Looking at Eric Santner’s Book (2016) The Weight of All Flesh (Part 9 of 28)
0176 The intellectual leaders of Shakespeare’s time made a simplification and propounded it as reality.
This simplification assumed that a citizenregular possessed a sane soul and exhibited the spirit of rationality. It ignored the Christian perspective inspiring both.
0177 The counselors of the early modern kings were experts in the maintenance of the king’s sublime body… I mean, the discipline of holding office.
They discovered that the king could rule without governing by allowing usury. Crownmoney surcharged surplus value. Gold became valuable as a measure of national wealth. Mercantilism was born.
0178 Before leaving this section, I want to generalize the model of spectral materialism applied to The Merchant of Venice.
I substitute the words “Marat” and “regular” for “Shylock” and “Antonio”. However, I retain the key concept that Shylock wants a pound of Antonio’s joissance, that is, his “flesh”.
I suggest that citizenMarat, like Shylock, desires a pound of citizenregular’s libido.
In the organization tier, this actualizes into two values: adaptability (for citizenregular) and control (for citizenMarat).

0179 To me, this diagram expresses features of Santner’s multilayered claims.
0180 In the late medieval and the early modern period, the mortal body (or flesh) of the king magically established the flourishing and suffering of the entire kingdom. His flesh bore the weight of kingliness, the expectations of the subjects.
If the king did not (literally) live up to the subject’s expectations, then the kingdom was vulnerable to sedition. The theory of the dual body of the king directed expectations in a particular manner, investing the mortal body of the king with a sublime body. This sublime body was answerable to God.
0181 Even with God removed from the picture, as Thomas Hobbes did in Leviathan, the subject’s expectations were profoundly simple. Protect us. Do not interfere with our contracts. Contracts among subjects were regulated by tradition, particularly Christian aphorisms like the golden rule, which (according to Hobbes) goes like this: Do not do unto others what you would not want done to yourself.
0182 Surely, Shylock did not get the memo. Neither did Marat, who planned to do to his political opponents what Charlotte Corday did to him.

0183 Indeed, in late medieval and early modern nations, the king was in a pressure cooker, watched from above by the very religion that his political theology expropriated, and watched from below by subjects who believed that Jesus was king.
0184 The immaterial surplus produced in this apparatus coincided with the flourishing and suffering of the entire kingdom.
The economic reason is straightforward. When the king was in check, protecting the subjects and freely allowing contracts, the subjects were able to cautiously move in the direction of greater industry and specialization. When the king was not in check, the subjects only did what they were told to do. They resisted innovation and resented the king.
0185 Santner delineates a trail from the political theology of the early moderns to the political economy of the modern and postmodern period. The sublime body of the king becomes dispersed among the citizens.
0186 However, to me, this portends two types of citizen.
Citizenregular inherits the expectations of kingliness. This is expressed as personal sovereignty.
CitizenMarat inherits the sublime character that (supposedly) is subject to divine judgment.
0187 But, there is a catch.
With the perspective level completely occluded, the source that judges discipline is no longer apparent. CitizenMaratbecomes god-like to the extent that his organizational objectives are substantiated by sovereign power.
0188 In Santner’s evocative terminology, the regular citizen’s libido (like Antonio’s) becomes the flesh that is weighed and appropriated by the self-anointed citizenMarat, acting in the domain of discipline and in the prospect of sowing and harvesting biopower.
The immaterial surplus produced in this apparatus fuels a repetition disorder called “regulation”. Regulation applies to the organization tier.
0189 The citizenregular adapts to this domination as short-sightedly as a sow finds comfort in her pen.
Regular humans have gone from sheep to pigs. Kings have gone from shepherds to farm-administrators fatting up the hogs for… harvest.
0190 What do the busy bodies intend to harvest?
I suspect that it is the joy of being a pig.



























