intersecting vocabularies: a transversal of brazil between “disruptive junes”
DESCRIPTION
This text designs an analytic and narrative cartography of the process of creating the book Vocabulário político para processos estéticos (A Political Vocabulary for Aesthetic Processes), which I conceived and edited, and which included the participation of more than 30 authors – diverse artists, researchers and activists throughout Brazil.TRANSCRIPT
Intersecting Vocabularies: A Transversal of Brazil Between “Disruptive Junes”
Cristina Ribas
“The political imagination unlocked itself and produced an incision in political time.”
Peter Pál Pélbart, Eu sou ninguém (I Am No One), 19/07/2013 1
Sections of the Text
1. Presentation
2. Language, Idiom, Financial Capitalism: Seizures and Proliferations of Meaning
3. Transversality
4. Method and Methodologies: A Transforming Encounter?
5. The Invention-Book and A Few Intersections
1. Presentation
This text designs an analytic and narrative cartography of the process of creating the book
Vocabulário político para processos estéticos (A Political Vocabulary for Aesthetic
Processes), which I conceived and edited, and which included the participation of more
than 30 authors – diverse artists, researchers and activists throughout Brazil. The process
of creating the book began in Rio de Janeiro, with funding from Funarte (Brazil’s national
Foundation for the Arts) through the 2013 Redes Grant. The book arose in the midst of a
cycle of protests that questioned a series of anti-democratic and neo-developmentalist
policies in Brazil, culminating in what has been called, variously, June Journeys, Brazilian
Spring, June Cycle, and Disruptive June, among other names.2 The book is the homonym
of a project that took place through diverse encounters in April 2014. Vocabulário político
was launched in January 2015 with free distribution. It can also be downloaded here
(Portuguese only) (hiperlik http://vocabpol.cristinaribas.org/vroli). This text is itself a
cartography, in that, it narrates part of the bookmaking process, brings up a few marks of
this process and opens new paths for investigation.
The conception of Vocabulário político para processos estéticos took place in parallel to a
cycle of protests that broke out in Brazil beginning in mid-April 2013, with the first protests
of the Free Pass Movement MPL (Movimento Passe Livre)3 in the cities of Porto Alegre,
Florianópolis and Salvador. The initial objective of this project was not primarily to serve as
a strategy connected to the cycle of protests. Instead, it aimed at creating a strategy of
provoking a species of transversals a crossing-over between creative and political spaces
in certain circles of aesthetic and political production in Brazil that had also become
mobilized by the cycle of protests. The project’s central objective was to map concepts and
practices through an encounter of differences, through a multiple (or diverse) collective,
with participants from various parts of the country.4 By collecting concepts and practices
that the participants brought together, the book became a product beyond-vocabulary, an
archive and a toolbox for collective processes.5 6 However, the way we dealt with these
concepts was not based on the sort of objectivity one might encounter with other
toolboxes, we let ourselves drift and detour, playing with possible and unlikely connections,
for example the word infrastructure linked with maternity, opening up new political readings
and interconnections. We produced entry-concepts that could lead the reader to discover
other points of departure or other tools; in other words, our tollbox created intersections
with other vocabularies, and between vocabularies.
Political vocabulary is therefore an invention-book with more than 30 expressed in diverse
languages, making use of narratives, personal accounts, critical and theoretical
arguments, fiction, diagrams, poetry and images, among other forms. A major part of this
content arises with, or passes through, the Disruptive Junes. Meanwhile, this current text
follows two questions or presuppositions that I examine in the book’s Editorial/Dis-editorial
(hiperlink para http://vocabpol.cristinaribas.org/bulariovoca/), investigating especially the
concept of “transversality” and our possibility of making vocabularies “intersect”. The two
questions that I examine in the Editorial are centred on both the “making” of a vocabulary
(“how can we make a vocabulary?” or its method) as well as on its effects (“what does a
vocabulary want to make?”). By moving myself between these two questions, I aim to
open analyses regarding the effects of Political vocabulary in the political and cultural
context of today’s Brazil.
Here, I consider the concept of “transversality” through the practice of “cartography” as
conceptualized by Félix Guattari and Suely Rolnik, further developed in Brazil today in
“transversalist” academic research by scholars including Virgínia Kastrup, Eduardo
Passos, Regina Benevides de Barros and Tania Maria Galli da Fonseca, among many
others.7 The concept of “intersectionality,” for its part, arises from feminist struggles and
from the necessity of removing “white feminism” from a central position in these struggles
to create space for an “intersectional feminism”8. The objective of “intersectionality” is to
create passages, crossings or lines of solidarity between diverse struggles including those
that are constituted around notions of race, sexuality, class and gender. In this text, I will
not investigate “intersectional feminism”, but I will appropriate the concept of
intersectionality without removing it from its political background, while trying to activate it
in the space and mode of happening for our Vocabularies.
The analysis of the process of constructing the book is, in practice, the investigation of the
possibility of applying transversality and activating intersectionality in encounters such as
this one: encounters that seek to produce by putting artistic and political practices into
contact with each other, as well as by including other practices, such as the educational,
mediatic and philosophical.9
In order to make the book, I invited people or groups whose practices arise, in large part,
from hybrid places, who rehearse and perform interventions in fields of diverse areas of
knowledge, or through transversals among and between idioms.10 These people produce
art, radical strategies for research, knowledge production and learning, and urban
interventions. They create various dispositifs: performances, political and social
mobilizations and translations; they organize books, participate in popular education
groups, organize co-research workshops, vegan festivals, digital culture festivals, critical
cartography festivals and they give horseback riding lessons, among other activities.
