RAYMOND WILLIAMS
BASE AND SUPERSTRUCTURE IN MARXIST CULTURAL THEORY
BASE AND SUPERSTRUCTURE IN MARXIST CULTURAL THEORY
Any modern approach to
a Marxist theory of culture must begin by considering the proposition of a
determining base and a determined superstructure. From a strictly theoretical
point of view this is not, in fact, where we might choose to begin. [1] It would be in many ways preferable if we
could begin from a proposition which originally was equally central, equally
authentic: namely the proposition that social being determines consciousness.
It is not that the two propositions necessarily deny each other or are in
contradiction. But the proposition of base and superstructure, with its
figurative element, with its suggestion of a definite and fixed spatial
relationship, constitutes, at least in certain hands, a very specialized and at
times unacceptable version of the other proposition. Yet in the transition from
Marx to Marxism, and in the development of mainstream Marxism itself, the
proposition of the determining base and the determined superstructure has been
commonly held to be the key to Marxist cultural analysis.
Now it is important,
as we try to analyse this proposition, to be aware that the term of
relationship which is involved, that is to say ‘determines’, is of great
linguistic and real complexity. The language of determination and even more of
determinism was inherited from idealist and especially theological accounts of
the world and man. It is significant that it is in one of his familiar
inversions, his contradictions of received propositions, that Marx uses the
word ‘determines’. He is opposing an ideology that had been insistent on the
power of certain forces outside man, or, in its secular version, on an abstract
determining consciousness. Marx’s own proposition explicitly denies this, and
puts the origin of determination in men’s own activities. Nevertheless, the
particular history and continuity of the term serves to remind us that there
are, within ordinary use—and this is true of most of the major European
languages—quite different possible meanings and implications of the word
‘determine’. There is, on the one hand, from its theological inheritance, the
notion of an external cause which totally predicts or prefigures, indeed
totally controls a subsequent activity. But there is also, from the experience
of social practice, a notion of determination as setting limits, exerting
pressures.
Now there is clearly a
difference between a process of setting limits and exerting pressures, whether
by some external force or by the internal laws of a particular development, and
that other process in which a subsequent content is essentially prefigured,
predicted and controlled by a pre-existing external force. Yet it is fair to
say, looking at many applications of Marxist cultural analysis, that it is the
second sense, the notion of prefiguration, prediction or control, which has
often explicitly or implicitly been used.
Superstructure: Qualifications and
Amendments
The term of
relationship is then the first thing that we have to examine in this
proposition, but we have to do this by going on to look at the related terms
themselves. ‘Superstructure’ has had most attention. People commonly speak of
‘the superstructure’, although it is interesting that originally, in Marx’s German,
the term is in one important use plural. Other people speak of the different
activities ‘inside’ the superstructure or superstructures. Now already in Marx
himself, in the later correspondence of Engels, and at many points in the
subsequent Marxist tradition, qualifications have been made about the
determined character of certain superstructural activities. The first kind of
qualification had to do with delays in time, with complications, and with
certain indirect or relatively distant relationships. The simplest notion of a
superstructure, which is still by no means entirely abandoned, had been the
reflection, the imitation or the reproduction of the reality of the base in the
superstructure in a more or less direct way. Positivist notions of reflection
and reproduction of course directly supported this. But since in many real
cultural activities this relationship cannot be found, or cannot be found
without effort or even violence to the material or practice being studied, the
notion was introduced of delays in time, the famous lags; of various technical
complications; and of indirectness, in which certain kinds of activity in the
cultural sphere—philosophy, for example—were situated at a greater distance
from the primary economic activities. That was the first stage of qualification
of the notion of superstructure: in effect, an operational qualification. The
second stage was related but more fundamental, in that the process of the
relationship itself was more substantially looked at. This was the kind of
reconsideration which gave rise to the modern notion of ‘mediation’, in which
something more than simple reflection or reproduction—indeed something
radically different from either reflection or reproduction—actively occurs. In
the later twentieth century there is the notion of ‘homologous structures’,
where there may be no direct or easily apparent similarity, and certainly
nothing like reflection or reproduction, between the superstructural process
and the reality of the base, but in which there is an essential homology or
correspondence of structures, which can be discovered by analysis. This is not
the same notion as ‘mediation’, but it is the same kind of amendment in that
the relationship between the base and the superstructure is not supposed to be
direct, nor simply operationally subject to lags and complications and
indirectnesses, but that of its nature it is not direct reproduction.
