 |
| |
| Index des articles | Article index |
|
   
 |
On
the Difficulty of Being Glocal
|
 |
 |
Bruno
Latour, Domus, March 2004, no. 2,
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Universalism used to be a rather simple affair: the more detached
from local traditions, the more universal you became. If the stoics
could be called ‘citizens of the world’, it’s because
they accepted being part of the ‘human race’, above and
beyond the narrow labels of ‘Greek’ and ‘barbarian’.
A regular scale seemed to lead from local to global, offering a compass
along which every position could be mapped. Until recently, the more
modern you were, the higher up you ascended; the less modern you were,
the lower down you were confined.
Things have now changed a lot. What now is more universal: the American
world order or the French Republic? The forces of globalization or
those who call themselves anti-mondialists? Local farmers daily influenced
by the price fluctuations of commodities or local teachers insulated
behind the walls of civil service? Amazon Indians able to mobilize
NGOs in their defence or some famous philosopher secluded on campus?
And what about China? Certainly a billion and a half people will add
some weight to whichever definition of the world they adhere to, no
matter how local it might appear to Westerners – if there is
still a West.
The situation is all the more confusing because, as many anthropologists
have shown, people devise new ‘localisms’ even faster
than globalization is supposed to destroy them. Traditions are invented
daily, entire cultures are coming into existence, languages are being
made up; as to religious affiliations, they may become even more entrenched
than before. It’s as if the metaphor of ‘roots’
had been turned upside down: the more ‘uprooted’ by the
forces of modernization, the farther down identities are attaching
themselves. Modernization, with its clear frontlines, has become as
confusing as a game of Go at mid-play.
Hence the success of the word glocal, which signifies that labels
can no longer be safely positioned along the former scale, stretching,
by successive extensions, from the most local to the most universal.
Instead of subtracting one another, conflicting identities keep being
added. And yet they remain in conflict and thus have to be sorted
out, since no one can belong to all of them at once…
But if the compass of modernization is spinning so madly, how can
we distinguish between legitimate and illegitimate glocal attachments?
First we have to modify this bad habit of ranking all entities of
society from the largest to the smallest through some sort of zooming
effect. ‘Large’ and ‘small’ are devoid of
practical meaning. It’s wrong to assume that society is made
of Russian dolls fitting into one another, all the way from planet
Earth to the inside secrets of an individual heart. Wall Street is
not a bigger space than, let’s say, Gaza. From the boardroom
of IBM, one can’t see farther outside than a shopkeeper in Jakarta.
As for the Oval Office, who could think it’s inhabited by people
with ‘larger views’ than those of my concierge?
What we really mean by size is connectedness. Yes, the floor of Wall
Street might be more connected, through many more channels, with many
other places on Earth than my study, but it’s not bigger or
wider; it does not see clearer; it’s not more universal than
any other locus. All places are equally local – what else could
they be? – but they are hooked up differentially to several
others. Apart from those links, we are all blind. Thus, it’s
the quality of what is transported from place to place that creates
asymmetries between sites: one can be said to be ‘bigger’
than some other, but only as long as connections are reliably maintained.
It’s never the case that one site is more universal, more encompassing,
more open-minded than any other, in and of itself.
Once this radical ‘flattening’ of the land has been obtained,
once every global view has been firmly localized into one specific
site, once attention is focused on the connecting networks, it’s
possible to ask a second question: since we see something only thanks
to what circulates between sites, how can we be made aware of the
fragility of our own interpretations? A club is not good or bad depending
on its extension – the more inclusive the better, or, on the
contrary, the more exclusive the better – but depending on its
ability to fathom its own limitations when it excludes or includes
other members.
This is where the old label cosmopolitan could get a new meaning.
Although Ulrich Beck recently tried to use it as a synonym of ‘having
multiple identities all at once’, Isabelle Stengers has proposed
a much more radical meaning: politics of the cosmos. How can we entertain
not just many identities at various degrees of extensions, but different
cosmos?
That cosmos are also up for grabs is a new and unsettling idea. Before,
there existed a single nature and different cultures, some of which
were ‘limited’ to a local point of view while others were
broad enough to offer membership to ‘citizens of the cosmos’.
But how to build the City of which they are supposed to be the citizens?
Where is the common home that we could live in? Such a task can no
longer be simplified in advance by saying that the wider the perspective
the better it is, for there is no ‘larger’ view anymore.
In the old cosmopolitan view, there were no politics and no cosmos
because the higher unit was already given: one had only to break away
from one’s own attachments in order to reach it. But in Stengers’
view, there is no more strenuous task than to invent political tools
capable of revealing how all cosmos differ from one another. It’s
an even more risky endeavour to imagine how they could be gathered
into some future common arrangement. If cosmopolitan is an adjective
fit for a fashion magazine, cosmopolitics, on the other hand, is the
duty of the future, the only way to build the common Domus.
|
 |
 |
|