I invited the Agência Transitiva collective, as well as several individuals: Andre Basséres,
André Luiz Mesquita, Beatriz Lemos, Breno Silva, Cecília Cotrim, Davi Marcos, Daniela
Mattos, Enrico Rocha, Giseli Vasconcelos, Graziela Kunsch, Inês Nin, Isabel Ferreira,
Jeferson Andrade, Julia Ruiz, Juliana Dorneles, Kadija de Paula, Laura Lima, Lucas
Rodrigues, Lucas Sargentelli, Margit Leisner, Pedro Mendes, Raphi Soifer, Rodrigo
Nunes, and Sara Uchoa.11 Inês and Sara were also part of the production team, working
respectively on the website’s design and on the production of the project. Anamalia Ribas,
Annick Kleizen, Bárbara Lito, Geo Abreu, Steffania Paola and Tiago Régis joined later,
contributing with texts or comments. Luiza Cilente transcribed the audio of some of the
conversations. Texts from Brian Holmes, Fernando Monteiro (from the Coletivo Das Lutas
group), Hélio Oiticica, Josinaldo Medeiros and RhR - an “organism” from Rio de Janeiro -
were added as Entries or participating on other Entries. Priscila Gonzaga, from Editora
Aplicação, designed the book.
The project is based on the understanding that creative and political processes also pass
through the creation of concepts that mobilize their own practice. That is to say, the
understanding that which we do not create without modifying - or, in other words, without
actualizing - concepts and practices. In this sense, a mapping of the enunciations,
discourses and signs that proliferate contemporary life can show us productive and
emergent passages of meaning between political effect and creative potential.12 The desire
to approach productive spaces of creation and of politics by producing a transversal
between them comes from my own experience as an activist in social and environmental
movements at the same time as I was creating actions in public spaces that were more
related to idioms in the field of art. These actions ranged from urban interventions to
community-based, participative art (although I recognize that these are somewhat
problematic concepts that I do not plan to develop here). Political vocabulary encouraged
me to design a hypothesis - affirmed by many theories of politics - that politics itself
prescinds from creation, that its creative dimension disconnects from a thought politics,
and that politics prescinds from the transformative encounters that engage processes of
subjectivation, processes that, on its way, open processes of autonomization. Therefore,
the modes of making and doing that place themselves in hybrid territories seem to answer
to the complexity of political encounters in contemporary cities, as well as to the
complexity of the production of life itself in its multiple singularities and commonalities.
The space of the streets themselves in Brazil during the Disruptive Junes cycle of protests
- both for those who were literally on the streets and those who were not - was marked by
the design of diverse transversals, such as in the protests that departed from the favela of
Rocinha demanding to know the whereabouts of Amarildo Dias de Souza’s body13,
breaking the enunciated dichotomy of “the favela coming down to the asphalt” and urging
the asphalt itself to conjure up the body. As Barbara Szaniecki wrote, alongside the
“Where is Amarildo?” (“Cadê o Amarildo?”) meme, “a tide of expressive forms [emerged]
crossing the real and virtual polis, manifesting its pain at the massacre of young people in
the [favela of] Maré and at Amarildo’s disappearance in Rocinha”14. In the intersectionality
of that conjuring, a proliferation of enunciations, hearings and new shouts caused effects
that were not only political, but also aesthetic, to arise.
Paolo Virno writes that idiom, in and of itself, has a political capacity. For Virno, the
articulated discourse is a virtuoso praxis, the ultimate end of which is the exercise of this
ability. Language for Virno is simultaneously production (poeisis) and cognition (episteme).
According to Virno, politics creates a body with the very being of idiom. 15 Virno analyzes
the capacity of idiom and of virtuoso performances (comparing the contemporary worker to
the artist) to the capturing of this capacity as a productive mode. He sees here an aspect
of the autonomization of the worker, in which linguistic performance becomes an “activity
without an end product”. However, it is at this same point of absolute abstraction that the
capture and production of the value of vital potential reside. As Franco Bifo Berardi says, it
is here that a real body and the reproduction of value separate, given that in the era of
financial capital, not even interchangeable goods are necessary, in the same way that
bodies and lives have become disposable.16
In one of the project’s first conversations, Breno Silva showed how he perceived the
conception of a new vocabulary. For him, the vocabulary that arose from our project could
be activated by writing short texts, which would operate in the form of a glossary;
therefore, from that point, we could observe how new vocabularies might arise. Breno did
not propose that these two moments need be distinct (the creation of the vocabulary and
its effectuation) and distant from each other, but he clearly elaborated how we, at times
atomized by incisions or by the observation of fragments of time, might perceive the
constitution of new vocabularies. When I proposed that we begin based on the notion of
vocabulary, it was with the intuition of observing the living and relational dimension of
idiom so that, listening to one another, we might be able to operate a sort of analysis of the
words, the concepts, and the signs that we mobilize, create, deny and resignify, among
other actions. In a certain way, I wanted us to be able to look at our disruptive April (we
were meeting in the middle of the cycle of the disruptive Junes) through vocabularies that
were already intersecting. It is from here that we began the artificial operation of giving
form, to a certain extent, to our more or less invisible vocabularies, giving a form that took
shape as a book: as it passed through the stages of writing, diagrams, design and image.
The invention-book is therefore this procedure, or this Strategy (hiperlink para
http://vocabpol.cristinaribas.org/estrategia/ ), as Julia Ruiz wrote in Political vocabulary. In
the vocabulary of cartographies, “mapping” is at once a presentation conferring visibility
and expression, but it is also a production, and not a representation.17
2. Language, Idiom18, Financial Capitalism: Seizures and Proliferations of
Meaning
Idiom, or how we communicate, how we speak (and what we speak about, if we speak)
are constitutive of our lives, of the singularities that we design, and of the common realities
to which we belong. Idiom, therefore, is directly related to the production of life, the
production of languages and of other idioms, and the creation of other modes of
expression and communication. Vocabularies, however, are part of the living dimension of
idiom, and manifest themselves in our artistic and political practices. Vocabularies are
shaped by multiple forms of miscegenation that expose the marks of our individualities
through plural registries, such as the generation to which we belong, our gender, our
familial relations, relationship to power, our work, our ethnicities, and our languages. But
idioms, like vocabularies, are not directly related to speech, or to the capacity of speech as
a communicative fact. Our vocabularies can--in situations of censorship, trauma and
silencing--remain as non-enunciated idioms; they can remain in a dimension that is neither
audible nor visible within other human expressions. Strategically, they can be neither
heard nor understood, thereby remaining obscured and unsignified.