These qualifications
and amendments are important. But it seems to me that what has not been looked
at with equal care, is the received notion of the base. And indeed I would
argue that the base is the more important concept to look at if we are to
understand the realities of cultural process. In many uses of the proposition
of base and superstructure, as a matter of verbal habit, ‘the base’ has come to
be considered virtually as an object, or in less crude cases, it has been
considered in essentially uniform and usually static ways. ‘The base’ is the
real social existence of man. ‘The base’ is the real relations of production
corresponding to a stage of the development of material productive forces. ‘The
base’ is a mode of production at a particular stage of its development. We make
and repeat propositions of this kind, but the usage is then very different from
Marx’s emphasis on productive activities, in particular structural relations,
constituting the foundation of all other activities. For while a particular
stage of the development of production can be discovered and made precise by
analysis, it is never in practice either uniform or static. It is indeed one of
the central propositions of Marx’s sense of history that there are deep
contradictions in the relationships of production and in the consequent social
relationships. There is therefore the continual possibility of the dynamic
variation of these forces. Moreover, when these forces are considered, as Marx
always considers them, as the specific activities and relationships of real
men, they mean something very much more active, more complicated and more
contradictory than the developed metaphorical notion of ‘the base’ could
possibly allow us to realize.
Base and Productive Forces
So we have to say that
when we talk of ‘the base’, we are talking of a process and not a state. And we
cannot ascribe to that process certain fixed properties for subsequent
deduction to the variable processes of the superstructure. Most people who have
wanted to make the ordinary proposition more reasonable have concentrated on
refining the notion of superstructure. But I would say that each term of the
proposition has to be revalued in a particular direction. We have to revalue
‘determination’ towards the setting of limits and the exertion of pressure, and
away from a predicted, prefigured and controlled content. We have to revalue ‘superstructure’
towards a related range of cultural practices, and away from a reflected,
reproduced or specifically dependent content. And, crucially, we have to
revalue ‘the base’ away from the notion of a fixed economic or technological
abstraction, and towards the specific activities of men in real social and
economic relationships, containing fundamental contradictions and variations
and therefore always in a state of dynamic process.
It is worth observing
one further implication behind the customary definitions. ‘The base’ has come
to include, especially in certain 20th-century developments, a strong and
limiting sense of basic industry. The emphasis on heavy industry, even, has
played a certain cultural role. And this raises a more general problem, for we
find ourselves forced to look again at the ordinary notion of ‘productive
forces’. Clearly what we are examining in the base is primary productive
forces. Yet some very crucial distinctions have to be made here. It is true
that in his analysis of capitalist production Marx considered ‘productive work’
in a very particular and specialized sense corresponding to that mode of
production. There is a difficult passage in the Grundrisse in
which he argues that while the man who makes a piano is a productive worker,
there is a real question whether the man who distributes the piano is also a
productive worker; but he probably is, since he contributes to the realization
of surplus value. Yet when it comes to the man who plays the piano, whether to
himself or to others, there is no question: he is not a productive worker at
all. So piano-maker is base, but pianist superstructure. As a way of
considering cultural activity, and incidentally the economics of modern
cultural activity, this is very clearly a dead-end. But for any theoretical
clarification it is crucial to recognize that Marx was there engaged in an
analysis of a particular kind of production, that is capitalist commodity
production. Within his analysis of that mode, he had to give to the notion of
‘productive labour’ and ‘productive forces’ a specialized sense of primary work
on materials in a form which produced commodities. But this has narrowed
remarkably, and in a cultural context very damagingly, from his more central
notion of productive forces, in which, to give just brief
reminders, the most important thing a worker ever produces is himself, himself
in the fact of that kind of labour, or the broader historical emphasis of men
producing themselves, themselves and their history. Now when we talk of the
base, and of primary productive forces, it matters very much whether we are
referring, as in one degenerate form of this proposition became habitual, to
primary production within the terms of capitalist economic relationships, or to
the primary production of society itself, and of men themselves, material
production and reproduction of real life. If we have the broad sense of
productive forces, we look at the whole question of the base differently, and
we are then less tempted to dismiss as superstructural, and in that sense as
merely secondary, certain vital productive social forces, which are in the
broad sense, from the beginning, basic.
