation
in Europe as a victory for the right. It's true that in many
countries
                                    the right is in power - the right has just come to
power in France after a long period of socialism, its in power
in
                                    many more countries, in probably it is going to come power
in Spain, it is in power in Italy, fortunately it might get
                                    out of
power in Britain. But anyway, the question seems to me is
that, what I call the democratic right, is not, I think,
                                    in much
better shape than the left. Because, the model of Thatcher -
those triumphant years of the right - I think they
                                    are finished.
Because, in fact, the right, the democratic right, is confronted
with a problem for which they don't have
                                    a solution. Their
neo-liberal model is not working. The case of Britain is very
interesting from that point of view,
                                    because the Thatcher
experiment has failed. This is absolutely recognized. There is
no alternative on the right for
                                    that. In many of the European
countries, right-wing parties are facing the same situation. So,
I find both the left
                                    and the right, really, not knowing how to
address the present situation. And that's why the extreme
right is the one
                                    which is today occupying the terrain. If you
see the movement which are in expansion, it is extreme right.
In France,
                                    in Italy, in Austria, in Belgium, in Denmark, this is
the trend which is being put in place. And that, of course, is
extremely
                                    dangerous, because this is something which put
into question the very basis of the liberal democratic model as
we have
                                    learned it so far. So, in fact, I find the situation, in a
sense, more worrying that what a simple victory of the right
over
                                    the left will have implied.
In the
                                    terms of your political theory, the right would take the
adversarial relationship of, say, the conservative party and
the
                                    labour party in Britain and turn it into a friend-enemy
relationship, in fact, that would threaten the foundation of the
liberal
                                    political order. So you would see that as the biggest
danger?
Mouffe: Yes,
                                    because I don't think there is a possibility of an
adversarial relation with the extreme right. Those are
enemies, while
                                    the adversarial relation can only take place
between left and democratic right. But, I think that, I've been
trying
                                    to interpret that because, for me it is a phenomenon
which is extremely important. There is a real urgency today in
trying
                                    to understand the rights of the right in order to be able
to offer an alternative. I think that one of the reasons why
there
                                    is such a popular mobilization around extreme right
parties is because the democratic left and right have not been
able
                                    to put in place what I call this agonistic pluralism. They've
been, in fact, drawn towards some kind of consensus model
and
                                    the idea that politics should take place at the center. This
was very clear in France when the socialists came to power
because
                                    they actively abandoned their Jacobean type of
politics which was very much in terms of friend-enemy. And
that was something
                                    positive. But they were not able to think in
terms of adversary; they fell completely into the traditional
liberal model
                                    of competitors. So it was a question, "well, you
know, we've got our interests, our bureaucratic system, our
elites
                                    that we want to put into power," but there was no
attempt at all to transform the hegemony, to transform power
relations.
                                    So, it has very much been some kind of struggle
located at the center between different parties which were not
offering
                                    any kind of alternative. There was no confrontation.
And I think that explains, to a large extent, on one part, the
disaffection
                                    of many people in France with those parties, the
growth of fundamentalist movements, movements in which,
what I call
                                    the passions are not mobilized toward democratic
design, and also, the fact that the extreme right is the one
which
                                    is mobilizing passion because they are offering an
alternative. And I think that's why it's so important to
recognize
                                    that if we want to offer democratic channels,
democratic ways for passion to express themselves, one
needs to abandon
                                    this consensus-centric model of politics
and revive the agonistic adversarial relation. I think that this
blurring of
                                    the left-right distinction which we have witnessed in
Europe, and which has been celebrated by many people by
saying
                                    how we are now coming to maturity, how this is
progress for democracy, I think this is disastrous for
democracy, because
                                    this creates the terrain in which the
extreme right is beginning to make in roads.
Laclau: Yes,
                                    because what happens is that whenever you have
unfulfilled demands of people and the need of a discourse of
opposition,
                                    and this discourse is not present - is replaced by
some kind of politics of piecemeal engineer, consensus, and
so on
                                    - the need for a radical confrontation through the
system is more important than the terms in which this
confrontation
                                    is carried out. So, for instance, many social
forces which were the classical constituency of the communist
party in
                                    France, have become supporters of Lepen simply
because the old radicalism of the Purple de Gauche, as they
call it,
                                    have not been replaced by anything. So, what we have,
I think, in Northern Europe is a whirl-wind phenomenon today.