The force of intersecting vocabularies, for its part, produces enunciations: like an
uncontrollable scream that opens the space in front of the body and finds other bodies to
contaminate that reproduce and modulate that same enunciation. The strength of the
intersection of vocabularies, like that of the social encounter, or as an Evento (hiperlink
para http://vocabpol.cristinaribas.org/evento/), as analyzed by Rodrigo Nunes in Political
Vocabulary, may not only be the space of disputed meaning, but of life itself. In the
context of Brazil’s recent protests, the fusion of the Black Blocs with protesting teachers in
Rio de Janeiro can be thought of as an example of strength. To tell the story quickly: in
October of 2013, Rio de Janeiro military police violently repressed a protest that was part
of the state and municipal teachers’ strike. Black Bloc members joined the teachers in
solidarity. When these Black Blocs were repressed, various new lines of solidarity were
created, seen especially in two new blocs: the “Black Profs” and the “Teachers’ Troupe” .
These two blocs did not allow for distinctions between teachers and Black Bloc members,
which confounded police strategy and created heretofore unseen solidarity in the cycle of
protests in Rio de Janeiro.
We can identify a point of departure for the strength of intersecting vocabularies - and, on
the other hand, the cause of their suppression - in the analyses of authors like Paolo Virno,
Cristian Marazzi, Franco Bifo Berardi and Félix Guattari19, each of whom, in his own way,
shows that linguistic production is currently subsumed by the means of capital (both
cognitive and financial). This results in a brutal flattening: diminishing the potential of the
proliferation of meaning in the social production of idiom.20 This does not mean that we
produce less (to the contrary!), but rather that there is a semiotization of aesthetic and
political production that veers away from the multitudinous proliferation that creative
potential may possess as a function of meaning: the value of capital. As Berardi writes,
this means that there is very little sense for a never-seen quantity of signs. And this also
means, on the other hand, that we become agents of valorization.21
In recent months and years, Brazil22 has, for its own part, shown an uncontrollable
proliferation of enunciations that demand democracy and the right to protest: the
guarantees of basic civil rights when faced with the Brazilian state’s irresponsible spending
(especially on “megaevents”23); the respect of life and of religious differences; and the end
of homophobia, racism and police violence. This uncontrollable proliferation of
enunciations marks the very intensive passages between political and aesthetic
processes.
Faced with what I will call the “greater issue” involving the social meaning of idiom and the
reproduction of value in financial capital, how can we create strategies of visibility for the
vocabularies that proliferate along with our struggles, our lives and the production of
enunciations in the face of macropolitics and macroeconomics? There is currently a shock
between our relationship to production and the meaning of social production, exposing
how capital and the state are ever more conjoined. This shock is an antagonistic conflict in
which distinct positions raise their voices in a more or less territorialized, more or less
normative way (such as the non-legalization of abortion and the homophobic “Family
Statute”, among others). It becomes necessary to affirm that the boycott of the streets’
political forces and creators is a boycott of creative potential itself. This boycott occurs in
diverse spheres, ranging from the media to the government.24
Virno’s defense of reclaiming the concept of multitude, as expressed in A Grammar of the
Multitude, is worth examining here in order to consider the creative potential of life and the
potential to differ with another. Virno recuperates Spinoza’s definition of a multitude that
affirms “plurality” rather than massification (faced with images of the people, or the public).
He writes: “Multitude is the form of social and political existence for the many, seen as
being many: a permanent form, not an episodic or interstitial form”. He presents another
diagram through which he conceptualizes “multitude” in the post-Fordist era, writing that:
An entire gamut of considerable phenomena - linguistic games, forms of
life, ethical inclinations, salient characteristics of production in today’s
world - will end up to be only slightly, or not at all, comprehensible, unless
understood as originating from the mode of being of the many. To
investigate this mode of being, one must have recourse to a rather varied
kind of conceptual orchestration: anthropology, philosophy of language,
criticism of political economics, ethics. One must circumnavigate the
multitude-continent, changing frequently the angle of perspective.25
The “how” that is implicit in this section of Virno’s text is the same as the “how to do” in
Political Vocabulary. This is why assembling a “vocabulary” is a proposal that is artificial,
capenga26 and doubtful, but that can still operate as a productive machine. Guattari invests
in the concept of machine in Chaosmosis, in an amplified conception of machine, a
machine that joins itself to vital processes and becomes “desiring”, or literally, an activation
of libido, producing more desire.27 From the perspective of vocabularies or the intersection
between them, vocabularies can become a machine that does not belong to the “majority”
of speech (of those who already have a voice, those who can speak, or those who speak
in the common sense), but that is also a machine that opens listening and “bulinações”28
that arise in aesthetic and political processes, in exchanges, in creations, in the subjective
transformations that break the semiotics of macropolitics, that interfere with the structure of
the state’s power, and that proliferate social meanings.
3. Transversality
So, how is it then that we “made” the Political Vocabulary? Or how is it that we came to a
definition of a “conceptual orchestration” - as Virno speaks of - from which we made the
vocabulary? The Political Vocabulary as project put people together in a restricted time
frame. We met in a series of intense workshops and discussions over the course of one
week in April 2014. We were not an already constituted group from where the making of
the book could begin. So how is it that we established, from my invitation, a method or a
methodology to make the vocabulary? Collective processes prescind of a “how to do”. In
our case, without a method we could have run the risk of finishing our “working week”
without a working framework. A “how to do” is a mixture between method and strategy. I
conceived, in order to start the week, a sort of framework that asked each participant to
make a “proposition” to the other participants. In one way I didn’t want to over impose
“methods”, and part of my expectation was to hear from the participants which methods or
methodologies they would bring, intrinsic to their practices in their every day life and their
collective processes. Julia Ruiz asked (problematizing!) if we would make a vocabulary
that could “teach” something to aesthetic processes, and many people have suggested
that the vocabulary could be the other way round: aesthetical for political processes!
