Hannah Arendt reads the refusal of the passengers in terms
of her larger critique of totalitarianism and the break-down of authority
within the state. As the title of Moten’s poem indicates, I believe that this
is yet another example (from a litany of examples in his poetry and
scholarship) of the (forced) experiment of Black life in the United States.
Here what is being tested is another form of politics, a politics of the
unauthorized, unlegislated, and unadministered. The refusal to leave a train
indicates not just an isolated event for Moten, but a continuum of spontaneous
resistance and refusal definitive of Black ontology. To not leave the train is
a test—a testing of the authority of the municipality and thus the state. It is
also a test—as in an experiment. Or: “experimental slant can’t help but hurt
you. look how hard and sharp it makes you breathe. You have to refuse in real
time with things that revise in real time when the wind is closed.” Like music
composition and performance, refusing to vacate a train is also an expression
of the general intellect inasmuch as it objectifies knowledge that becomes
transmissable within a particular cultural tradition, namely the knowledge of
resisting artfully. Not unlike the autonomists, Black life is characterized—if
not essentialized—by forms of refusal that do not conform to state authority,
that, in other words, do not play into the hands of sanctioned political
expression.
Echoing the notion of the “post-political” in autonomist
discourse, Moten coins the term “ante-politics.” What Black collectivity and
autonomists share most in common is the tendency towards refusals that anteriorize
politics, forcing political expression outside or beyond the enclosures of
governance towards what Saidiya Hartman calls a “politics without a proper
locus.” So that the “rent party is the curriculum of the rent party,” which is
to say, theory and practice become immediate to one another through collective social
expression. “This is how we never arrive” is obviously a reference to the train
stuck at 110th St., but it also echoes Moten’s larger
historical-ontological-political project, which employs Afro-Derridian
formulations and terminology to register a temporality that is anterior—other
than itself. To not arrive, in this case, is to practice a politics of the
“ante”—of the exterior; one that will not cohere into a state formation, that
will uphold an ongoing experiment, an ongoing test of “fail[ing] to legislate.”
These connections are elaborated in Moten’s collaboration with Stefano Harney, The Undercommons: Fugitive Planning and
Black Study, which evokes numerous political and social formations against
the state and university. Not least of these is the undercommons itself, which
like the maroon communities that precede it creates enclaves autonomous from
the intervention of the Anti-Black state.
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