Uses of Totality
Yet, because of the
difficulties of the ordinary proposition of base and superstructure, there was
an alternative and very important development, an emphasis primarily associated
with Luk`cs, on a social ‘totality’. The totality of social practices was
opposed to this layered notion of a base and a consequent superstructure. This
totality of practices is compatible with the notion of social being determining
consciousness, but it does not understand this process in terms of a base and a
superstructure. Now the language of totality has become common, and it is
indeed in many ways more acceptable than the notion of base and superstructure.
But with one very important reservation. It is very easy for the notion of
totality to empty of its essential content the original Marxist proposition.
For if we come to say that society is composed of a large number of social
practices which form a concrete social whole, and if we give to each practice a
certain specific recognition, adding only that they interact, relate and
combine in very complicated ways, we are at one level much more obviously
talking about reality, but we are at another level withdrawing from the claim
that there is any process of determination. And this I, for one, would be very
unwilling to do. Indeed, the key question to ask about any notion of totality
in cultural theory is this: whether the notion of totality includes the notion
of intention. For if totality is simply concrete, if it is simply the
recognition of a large variety of miscellaneous and contemporaneous practices,
then it is essentially empty of any content that could be called Marxist.
Intention, the notion of intention, restores the key question, or rather the
key emphasis. For while it is true that any society is a complex whole of such
practices, it is also true that any society has a specific organization, a
specific structure, and that the principles of this organization and structure
can be seen as directly related to certain social intentions, intentions by
which we define the society, intentions which in all our experience have been
the rule of a particular class. One of the unexpected consequences of the
crudeness of the base/superstructure model has been the too easy acceptance of
models which appear less crude—models of totality or of a complex whole—but
which exclude the facts of social intention, the class character of a particular
society and so on. And this reminds us of how much we lose if we abandon the
superstructural emphasis altogether. Thus I have great difficulty in seeing
processes of art and thought as superstructural in the sense of the formula as
it is commonly used. But in many areas of social and political thought—certain
kinds of ratifying theory, certain kinds of law, certain kinds of institutions,
which after all in Marx’s original formulations were very much part of the
superstructure—in all that kind of social apparatus, and in a decisive area of
political and ideological activity and construction, if we fail to see a
superstructural element we fail to recognize reality at all. These laws,
constitutions, theories, ideologies, which are claimed as natural, or as having
universal validity or significance, simply have to be seen as expressing and
ratifying the domination of a particular class. Indeed the difficulty of
revising the formula of base and superstructure has had much to do with the
perception of many militants—who have to fight such institutions and notions as
well as fighting economic battles—that if these institutions and their
ideologies are not perceived as having that kind of dependent and ratifying
relationship, if their claims to universal validity or legitimacy are not
denied and fought, then the class character of the society can no longer be
seen. And this has been the effect of some versions of totality as the
description of cultural process. Indeed I think that we can properly use the notion
of totality only when we combine it with that other crucial Marxist concept of
‘hegemony’.
The Complexity of Hegemony
It is Gramsci’s great
contribution to have emphasized hegemony, and also to have understood it at a
depth which is, I think, rare. For hegemony supposes the existence of something
which is truly total, which is not merely secondary or superstructural, like
the weak sense of ideology, but which is lived at such a depth, which saturates
the society to such an extent, and which, as Gramsci put it, even constitutes
the limit of common sense for most people under its sway, that it corresponds
to the reality of social experience very much more clearly than any notions
derived from the formula of base and superstructure. For if ideology were merely
some abstract imposed notion, if our social and political and cultural ideas
and assumptions and habits were merely the result of specific manipulation, of
a kind of overt training which might be simply ended or withdrawn, then the
society would be very much easier to move and to change than in practice it has
ever been or is. This notion of hegemony as deeply saturating the consciousness
of a society seems to be fundamental. And hegemony has the advantage over
general notions of totality, that it at the same time emphasizes the facts of
domination.