Amongst several methodologies I have used myself, studying and mobilizing them in arts
projects, in the University and in independent research, and thus in the political processes
in which I took part, I brought to that week of work both notions of research and radical
learning.29 In my practice the notion of research is very much inspired by the notion of
“militant research” from the groups Colectivo Situaciones and Precarias a La Deriva.30
Both methodologies and concepts - learning and research - work together and they
encounter each other also in the conception of a “multitude” (Virno) and the “processes of
subjectivation” (Guattari). Precarias a La Deriva conceptualized the notion of “militant
research” as:
[…] a process of re-appropriation of our capacity of creation of worlds driven
by a stubborn militant decision that is not comfortable with the “a priori”, the
“should be”, or old and new models... but one that interrogates,
problematizes and pushes the real through a series a concrete procedures.31
In my Ph.D at Goldsmiths College (in London, UK), where I study with both eyes turned
towards Brazil, I have been focusing on Felix Guattari's schizoanalytical cartographies and
four other concepts developed by him associated directly to the cartographies. They are
the “ethico-aestetical paradigm”, “collective assemblage of enunciation”, “institutional
analysis” and “transversality”. The “transversality” can be understood as the production of
an analysis strategy (being a mode of observation, an implication, a listening, amongst
other procedures). Transversality has to be able to break majoritarian aspects and open
positionalities, singularizations and interventions. Following this concept and practice, I
realize, allows transversal analysis in two ways: in one way it can create interventions or
crossings in fields of knowledge or in different practices (crossing through practices,
crossing through institutions), and in the other way, in group work, it can activate authentic
speeches (or testimonies) that will possibly address an institutional analysis and that might
be able to produce “cuts” in the institutions themselves.
The concept of transversality appears in Guattari’s practice of institutional psychotherapy
when working in the Psychiatric Clinic La Borde in the outskirts of Paris.32 The clinic was
directed by Jean Oury and was opened in 1951. Guattari had worked there since 1955,
learning and collaborating with Oury on several articles. A series of transformations tested
in the clinic corresponded to the movement of institutional analysis and was parallel to
community health movements that was happening elsewhere in the USA, Europe and
other countries (a movement known in Brazil as “luta anti-manicomial”).33 In the Clinic,
Guattari and Oury developed their most significant contributions to institutional psychiatry,
literally turning “upside down” some practices by creating “transversals” that could
problematize the psychiatric institution in its power, control, care and therapeutic
dimensions. The critique made by Guattari came from his studies on psychoanalysis,
studying with Jacques Lacan and being his patient for many years. Psychoanalysis was
the most common method applied all over Europe, both for individual treatment in private
consultation and in the psychiatric asylums.
La Borde clinic was open to visitors, had interns, and open sessions of “institutional
analysis” that used to receive militants, sociologists, philosophers and others. Guattari and
Oury observed it was necessary to shift from the intern’s private treatment to a treatment
that would focus on the forces of the institution itself. Moving away from the “one-to-one”
therapy (analyst and analysand), they wanted to be able to detach the treatment from
psychoanalytical truths (based on Oedipian triangulation), to be able to look at the
collective or social production of pathologies, and, on the other hand, social production of
desire. Guattari and Oury worked through the transversalization of the treatment by
bringing La Borde’s patients (both the professions and the patients) to a collective session
of analysis, in which the analysand was the institution itself and not the isolated patient
(which does not mean that each patient stopped being taken care of case by case, or that
they stopped the one-to-one therapy). Transversality requires that, in a collective session
of analysis, each participant in the session, whether a healthcare provider, a patient or a
visitor, revisits their own role. This happens, for example, through the analysis of each
person’s symbolic role on how he or she could become an “expression of the institution’s
unconscious subjectivity”. Which means, how one can simultaneously speak from a
particular position and “be the institution itself”, and by analysing this “symbiosis”, produce
new points of view, dislodging the power from the speeches in which it is often embedded
and launching its redistribution.
Recovering those two ways by which we can put transversality into practice, in the first
way as a method for collective practices, configuring an analysis on the institutions and the
forms they imprint in collective formations, the second being the form through which the
collective configures itself. Guattari created a distinction that is very useful between
“subject groups” and “subjected groups”. The first term defines groups that are able to
conceive their own mechanisms and realize their end (because they have autonomy in the
conduct of their own process). The second describes groups that follow rigid methods,
reproducing hierarchies. Those groups tend not to create space for processes of
subjectivation that are more transformative. For Guattari, accordingly to Watson, the
subject group is the one that “has managed to organize itself according to the structure of
transversality”.34
The second way that I see we can put transversality into practice refers to a capacity of
crossing through practices and forms, institutions and fields of knowledge. The drawing of
a transversal in this case would be provoking a tension between majoritarian and
minoritarian becomings, opening exchanges directly in the micropolitical field, without
having to refer to the macropolitical field (where major significations reside). In this case
there would be a break in the binary relation that constantly reflects practices to a
structure. As an example, we can think about the proliferation of enunciations in the streets
of Brazil in the cycle of Junes and how this is addressed to the majoritarian structure
constituted by the Brazilian state. State control of power ignores and/or over - signifies
these “minor enunciations”.