It
                                    is some kind of exhaustion of the ideologies which, during
some period, had represented left-wing or progressive
courses.
                                    They have disintegrated because the historical
assumptions are no longer there, and some kind of a new
fundamentalist
                                    type of discourse is occupying that place. In
the case of the Middle East, it's perfectly clear. In the years
after
                                    the Second World War, the dominant progressive
ideology was Arab nationalism. Now, Arab nationalism was
constructed
                                    around the nation state, the new nation states
which were emerging in the Middle East. For instance, when
Pakistan emerged
                                    there as an Islamic nation, it was criticized
by the whole because they said an Islamic nation state is a
contradiction
                                    in terms. Now, with the stalemate in the Middle
East, Arab nationalism collapses everywhere as a dominant
ideology and
                                    this space has to be taken by Islamic
fundamentalism simply because there were many unfulfilled
demands which require
                                    some kind of radical answer.
So, opposition
                                    to the system as a whole has tended to be, in
recent years, from the right rather than from the left. How do
you fit
                                    the corporatist agenda, or the neo-liberal fiscal
responsibility agenda into this picture of contemporary
politics?
Laclau: Well,
                                    I would say the corporatist model, or the neo-liberal
model, to a large extent, has failed as an attempt to galvanize
the
                                    political system. The years of the 1980's were the years of
a movement, to the right, of the established parties. They
were
                                    the years of Reganism, the years of Thacherism, and so
on and so forth. Now, in some sense, these were the last
utopian
                                    years because, the idea of an utopian politics not only
belongs to the left, it belongs also to the right. We had some
kind
                                    of blueprint of society, created by neo-liberalism, which
had to be applied. Now, today people are much more blasé.
The
                                    idea of a blueprint of society and utopian politics along
these lines, either through the right or through the left, are
very
                                    much put into question. And they are being replaced by
some kind of issue politics, micro politics, in some respects,
all
                                    by emergence of the new fundamentalism that we are
referring to. But the big designs like the Great Society, or the
New
                                    Deal, or the neo-liberal model, and so on, are no longer
there.
Mouffe: But
                                    speaking of comparativism, which is the best model,
maybe, of this kind of consensus approach, I think this is
clearly
                                    what has also created the terrain in many places for
the extreme right. I'm thinking of Austria, for instance, which
was
                                    the corporatist model par excellance, where, for many
years, we had this cohabitation between conservative and
social
                                    democrats, and where, of course, the party of Gork
Idor is, today, extremely important precisely because they are
the
                                    only one offering a radical alternative. Of course, with the
recent election given to the socialists, it will increase.
                                    That
situation might have been worse, but clearly, the party which
is today on the move in Austria, is the Freedom Party
                                    of Idor,
and it¹s very much articulating the discontent with the
corporatist model that had been in place in Austria.
Underlying
                                    your analysis of contemporary political events is
the theory of hegemony that you've been developing for a
number of
                                    years. I wonder if you could explain to me, in more
general terms now, the contribution you think political
philosophy
                                    and philosophy in general can make to political
issues or political movements.
Laclau: Yes.
                                    Well, a hegemonic model of politics, which I think is,
finally, all politics are hegemonic to some extent, consists in
                                    a
process of pragmatically putting together things or
occurrences which do not necessarily have to coalesce in that
way.
                                    It involves a contingent intervention. To give you an
example, at the end of the Second World War, there was a
discussion
                                    within the Italian Communist Party about how the
party was going to be constructed in the post-war period. And
there
                                    were two currents: one which said the party is the party
of the working class. So, it had to be the party representing
an
                                    enclave in the industrial north and they had to live totally
outside of the world of the Mizsiogiorno and everything
connected
                                    with it. The other position, which was more
Gramscian, and finally adopted through the leadership of
Palmido Atoliati,
                                    said no, we are going to build up the party in
the south. How is the working class is weak in the south. They
said the
                                    premises of the Party and the premises of the Trade
Union are going to be the center of a plurality of social
initiative:
                                    the struggle against the Mafia, the struggle for
school cooperatives, and so on. So, that communism, in the
end, became
                                    the coalescing symbol of a plurality of struggles,
which, in themselves, didn't have any need to coincide in that
way
                                    - there was no structural law pushing them in that way.