Yet there are times
when I hear discussions of hegemony and feel that it too, as a concept, is
being dragged back to the relatively simple, uniform and static notion which
‘superstructure’ in ordinary use had become. Indeed I think that we have to
give a very complex account of hegemony if we are talking about any real social
formation. Above all we have to give an account which allows for its elements
of real and constant change. We have to emphasize that hegemony is not
singular; indeed that its own internal structures are highly complex, and have
continually to be renewed, recreated and defended; and by the same token, that
they can be continually challenged and in certain respects modified. That is
why instead of speaking simply of ‘the hegemony’, ‘a hegemony’, I would propose
a model which allows for this kind of variation and contradiction, its sets of
alternatives and its processes of change.
But one thing that is
evident in some of the best Marxist cultural analysis is that it is very much
more at home in what one might call epochal questions than in
what one has to call historicalquestions. That is to say, it is
usually very much better at distinguishing the large features of different
epochs of society, as between feudal and bourgeois, or what might be, than at
distinguishing between different phases of bourgeois society, and different
moments within the phases: that true historical process which demands a much
greater precision and delicacy of analysis than the always striking epochal
analysis which is concerned with main lineaments and features.
Now the theoretical
model which I have been trying to work with is this. I would say first that in
any society, in any particular period, there is a central system of practices,
meanings and values, which we can properly call dominant and effective. This
implies no presumption about its value. All I am saying is that it is central.
Indeed I would call it a corporate system, but this might be confusing, since
Gramsci uses ‘corporate’ to mean the subordinate as opposed to the general and
dominant elements of hegemony. In any case what I have in mind is the central,
effective and dominant system of meanings and values, which are not merely
abstract but which are organized and lived. That is why hegemony is not to be
understood at the level of mere opinion or mere manipulation. It is a whole
body of practices and expectations; our assignments of energy, our ordinary
understanding of the nature of man and of his world. It is a set of meanings
and values which as they are experienced as practices appear as reciprocally
confirming. It thus constitutes a sense of reality for most people in the
society, a sense of absolute because experienced reality beyond which it is
very difficult for most members of the society to move, in most areas of their
lives. But this is not, except in the operation of a moment of abstract
analysis, in any sense a static system. On the contrary we can only understand
an effective and dominant culture if we understand the real social process on
which it depends: I mean the process of incorporation. The modes of
incorporation are of great social significance, and incidentally in our kind of
society have considerable economic significance. The educational institutions
are usually the main agencies of the transmission of an effective dominant
culture, and this is now a major economic as well as cultural activity; indeed
it is both in the same moment. Moreover, at a philosophical level, at the true
level of theory and at the level of the history of various practices, there is
a process which I call the selective tradition: that which, within
the terms of an effective dominant culture, is always passed off as ‘the
tradition’, ‘the significant past’. But always the selectivity is
the point; the way in which from a whole possible area of past and present,
certain meanings and practices are chosen for emphasis, certain other meanings
and practices are neglected and excluded. Even more crucially, some of these meanings
and practices are reinterpreted, diluted, or put into forms which support or at
least do not contradict other elements within the effective dominant culture.
The processes of education; the processes of a much wider social training
within institutions like the family; the practical definitions and organisation
of work; the selective tradition at an intellectual and theoretical level: all
these forces are involved in a continual making and remaking of an effective
dominant culture, and on them, as experienced, as built into our living, its
reality depends. If what we learn there were merely an imposed ideology, or if
it were only the isolable meanings and practices of the ruling class, or of a
section of the ruling class, which gets imposed on others, occupying merely the
top of our minds, it would be—and one would be glad—a very much easier thing to
overthrow.
It is not only the
depths to which this process reaches, selecting and organizing and interpreting
our experience. It is also that it is continually active and adjusting; it
isn’t just the past, the dry husks of ideology which we can more easily
discard. And this can only be so, in a complex society, if it is something more
substantial and more flexible than any abstract imposed ideology. Thus we have
to recognize the alternative meanings and values, the alternative opinions and
attitudes, even some alternative senses of the world, which can be accommodated
and tolerated within a particular effective and dominant culture. This has been
much under-emphasized in our notions of a superstructure, and even in some
notions of hegemony. And the under-emphasis opens the way for retreat to an
indifferent complexity. In the practice of politics, for example, there are
certain truly incorporated modes of what are nevertheless, within those terms,
real oppositions, that are felt and fought out. Their existence within the
incorporation is recognizable by the fact that, whatever the degree of internal
conflict or internal variation, they do not in practice go beyond the limits of
the central effective and dominant definitions. This is true, for example, of
the practice of parliamentary politics, though its internal oppositions are
real. It is true about a whole range of practices and arguments, in any real
society, which can by no means be reduced to an ideological cover, but which
can nevertheless be properly analysed as in my sense corporate, if we find
that, whatever the degree of internal controversy and variation, they do not
exceed the limits of the central corporate definitions.