Transversality as a method, or as a systematized method that can be accessed and
applied in contingent and temporary situations, can be encountered today in the definition
of the “schizoanalytical cartographies” emerging from the work of Brazilian psychologists,
lecturers and researchers in several. Regina Benevides de Barros and Eduardo Passos,
from UFF (Universidade Federal Fluminense), explain that the cartographic method has
both a clinical and a political direction, that it has a “transversality coefficient” that
guarantees a communication that does not extinguishes itself in the two-dimensional axes
of the socius (the vertical and the horizontal). The cartographic method, following them, is
always transversal. The transversal is, indeed, the creation of a third vector that crosses
through the vertical - the one that organizes difference (producing hierarchies) - and the
horizontal, which organizes by affinity, putting minorities together. Barros and Passos
affirm that the “political nature of the cartographic method” concerns the capacity of
producing such a third vector. In the production of transversal methodologies other
perspectives are rehearsed, incisions that might be able to relate aesthetic and political
processes together.35
4. Methods and Methodologies: A Transformative Encounter?
In the meetings that were held for the making of the book in Rio de Janeiro we did not
center our conversation around the construction of a group process in the sense of
attempting to produce a collectivity, nor did we deeply exchange differing group
methodologies. Several interventions and contributions by participants in the project
exceeded my pre-conception of how that week of work should function and in a way where
we could move on from understanding what had been the book’s pre-project. In conceiving
this project and group to make the Political vocabulary, there was already thinking about
the transversal practices that the participants had been developing in different fields, social
constitutions and institutions. By enabling us to share our modes of production - how we
work, how we perform - there could certainly be a path to investigating our vocabularies,
observing similitudes and differences, that would not only be conceptual, but also show
how they are expressed in our practices. Personally, my desire was that in the process of
the intersection of our vocabularies, by listening to each other, we could learn with each
other about our modes of doing but could also revisit our positionalities. In this sense there
was a “gamble” for the encounter to be subjectively transformative. 36
In different configurations, I had already worked with some of the invited participants
before on common projects in the arts, such as Beatriz Lemos, Isabel Ferreira, Breno Silva
and Graziela Kunsch, or I had worked with some of them in projects or groups engaged
with social mobilization and political organizing (Pedro Mendes, Inês Nin, Sara Uchoa and
Rodrigo Nunes). From close observation of how some of the people worked, like Juliana
Dorneles, Raphi Soifer and Laura Lima, and by noticing their transformative capacity when
working collectively, I wanted to invite them to be in the project. Some like André Mesquita
and Julia Ruiz for example, were invited because I wanted to share with them research
processes and the conceptualization of events and creative and political processes, as
they do in their own research and militancy. Besides, the gathering enabled unpredictable
exchanges between the participants.
Amongst all the things, sensations, perceptions, collective experiences and life chronicles
that emerged at the end of a week of working together, we were also simultaneously listing
and diagramming the concepts that we wanted to work through in the book. “Tools” could
be useful among us to establish a common working terrain, what could become at the
same time content for the future book. The concepts and practices, or the vocables,
literally from a vocabulary, are in the book called Entries. I remember it was André
Mesquita who first classified in categories the list of vocables that appeared in our
conversations. From this first mapping and classification we could start understanding not
just the “inner contents of the content”, but also how they could operate. The concepts that
appeared and that were more related to group dynamics, what I call the “toolbox” for
collective processes, were Complexity, Experience, Hidrosolidarity, Humor, Listening,
Neighborhood, responsa-ability37, Strategy, Transduction and Writing, amongst others. In
the meeting the group Agência Transitiva presented their method of Check In and Check
Out. It became a beautiful way of introducing speeches or testimonies that could connect
to our subjective states, and it also operated as a living cartography of the participants. In
the Check In and Check Out we had a precise time to say how we were feeling, what
could positively work as a feedback of the collective processes we were engaged in.
“Transversality” didn’t make the book as an entry, but in our encounter it operated through
me, in the way I was (or thought I was) “subjacently” catalyzing the work to be done, acting
in a sort of experimental mixture of work as mediator, artist, militant investigator and
curator at the same time. A mediator usually has the role of keeping the conversation
inside the very specific proposition that holds the group together, of counting time and of
opening space for different positionalities. My experience as project organizer and
subsequently as book editor allowed me to experiment with ways of working that I hadn’t
experienced before. From my previous experiences I wanted to be able to activate in
myself that attentive listening, that “transversality coefficient” that should be brought by the
participants as well. How could I, from my previous experiences, configure a catalyst
position that would not defend any form, institution or field of knowledge given previously?
How could I configure with the participants a space in which we could attentively listen to
each other, that could authorize authentic positionalities, and, by listening to our multiple
desires, could give shape to a plural vocabulary? How could I not try to maintain a neutral
position (is it even possible to be neutral?), but rather one that could be active, catalytic
(increasing heat, contact, relation) and bulinadora (an inciter).
In order to guarantee the encounter in its transformative potency we should, in the analysis
of our discourses, be able to dislodge or displace our points of view, open ourselves to
confront our perceptions and concepts to other perceptions and ways of living that could
be different, even if making use of the same concept (the same noun!) or practice. That
would be a way of putting transversality into practice. And that did indeed happen. It was
important, for example, when Juliana Dorneles proposed making a dynamics that would
start with a one-to-one dorsal spine massage and unfold into a moment of writing. She
asked us how we could produce from other places. These other places, I saw, would not
be relying on discursive, narrative, analytical or verbal exchanges from our concepts and
practices. In this sense, enlarging what Julia asked about the aesthetic processes that
could “learn with” political processes, I see that what we could “learn with each other” was
very important. The notion of “learning” here would have to be inflected, however, to the
processes of subjectivation, to the transformational processes and to what it is that makes
a position shift beyond attentive listening. It seems that one cannot come out of a process
with no record whatsoever of what was being said, with no affectation. I believe that the
possibility of producing transversally comes from the ability of disconnecting from the very
majoritarian identitarian factors in the constitution of a subject (and of a struggle). The
necessity of producing an identity is, however, one of the mechanisms of political
resistance. This disconnecting could give space to other perceptions of one’s majoritarian
factors, which could connect us in different minoritarian aspects. That might mean leaving
a mode of production or signification of the production in a specific field or discourse in
order to occupy other spaces that are more complex, more problematic, more hybrid,
uneasy to be defined and circumscribed. This is a total strategy. This strategy dislodges,
for example, the understanding of the aesthetic effects of creativity. What new spaces for
creative affect and aesthetic effect can emerge from that?