The proof is that in some other areas, there were the
Christian
                                    democrat lawyer who produced this role of
articulation. But once this role of articulation has succeed, it
manages to
                                    produce for a whole historical period, a certain
configuration of alliance forces and so on. This is an example
of what
                                    hegemonic politics is about. Now, this, as you see,
goes very much against the notion of a strict interest
determining
                                    what form of politics is going to show. It involves
a strategic movement which is always transient, unstable and
negotiated.
Mouffe: Here,
                                    it is important, I think, to insist on the fact that this
hegemonic politics, of course, can be put into practice by the
right
                                    as much as by the left. For instance, the example
Ernesto was giving referring to Italy, is precisely what we are
seeing
                                    now about the growth of the Islamic fundamentalist
movement. In many countries, for instance, to take the case
of Turkey,
                                    where the rise of the Reza Reform Party has been
very important, is articulating a similar type of hegemony that
the
                                    communists did in Italy, you know, offering organizations,
creating in civic society, a series of links. But because they
were
                                    offering an alternative to the government, they have
been able to really establish a very serious basis in civic
society
                                    following exactly that model. That¹s the same, to a
certain extent, for Algeria. The growth of the [Š] in Algeria
has
                                    been following exactly the same model. So, that's why it's
important for the left to really understand that that's the
                                    way
they can create some kind of democratic alliance, because if
they don't do that, its the other parties which are
                                    doing it.
Laclau: Traditionally,
                                    for instance, the Mas Limbrada became a mass
movement, not simply on the basis of agitation, but on the
basis of organizing
                                    a plurality of institutions which were the
basis for social security, cultural participation, recreation, and
so on,
                                    for people so that, in the end, they had become a state
within the state. Later on they were destroyed by Nazar, but
whenever
                                    a fundamentalism has expanded in the Islamic
countries, it has been on the basis of this model. And I have
seen this
                                    model also operating very much in the plurality of
populist movements in Latin America, like in Peru, perronism
in Argetnina
                                    in the forties and so on.
So, if
                                    hegemony is putting together a number of different
political elements which are not necessarily connected
together,
                                    but are put together through an articulation. At the
level of philosophy, you've been interested, recently, to
theorize
                                    this through the concept of undecidability. What
could you say to us quickly about the concept of
undecidability in
                                    philosophy and how it might relate to the
theory of hegemony?
Laclau: Well,
                                    in fact, the concept of undecidability has been
developed from a variety of occurrences with the general
spectrum of
                                    what has been called post-structuralism. But let's
suppose we take the deconstructionist alternative. What
deconstruction
                                    is doing is to show that many structures, many
categories which present themselves as closed categories
are, in fact,
                                    penetrated by internal aporias, so that the actual
configuration that they show is, in fact, concealing many
different
                                    alternatives which are repressed. Now, once you
bring this to light, you are also showing a plurality of strategic
development
                                    which become thinkable. So, what I would say
deconstruction is doing, is to enlarge the area of
undecidability in social
                                    relations, which require political
intervention, but at the same time, this requires a theory of
the decision; how to
                                    take a decision within an undecidable
terrain. And that is what the theory of hegemony attempts to
do. For example,
                                    Gramsci, we were speaking about before,
Gramsci advanced a great deal, I think, in terms of showing
social elements
                                    as having only contingent articulation. In this
sense, he was enlarging the field of structure and
undecidability, and
                                    conceived hegemony as the moment of
the decision. But he was limited by a classical ontology by
which this dimension
                                    of undecidability could be extended only
so far. But in contemporary society with the phenomenon of
globalization, with
                                    the phenomenon of combined and uneven
development, with the phenomenon of social fragmentation,
we need definitely a
                                    much radical conception of undecidability
than what was present at the time Gramsci. And I think
deconstruction and
                                    post-structuralism are pushing in that
direction.