But if we are to say
this, we have to think again about the sources of that which is not corporate;
of those practices, experiences, meanings, values which are not part of the
effective dominant culture. We can express this in two ways. There is clearly
something that we can call alternative to the effective dominant culture, and
there is something else that we can call oppositional, in a true sense. The
degree of existence of these alternative and oppositional forms is itself a
matter of constant historical variation in real circumstances. In certain
societies it is possible to find areas of social life in which quite real
alternatives are at least left alone. (If they are made available, of course,
they are part of the corporate organization.) The existence of the possibility
of opposition, and of its articulation, its degree of openness, and so on,
again depends on very precise social and political forces. The facts of
alternative and oppositional forms of social life and culture, in relation to
the effective and dominant culture, have then to be recognized as subject to
historical variation, and as having sources which are very significant, as a
fact about the dominant culture itself.
Residual and Emergent Cultures
I have next to introduce
a further distinction, between residual and emergent forms,
both of alternative and of oppositional culture. By ‘residual’ I mean that some
experiences, meanings and values which cannot be verified or cannot be
expressed in the terms of the dominant culture, are nevertheless lived and
practised on the basis of the residue—cultural as well as social—of some
previous social formation. There is a real case of this in certain religious
values, by contrast with the very evident incorporation of most religious
meanings and values into the dominant system. The same is true, in a culture
like Britain, of certain notions derived from a rural past, which have a very
significant popularity. A residual culture is usually at some distance from the
effective dominant culture, but one has to recognize that, in real cultural
activities, it may get incorporated into it. This is because some part of it,
some version of it—and especially if the residue is from some major area of the
past—will in many cases have had to be incorporated if the effective dominant
culture is to make sense in those areas. It is also because at certain points a
dominant culture cannot allow too much of this kind of practice and experience
outside itself, at least without risk. Thus the pressures are real, but certain
genuinely residual meanings and practices in some important cases survive.
By ‘emergent’ I mean,
first, that new meanings and values, new practices, new significances and
experiences, are continually being created. But there is then a much earlier
attempt to incorporate them, just because they are part—and yet not part—of
effective contemporary practice. Indeed it is significant in our own period how
very early this attempt is, how alert the dominant culture now is to anything
that can be seen as emergent. We have then to see, first, as it were a temporal
relation between a dominant culture and on the one hand a residual and on the
other hand an emergent culture. But we can only understand this if we can make
distinctions, that usually require very precise analysis, between
residual-incorporated and residual not incorporated, and between
emergent-incorporated and emergent not incorporated. It is an important fact
about any particular society, how far it reaches into the whole range of human
practices and experiences in an attempt at incorporation. It may be true of
some earlier phases of bourgeois society, for example, that there were some
areas of experience which it was willing to dispense with, which it was
prepared to assign as the sphere of private or artistic life, and as being no
particular business of society or the state. This went along with certain kinds
of political tolerance, even if the reality of that tolerance was malign
neglect. But I am sure it is true of the society that has come into existence
since the last war, that progressively, because of developments in the social
character of labour, in the social character of communications, and in the
social character of decision, it extends much further than ever before in
capitalist society into certain hitherto resigned areas of experience and
practice and meaning. Thus the effective decision, as to whether a practice is
alternative or oppositional, is often now made within a very much narrower
scope. There is a simple theoretical distinction between alternative and
oppositional, that is to say between someone who simply finds a different way
to live and wishes to be left alone with it, and someone who finds a different
way to live and wants to change the society in its light. This is usually the
difference between individual and small-group solutions to social crisis and those
solutions which properly belong to political and ultimately revolutionary
practice. But it is often a very narrow line, in reality, between alternative
and oppositional. A meaning or a practice may be tolerated as a deviation, and
yet still be seen only as another particular way to live. But as the necessary
area of effective dominance extends, the same meanings and practices can be
seen by the dominant culture, not merely as disregarding or despising it, but
as challenging it.