The process of making the book incited, therefore, numerous displacements. Some of us
came out of the meeting very confident “about what” or “how” the contribution to the book
would be (written, drawn or diagrammed). Some of us left with a well consolidated
sensation of what the contribution would be, which later came to be the content itself
assuming a form, recovering some of the threads of the content-diagram we worked on
throughout the week. But the process of the book also incited contributions that took a
while to arrive, taking longer because they had to gain sense, they had to occupy a body,
and those especially called me to continue the process of attentive listening, reconfiguring
in each situation the catalyst-editor in relation with the vocabulosos-writes. In this process
of the transformation of content taking shape, other transformations emerged. One of
those was the process of replacement facing that displacement, a certain kind of
Transduction that operated together with the desiring production, with the desire of
operating new listenings, new readings and new “out loud readings”.
It is clear that each methodology has escape routes. That each productive methodology
cannot restrict a process to the point of freezing it. That is why what emerges here is a
“bastard vocabulary”, as was said by a friend when he saw the book - a vocabulary that
emerges from the collection of multiple voices that often talk together, in unison. Maybe
the book is the result of a process in which some allowed themselves to bulinar more to
each other, allowing an entering into a creative and political estate. That is why it is not
worth describing here the project in a way that the description serves only to justify a
process, as an incarcerated memory of the process, where we can identify plenty affects
but few effects. I perceive that what is worthwhile in the process of provoking transversals
is the continuous analysis of the productive way by which each Entry appeared, so from
this we can imagine and desire other intersectionalities.
I finish this text with a narrative of some of the experiences of the participants and their
writing processes, then connect with actual dimensions of these experiences, being the
participants more or less connected to social struggles and the Disruptive Junes.
5. The Invention-Book and A Few Intersections
Now that the book is launched it is as if an attention to the future has opened, a future of
the invention-book. The future of the book is the meetings, the talks, the social spaces in
which the book will participate. With the finishing of the book a “scan” takes place of “what
is it that this invention-book is making” or might be “making-desire” today in the political
spaces and in the spaces for creativity, and above all in the spaces in which politics is
enabled by a creative capacity as well. In this sense, as already noted, it is possible to
operate an inversion of the name of the project, as many people have suggested.
Aesthetical vocabulary for political processes. What the political processes can “learn”
from aesthetic processes is exactly the capacity of activating singularitiesand
intersectionalities, of activating a creative dimension that is inherent to life itself.
In this sense, I create an analogy with a former conception of history to think about what
sort of relevance aesthetic processes are taking in the lifes of those enunciating
themselves in the spaces of the streets. History in a conservative cenception might act as
a mechanism that blocks changes in social processes, as an indelible horizon. For the arts
this mechanism could be the notion of spectacle. In the streets of Brazil, definitely it was
another spectacle that became present - it was “a cut in the political time”, as said by
Pélbart, made by those “who are no one”. A forcefield is open, without stage, where
tireless producers of a “minor Brazil” announce themselves. The “minor” Brazil would be
the one that affirms itself facing the “major” Brazil forcibly produced by the State and its
economical policies.
To end this analytical and visual cartography I bring four Entries that prolong
intersectionalities in the actuality of a “minor Brazil”.
Giseli Vasconcelos has written the Entry Hidrosolidariedade (hyperlink
http://vocabpol.cristinaribas.org/hidrosolidariedade/ ). Hydrosolidarity is a sort of “soluble
solidarity (…)”, it comprises “collaborations and associations”. The Entry is literally a dive
into the geography of the Amazonian region, and why not a cartography, that passes by
Oswald de Andrade’s38 journey to the constitution of the rede [aparelho]: network. The
network puts together hackers, artists and teachers, amongst others around the city of
Belém. Giseli was one of the organizers of the project Amazonian Critical Cartography
(hyperlink http://desarquivo.org/node/1382 ), a mapping project that developed a series of
activities in the Amazonian region, creating tools for mapping and publishing an
homologous book at the end. Giseli levers a plural vocabulary that “wets” itself in the
Amazonian geography, from the sensibility of sweating in wet lands. Facing that, I look at
this vocabulary without being able to forget the developmental projects that de-configure
the region.
The Pocket Cyclist’s Square ( hyperlink http://vocabpol.cristinaribas.org/praca-de-bolso-
do-ciclista/ ) was built with many hands - and why not with pedalling as well - in Curitiba in
the recent years. Margir Leisner took part in the encounter in Rio and initially had a
proposal for the book that ended up not formalized. She wrote about the building of the
Pocket Cyclist’s Square after an e-mail conversation between me and her. Margit had
doubts about what kind of contribution could be effective for the book. She did not center
her presence in the encounter around her participation in the building of the square,
however. In the e-mail exchange we talked about the collective process that she was
undergoing in Curitiba and how rich it was as a processes associating political and
aesthetical effects. Margit was also part of the movement resisting the destruction of
Bosque da Casa Goom (hyperlink http://tinyurl.com/lgq9v4b ), a similar case to Augusta
Park (hyperlink http://www.parqueaugusta.cc/). Augusta Park is a green space in the heart
of São Paulo that could have been transformed into a public park, however, instead it is
going to host the construction of three residential towers. The construction of the towers
extinguishes part of the microclimate held by the forest. It will extinguish as well some of
the practices that were developed there but that will certainly reappear in other processes
of resistance.
Enrico Rocha reports in the text Neighborhood (hyperlink
http://vocabpol.cristinaribas.org/vizinhanca/) its relation with the Poço da Draga (hyperlink
http://www.pocodadraga.org/) (Well of the dredge), a district at the border of the sea in the
city of Fortaleza. The Poço da Draga appeared in the construction of one of the docks in
Fortaleza in the beginning of the century, secreting an empty area that was slowly
occupied by fishermen for the construction of their houses. In the text Enrico makes a
beautiful report of his affective and political relationship to the Poço da Draga. He tells us
about the possibility of the community’s eviction with the construction of a big building that
could become a touristic aquarium – the Acquarium Ceará project. The project is already
presenting a series of economic scandals between the mayor of Fortaleza and
construction companies. Amongst the various actions that have happened to support the
district, at the end of April 2014 a group of artists made an exhibition in the Centro Cultural
Dragão do Mar. The exhibition was part of the series of events celebrating 108 years of the
community. Enrico wrote two texts for two newspapers in Fortaleza about the process. And
many posters were made for the exhibition.
Maré is a “complex” of favelas in the city of Rio de Janeiro. Maré means, in portuguese,
the tide. Maré in the book is a “complex” vocable, paraphrasing the intervention made by
Marcos Chaves in one of the walkways above Brazil Avenue. Amarécomplexo.39 To know
Maré’s complex was one of the ideas followed in that working week, coming out of the
concept that we could make propositions to each other in order to animate other modes of
investigation. Weeks before our meeting, in the beginning of April 2014, a slaughter
happened in Maré. A “conflict” ending with the shooting of nine people by the PM -
amongst them civilians who were not involved in drug trafficking. It was the justification
used by the Federal government to order the National Force to occupy Maré in order to
“guarantee the safety of the inhabitants”. The occupation happened in the same week we
were gathered for the Political Vocabulary. The proposition of going to Maré was made by
five participants: Lucas R., Lucas S., Breno, Graziela and Jeferson. It emerged from the
critical reading of the vocabulary used by the “Action protocol for security forces” produced
by NGOs, orienting the inhabitants to how they should respond to the searchers from the
PM and the army. The vocable Maré, in the book, became an investigative cartography
and ended up aggregating several voices that talk from inside and outside the favela. 40
The vocable is, however, a very small part of the much wider tide that asks for the leaving
of the national forces and demands an end to PM violence. Recently, a pacific
manifestation organized by the inhabitants and taking place in Brazil Avenue and Linha
Amarela was heavily repressed with tear gas and gunfire.
Additional Bibliography
Kastrup, V.; Passos, E. and Tedesco, S., Políticas da cognição. Porto Alegre: Sulina, 2008
Marazzi, C. Capital and Language. From the New Economy to the War Economy. New
York/London: The MIT Press, 2008
2 For more information on the cycle of protests and on contemporary Brazil, I recommend Jean Tible’s article Encruzilhadas Brasileiras: entre protestos, processos e eleições. The expression Disruptive June appears in his article. I make use of his expression here thinking the in between Junes: Dirsuptive Junes. http://nuso.org/upload/articulos/4090_1.pdf
3 http://www.mpl.org.br/
4 The participation of professionals from different parts of Brazil is one of the prerequisites for Funarte’s Redes Grant, which aims to stimulate the circulation of professionals by depolarizing central axes of production and mobilizing new productive networks.
5 Two books served as references for this project, both of which were conceived in a similar way as Vocabulário político and circulated during our encounters. They are Vocabulaboratoires (download http://desarquivo.org/node/1681), edited by Manuela Zechner, Anja Kanngieser and Paz Guevara, and Micropolíticas de Los Grupos: Para una Ecología de Las Prácticas Colectivas (download http://desarquivo.org/node/1685), organized by Oliver Crabbé, Thierry Muller and David Vercauteren. Both books are the results of encounters and exchanges, and operate both as toolboxes and as documents/archives of practices and experiences. Micropolíticas especially is organized through verbs that characterize group actions, or methodologies for micropolitical works.
6 In 2012, the Universidade Nômade (Nomad University) network compiled a lexicon entitled Ferramentas das Lutas (Tools for Struggles) http://www.revistaglobalbrasil.com.br/?page_id=1498
7 Information about these research groups can be found here: http://www.ufrgs.br/ppgpsicologia/ and here: http://www.slab.uff.br/
8 One of the reference articles on intersectional feminism that I used is Adriana Piscitelli’s Interseccionalidades, categorias de articulação e experiências de migrantes brasileiras. Revista Sociedade eCultura, v.11, n.2, July/Dec. 2008 link http://tinyurl.com/k64nsgl
9 In choosing the term “practices” to refer to artistic, political and other practices, I want to call attention not toa specific field or linguagem, but rather to the capacity - or literally, the practical dimensions - of the actionscarried out by various social actors. In this sense, for example, when I refer to artistic practices, I do notintend to concentrate solely on art undertaken by artists, but also on the artistic or creative aspects of othersocial practices. This, in a certain sense, is a transversalist perspective.
10 “Idiom” is a somewhat inexact translation of the Portuguese linguagem, which conveys “a grouping of capacities, signs and signals that constitute human communication, and which may include spoken, written, or gestured signs, among others.” (T.N.)
11The participants’ biographies can be found here: http://vocabpol.cristinaribas.org/ticipantespart/
12 Luiz Camillo Osório. A few thoughts on Aesthetics and Politics. In: Transnational Dialogues 2014. Availableat: http://www.transnationaldialogues.eu/
13 Amarildo was a builder and odd-job man who was tortured for no reason and killed in the Rocinha favela. The destiny of his body is still unknown, despite the recordings of cameras around the UPP station that were
made public showing the police taking Amarildo in the back of their car, in July 14th 2013. http://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caso_Amarildo
14Amar é a Maré Amarildo: multidão e arte, RJ 2013 http://uninomade.net/tenda/amar-e-a-mare
amarildo-multidao-e-arte-rj-2013/
15 Paolo Virno. Cuando el verbo se hace carne. Lenguaje y naturaleza humana. Buenos Aires: Cactus eTinta Limón, 2004. pp. 46
16Franco Bifo Berardi. The Uprising. On Poetry and Finance. New York/London: Semiotext(e), 2012.