Now it is crucial to
any Marxist theory of culture that it can give an adequate explanation of the
sources of those practices and meanings.We can understand, from an ordinary
historical approach, at least some of the sources of residual meanings and
practices. These are the results of earlier social formations, in which certain
real meanings and values were generated. In the subsequent default of a
particular phase of a dominant culture, there is then a reaching back to those
meanings and values which were created in real societies in the past, and which
still seem to have some significance because they represent areas of human
experience, aspiration and achievement, which the dominant culture undervalues
or opposes, or even cannot recognise. But our hardest task theoretically, is to
find a non-metaphysical and a non-subjectivist explanation of emergent cultural
practice. Moreover, part of our answer to this question bears on the process of
persistence of residual practices.
Class and Human Practice
We do have indeed one
source to hand from the central body of Marxist theory. We have the formation
of a new class, the coming to consciousness of a new class. This remains,
without doubt, quite centrally important. Of course, in itself, this process of
formation complicates any simple model of base and superstructure. It also
complicates some of the ordinary versions of hegemony, although it was
Gramsci’s whole object to see and to create by organization the hegemony of a
proletarian kind which is capable of challenging the bourgeois hegemony. We
have then one central source of new practice, in the emergence of a new class.
But we have also to recognize certain other kinds of source, and in cultural
practice some of these are very important. I would say that we can recognize
them on the basis of this proposition: that no mode of production, and
therefore no dominant society or order of society, and therefore no dominant
culture, in reality exhausts human practice, human energy, human intention.
Indeed it seems to me that this emphasis is not merely a negative proposition,
allowing us to account for certain things which happen outside the dominant
mode. On the contrary, it is a fact about the modes of domination that they
select from and consequently exclude the full range of human practice. The
difficulties of human practice outside or against the dominant mode are, of
course, real. It depends very much whether it is in an area in which the
dominant class and the dominant culture have an interest and a stake. If the
interest and the stake are explicit, many new practices will be reached for,
and if possible incorporated, or else extirpated with extraordinary vigour. But
in certain areas, there will be in certain periods practices and meanings which
are not reached for. There will be areas of practice and meaning which, almost
by definition from its own limited character, or in its profound deformation,
the dominant culture is unable in any real terms to recognize. This gives us a
bearing on the observable difference between, for example, the practices of a
capitalist state and a state like the contemporary Soviet Union in relation to
writers. Since from the whole Marxist tradition literature was seen as an
important activity, indeed a crucial activity, the Soviet state is very much
sharper in investigating areas where different versions of practice, different
meanings and values, are being attempted and expressed. In capitalist practice,
if the thing is not making a profit, or if it is not being widely circulated,
then it can for some time be overlooked, at least while it remains alternative.
When it becomes oppositional in an explicit way, it does, of course, get
approached or attacked.
I am saying then that
in relation to the full range of human practice at any one time, the dominant
mode is a conscious selection and organization. At least in its fully formed
state it is conscious. But there are always sources of real human practice
which it neglects or excludes. And these can be different in quality from the
developing and articulate interests of a rising class. They can include, for
example, alternative perception of others, in immediate personal relationships,
or new perceptions of material and media, in art and science, and within
certain limits these new perceptions can be practised. The relations between
the two kinds of source—the class and the excluded human area—are by no means
necessarily contradictory. At times they can be very close, and on the
relations between them, much in political practice depends. But culturally and
as a matter of theory the areas can be seen as distinct.
Now if we go back to
the cultural question in its most usual form—what are the relations between art
and society, or literature and society?—in the light of the preceding
discussion, we have to say first that there are no relations between literature
and society in that abstracted way. The literature is there from the beginning
as a practice in the society. Indeed until it and all other practices are
present, the society cannot be seen as fully formed. A society is not fully
available for analysis until each of its practices is included. But if we make
that emphasis we must make a corresponding emphasis: that we cannot separate
literature and art from other kinds of social practice, in such a way as to
make them subject to quite special and distinct laws. They may have quite
specific features as practices, but they cannot be separated from the general
social process. Indeed one way of emphasizing this is to say, to insist, that
literature is not restricted to operating in any one of the sectors I have been
seeking to describe in this model. It would be easy to say, it is a familiar
rhetoric, that literature operates in the emergent cultural sector, that it
represents the new feelings, the new meanings, the new values. We might
persuade ourselves of this theoretically, by abstract argument, but when we
read much literature, over the whole range, without the sleight-of-hand of
calling Literature only that which we have already selected as embodying
certain meanings and values at a certain scale of intensity, we are bound to
recognize that the act of writing, the practices of discourse in writing and
speech, the making of novels and poems and plays and theories, all this
activity takes place in all areas of the culture.