17Regarding this theme, it is also worth reading the text Complexidade that I wrote for the book http://vocabpol.cristinaribas.org/vocab/complexidade/
18 See Footnote 9 in the previous section.
19 I refer to Guattari’s work in the 1980s and in his final book, Chaosmosis (1992).
20 One of the texts that addresses these questions in Vocabulário político is Diagrama, by Tatiana Roque.
21 Op cit., Berardi, p.59-70. This affirmation makes me think of the meaning and economy of art fairs, projectsthat have been awarded the largest amounts of funding under the “Lei Rouanet” (Brazilian governmental financing laws). Art fairs “organize” a market of production and consumption of art based on a signifier: through something that can be economically interchangeable, or through art as experience in the modes thatthe fair accrues.
22 One of the texts I wrote for Vocabulário político is Brasil | brasiu | Brazis (link para o texto http://vocabpol.cristinaribas.org/brasil-brasiu-brazis/), a reflection on the diverse “Brazils” that exist in and from this territory.
23 See also: Who Is the Cup For? Expenses in the World Cup 2014, PACS – Instituto Políticas Alternativa para o Cone Sul http://www.boell.de/en/2014/05/26/who-cup-expenses-world-cup-2014
24 This issue can be considered in how the commercial media - newspapers and magazines such as OGlobo, Folha de São Paulo, and Veja, among others - classify and diminish the potential of the “Juneuprisings” in Brazil. These media sources initially identified protestors as “students” (thereby isolating thegeneral mobilization to a generational issue; “the idea of protest is part of this generation” and “it will goaway”) and, soon after, as “vandals” (a “bloc” that groups activists together with the idea of rioting andmarginality, and therefore considers it as being depoliticized or without considerable political propositions,and therefore an acceptable target for heavy police repression).
25 Paolo Virno. Gramática da Multidão. Para uma análise das formas de vida contemporâneas. Tradução deLeonardo Retamoso de Palma. Santa Maria, 2003, p. 5 (my emphasis)
26 In Vocabulário político, capenga--a uniquely Brazilian concept that refers to something shoddy or precarious that is at once functional but constantly on the verge of giving way - is conceptualized in Raphi Soifer’s text Forense Capenga http://vocabpol.cristinaribas.org/vocab/forense-capenga
27 Felix Guattari. Caosmose: um novo paradigma estético. São Paulo: Ed. 34, 1992, pp. 45-46
28 Cecilia Cotrim brought to us in the week of the project the notion of “bulinação”. She noticed it could be “read” from the word “vocabulary”. “Bolinação” is to incite someone sexually, or to annoy someone by makingjokes. From there we created the expression (to) “vocabulinar”. Since our encounter I have been working with the “bulination” as a capacity of rubbing each others vocabularies, what is also said by Annick Kleizen inher text Speechless (Mudez). We also created the term “vocabulação” bringing together “vocabulary” and “action” in English “vocabulation”.
29 These notions derive from the practice of groups drawing on Paulo Freire’s Pedagogy of the Oppressed. Groups in Europe and North America working with processes that cross militancy and arts practice such as Ultra-red have been mobilizing this concept. h ttp://ultrared.org
30 References to the work of these groups are Notas sobre el militante investigador, 2002 (link http://eipcp.net/transversal/0406/colectivosituaciones/en) and the book A la deriva por los circuitos de la precariedad femenina, 2004 (link http://www.traficantes.net/dvd/la-deriva-por-los-circuitos-de-la-precariedad-femenina)
31 Precarias a la deriva. “De preguntas, ilusiones, enjambres y desiertos.Apuntes sobre investigación ymilitancia desde Precarias a la deriva [Madrid]”. Em: Malo, Marta (ed.) Nociones comunes: experiencias yensayos entre investigación y militancia. Madrid: Traficantes de Sueños , 2004, p. 44.
32 “Transversality” is a key text from Guattari's work. It can be found in several of his ontologies. FélixGuattari. Molecular Revolution: Psychiatry and Politics. London: Peregrines, 1984. pp.11-23.
33 Jakob Jakobsen, in the article The Pedagogy of Negating the Institution investigates the institutional analysis in Europe between the 60s and 70s and connects to actual struggles for education. . http://www.metamute.org/editorial/articles/pedagogy-negating-institution
34Janell Watson. Guattari's diagrammatic thought: writing between Lacan and Deleuze. London, New York: Continuum Books, 2009. pp. 29.
35 R.B. Barros and E.E. Passos. , “A cartografia como método de pesquisa-intervenção”. In: L Escossia; VKastrup; E. Passos Eds. Pistas para o método da cartografia. Porto Alegre: Sulina, 2009, p. 28.
36 In this text I focus on the first working week for the making of the book. This week concerns what I called the “enclosed workshop” and it took place in Capacete, Rio de Janeiro, in the second week of April 2014.
37 This is the only concept that didn't come out as a vocable/ Entry as such, but somehow was expressed in Kadija’s de crossed vocabulary (Vocabulário cruzado link http://vocabpol.cristinaribas.org/vocabulario-cruzado/ )
38 Andrade was one of the founders of Brazilian modernism and a member of the Group of Five. He was one of the organisers of the Semana de Arte Moderna (Week of Modern Art). Andrade wrote Manifesto Antrofágico (Cannibal Manifesto) in 1928 after a long trip in the Amazonian region, in which he discovered a much more complex country then he knew from being a São Paulo elite citizen. Cannibalism is an ode to the capacity of mixing and assimilating cultures from brazilian indigenous tribes - the "anthropophagy" indigenous people - , that he extends to Brazilian culture in general. The Manifesto becomes one of the first counter discourses to postcolonial cultural domination.
39 The intervention made by Marcos Chaves, translating literally, means “To love is complex.”
40Maré Vive is both a Facebook page and a blog. It works as a portal for inhabitants’ testimonies, for the manifestation regarding the occupation and mistreatment they might be suffering. s://www.facebook.com/Marevive?fref=photo
1http://www1.folha.uol.com.br/opiniao/2013/07/1313378-peter-pal-pelbart-anota-ai-eu-sou-ninguem.shtml