Literature appears by
no means only in the emergent sector, which is always, in fact, quite rare. A
great deal of writing is of a residual kind, and this has been deeply true of
much English literature in the last half-century. Some of its fundamental meanings
and values have belonged to the cultural achievements of long-past stages of
society. So widespread is this fact, and the habits of mind it supports, that
in many minds ‘literature’ and ‘the past’ acquire a certain identity, and it is
then said that there is now no literature: all that glory is over. Yet most
writing, in any period, including our own, is a form of contribution to the
effective dominant culture. Indeed many of the specific qualities of
literature, its capacity to embody and enact and perform certain meanings and
values, or to create in single particular ways what would be otherwise merely
general truths, enable it to fulfil this effective function with great power.
To literature, of course, we must add the visual arts and music, and in our own
society the powerful arts of film and of broadcasting. But the general
theoretical point should be clear. If we are looking for the relations between
literature and society, we cannot either separate out this one practice from a
formed body of other practices, nor when we have identified the particular
practice can we give it a uniform, static and ahistorical relation to some
abstract social formation. The arts of writing and the arts of creation and
performance, over their whole range, are parts of the cultural process in all
the different ways, the different sectors, that I have been seeking to
describe. They contribute to the effective dominant culture and are a central
articulation of it. They embody residual meanings and values, not all of which
are incorporated, though many are. They express also and significantly some
emergent practices and meanings, yet some of these may eventually be
incorporated, as they reach people and begin to move them. Thus it was very
evident in the sixties, in some of the emergent arts of performance, that the
dominant culture reached out to transform them or seek to transform them. In
this process, of course, the dominant culture itself changes, not in its
central formation, but in many of its articulated features. But then in a
modern society it must always change in this way, if it is to remain dominant,
if it is still to be felt as in real ways central in all our many activities
and interests.
Critical Theory as Consumption
What then are the
implications of this general analysis for the analysis of particular works of
art? This is the question towards which most discussion of cultural theory
seems to be directed: the discovery of a method, perhaps even a methodology,
through which particular works of art can be understood and described. I would
not myself agree that this is the central use of cultural theory, but let us
for a moment consider it. What seems to me very striking is that nearly all
forms of contemporary critical theory are theories of consumption.
That is to say, they are concerned with understanding an object in such a way
that it can profitably or correctly be consumed. The earliest stage of
consumption theory was the theory of ‘taste’, where the link between the
practice and the theory was direct in the metaphor. From taste you got the more
elevated notion of ‘sensibility’, in which it was the consumption by
sensibility of elevated or insightful works that was held to be the essential
practice of reading, and critical activity was then a function of this sensibility.
There were then more developed theories, in the 1920’s with Richards, and later
in New Criticism, in which the effects of consumption were studied directly.
The language of the work of art as object then became more overt. ‘What effect
does this work (“the poem” as it was ordinarily described) have on me?’ Or,
‘what impact does it have on me?’, as it was later to be put in a much wider
area of communication studies. Naturally enough, the notion of the work of art
as object, as text, as an isolated artifact, became
central in all these later consumption theories. It was not only that the
practices of production were then overlooked, though this
fused with the notion that most important literature anyway was from the past.
The real social conditions of production were in any case neglected because
they were believed to be at best secondary. The true relationship was always
between the taste, the sensibility or the training of the reader and this
isolated work, this object ‘in itself as it really is’, as most people commonly
put it. But the notion of the work of art as object had a further large
theoretical effect. If you ask questions about the work of art seen as object,
they may include questions about the components of its production. Now, as it happened,
there was a use of the formula of base and superstructure which was precisely
in line with this. The components of a work of art were the real activities of
the base, and you could study the object to discover these components.
Sometimes you even studied the components and then projected the object. But in
any case the relationship that was looked for was one between an object and its
components. But this was not only true of Marxist suppositions of a base and a
superstructure. It was true also of various kinds of psychological theory,
whether in the form of archetypes, or the images of the collective unconscious,
or the myths and symbols which were seen as the components of
particular works of art. Or again there was biography, or psycho-biography and
its like, where the components were in the man’s life and the work of art was
an object in which components of this kind were discovered. Even in some of the
more rigorous forms of new criticism and of structuralist criticism, this
essential procedure of regarding the work as an object which has to be reduced
to its components, even if later it may be reconstituted, came to persist.
Objects and Practices
Now I think the true
crisis in cultural theory, in our own time, is between this view of the work of
art as object and the alternative view of art as a practice. Of course it is at
once objected that the work of art is an object: that various
works have survived from the past, particular sculptures, particular paintings,
particular buildings, and these are objects. This is of course true, but the
same way of thinking is applied to works which have no such specific material
existence. There is no Hamlet, no Brothers Karamazov,
no Wuthering Heights, in the sense that there is a particular great
painting. There is no Fifth Symphony, there is no work in the whole
area of music and dance and performance, which is an object in any way
comparable to those works in the visual arts which have survived. And yet the
habit of treating all such works as objects has persisted because this is a
basic theoretical and practical presupposition. But in literature, especially
in drama, in music and in a very wide area of the performing arts, what we have
are not objects but notations. These notations have to be
interpreted in an active way, according to particular conventions. But indeed
this is true over an even wider field. The relationship between the making of a
work of art and the reception of a work of art, is always active, and subject
to conventions, which in themselves are forms of social organization and
relationship, and this is radically different from the production and
consumption of an object. It is indeed an activity and a practice, and in its
accessible forms, although it may in some arts have the character of a material
object, it is still only accessible through active perception and
interpretation. This makes the case of notation, in arts like drama and
literature and music, only a special case of a much wider truth.
What this can show us
here about the practice of analysis is that we have to break from the notion of
isolating the object and then discovering its components. On the contrary we
have to discover the nature of a practice and then its conditions. Often these
two processes may in part resemble each other: in many other cases they are of
radically different kinds. And I would conclude with an observation on the way
this distinction bears on the Marxist tradition of the relation between primary
economic and social practices, and cultural practices. If we suppose that what
is produced in cultural practice is a series of objects, we shall, as in most
current forms of sociological-critical procedure, set about discovering their
components. Within a Marxist emphasis these components will be from what we have
been in the habit of calling the base. We shall isolate certain features which
we can so to say recognize in component form, or we will ask what
processes of transformation or mediation these components have gone through
before they arrived in this accessible state. But I am saying that we should
look not for the components of a product but for the conditions of a practice.
When we find ourselves looking at a particular work, or group of works, often
realizing, as we do so, their essential community as well as their irreducible
individuality, we should find ourselves attending first to the reality of their
practice and the conditions of the practice as it was then executed. And from
this I think we ask essentially different questions. Take for example the way
in which an object is related to a genre, in orthodox criticism. We identify it
by certain leading features, we then assign it to a larger category, the genre,
and then we may find the components of the genre in a particular social history
(although in some variants of Marxist criticism not even that is done, and the
genre is supposed to be some permanent category of the mind). It is not that
way of proceeding that seems to be required. The recognition of the relation of
a collective mode and an individual project—and these are the only categories
that we can initially presume—is a recognition of related practices. That is to
say, the irreducibly individual projects that particular works are, may come in
experience and in analysis to show resemblances which allow us to group them
into collective modes. These are by no means always genres. They may exist as
resemblances within and across genres. They may be the practice of a group in a
period, rather than the practice of a phase in a genre. But as we discover the
nature of a particular practice, and the nature of the relation between an
individual project and a collective mode, we find that we are analysing, as two
forms of the same process, both its active composition and its conditions of
composition, and in either direction this is a complex of extending active
relationships. This means, of course, that we have no built-in procedure of the
kind which is indicated by the fixed character of an object. We have the
principles of the relations of practices, within a discoverably intentional
organization, and we have the available hypotheses of dominant, residual and
emergent. But what we are actively seeking is the true practice which has been
alienated to an object, and the true conditions of practice—whether as literary
conventions or as social relationships—which have been alienated to components
or to mere background. As a general proposition this is only an emphasis, but
it seems to me to suggest at once the point of break and the point of
departure, in practical and theoretical work, within an active and
self-renewing Marxist cultural tradition.
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