This introduction was written for 'Przyszłości Wyobrażone: od myślącej maszyny 
do globalnej wioski' - the Polish translation of 'Imaginary Futures' which was 
published by Muza SA: http://www.muza.com.pl/?module=okladki&id=41865

=======================

I was sitting in a lecture theatre at University College London listening to 
the 
speakers at the final session of the Solidarity/solidarities conference on the 
1989 revolutions in Eastern Europe. Jan Dzierzgowski had worked hard on 
this translation and I owed it to him to write a smart introduction for its 
Polish 
readers. Where better to find inspiration than at this retrospective look at 
the 
demise of the Cold War? Imaginary Futures is a book about the political and 
cultural impact of the technological prophecies which emerged from this 
geopolitical confrontation. Computers and the Net are much more than useful 
tools. For over half a century, they have also embodied utopian dreams in the 
service of imperial ambition. During the Cold War, the American and Russian 
empires competed not only to control space, but also to own time. The nation 
that was pioneering the future in the present could claim leadership over the 
peoples of the world. The Berlin Wall might have fallen and the Russian troops 
have returned home, but this technological determinist ideology has proved to 
be remarkably persistent. The cheerleaders of neo-liberal globalisation have 
spent the past two decades pointing out American predominance over the 
computer industry and the Net – and then ordering the rest of the humanity to 
adopt their socio-economic panaceas of US-style privatisation, deregulation 
and financial speculation. By painstakingly explaining the history of the 
imaginary futures of artificial intelligence and the information society, my 
aim 
is to equip the readers of this book with the knowledge to refute this passé 
argument. The next time that someone tells you that the post-industrial utopia 
is just around the corner, you can reply that this prediction is nothing more 
than 
recycled McLuhanism. The Cold War is over – and so are its made-in-America 
imaginary futures.

If I needed confirmation of this book’s relevance, I could find it in the air 
of 
melancholy at the Solidarity/solidarities conference. This event was being held 
to mark the 20th anniversary of the wonderful historical moment when the 
Stalinist 
monopoly over political power was breached for the first time: the 4th June 
1989 
multi-party elections to the Polish parliament. Within a few months, the old 
order 
was being swept away across Eastern Europe - and decades of mendacity and 
oppression had come to an end. Yet, as I sat in the lecture theatre, the 
closing session 
of this conference seemed to be as much a memorial service for frustrated 
aspirations 
as a celebration of revolutionary victories. One Polish member of the audience 
ruefully 
admitted that he and his compatriots now enjoyed that greatest of European 
privileges: 
being able to complain in public about how dreadful everything was. The 
excitement of 
1989’s ‘springtime of the nations’ seemed like a distant memory when the region 
was 
being battered by the worst global economic crisis since the 1930s. Adding to 
the misery, 
its governments were still in thrall to the ideological choices that had been 
made during 
the transition to national independence and political pluralism. Neo-liberal 
economic 
policies didn’t just mark the break with the impoverished Russian empire, but 
also a 
commitment to American post-industrial modernity. The new elites of ‘new 
Europe’ had 
made the mistake of swapping one Cold War superpower’s imaginary future for 
that of 
the other. While I was listening to the downbeat discussion at the 
Solidarity/solidarities 
conference, I cast my mind back to when I first realised that our continent was 
on the brink 
of a momentous upheaval. The implosion of the Russian empire might have been a 
big 
surprise to expert opinion in the West, but it wasn’t to me. A Polish leftie 
had predicted 
what would happen in 1984 – and the opinions of someone who is on the side of 
the 
workers are always more credible than those who only think what is allowed to 
be 
thought. Trust your own, that’s what I say.  

“It’s all over, you know. No one believes in the system. Not the workers, not 
the peasants, 
not even the bureaucrats.” Elcia was a Solidarnösc activist who had fled to 
London after 
the 1981 military coup. We’d first met when she and her friends were making a 
programme 
for their fellow refugees on Our Radio: 103.8FM. They would knock on the door 
of the house 
in Kilburn where the studio of this pirate station was based and proudly 
announce that the 
“mad Poles” had arrived to do their show. Yet, beneath this bravado, there was 
the sadness 
that they faced long years of exile from their homeland. Scattered across 
London were the 
exiles from the 1953 Berlin Uprising, the 1956 Hungarian Revolution and the 
1968 Prague 
Spring. This new wave of Polish émigrés knew that they might have to wait 10 or 
20 years 
before another attempt was made to overthrow the Stalinist regimes which 
oppressed the 
nations of Eastern Europe. They would be condemned to live in limbo - separated 
from their 
family and friends back home with their children growing up in England having 
little more 
than an exotic name to connect them with their Polish heritage. No wonder my 
friend was 
so jubilant. It was only three years after the military coup that had crushed 
Solidarnösc – 
and she’d been able to make a quick visit to see her parents without any 
difficulties. The 
secret police must have known about her subversive activities in London, but no 
one seemed 
to care in Warsaw. She was enjoying a sweet irony: “Remember what Lenin said? 
The revolution 
will succeed when the masses can’t go on in the same old way and neither can 
the ruling class. 
Well, that’s what it’s like in Poland now. It’s all over, finished, done with. 
Once Poland goes, the 
whole rotten structure will collapse across the East. We’ve won, we’ve won!!” 

Elcia had read the historical conjuncture correctly. She could now move back to 
Poland with her 
son in anticipation of what was to come. Five years later, it really was all 
over. For those who 
weren’t around at the time, it is difficult to explain the liberation that we 
felt when the Cold War 
finally ended. I’d spent all of my adult life with the nagging fear that a 
stoned American pilot or 
a dodgy piece of Russian technology might accidentally launch a nuclear weapon 
which would 
start a conflagration that wiped out a large percentage of the European 
population. What made 
matters worse was how the institutionalised hypocrisy of the two superpowers 
had colonised the 
minds of people trapped on both sides of the Iron Curtain. This was a 
looking-glass world where 
the American bastion of democracy overthrew elected governments and the Russian 
champion 
of socialism sent in the tanks against the proletariat. Of course, it was easy 
to see the ideological 
corruption of this imperial duplicity in others. Our Polish friends from 
Solidarnösc were horrified 
when English leftists carried banners of Lenin and Trotsky on their 
demonstrations. We were 
disgusted when the workers of Gdansk gave a hero’s welcome to Margaret Thatcher 
so soon 
after she had brutally smashed the National Union of Miners’ strike at home. 
But, trying to get 
each other to understand that these acts of stupidity were symbolic gestures of 
defiance was 
almost impossible. Convinced that your enemy’s enemy must be your friend, too 
many dissidents 
on both sides had forgotten that they were united in a common struggle for 
freedom and dignity. 

In 1989, when the Polish elections began a chain reaction which swept away the 
Stalinist regimes 
across Eastern Europe, there was the brief moment of euphoria when it seemed 
that the doublethink 
of the Cold War might be exorcised. Jacek Kuron joked in an interview that he 
was on the verge of 
accomplishing his mission in life: restoring the rationality of politics in 
Europe by making the Left 
on the left and the Right on the right. The crowds in the streets of Warsaw, 
Budapest, Prague, 
Berlin and Bucharest chanted the slogan: “We don’t want any more social 
experiments.” They 
weren’t like their parents who’d been fooled by fascists who spoke like 
communists. This was 
Georg Hegel’s ‘end of history’ when utopian dreams are transformed into 
pragmatic solutions. 
On that magic evening of 9th November when the Berlin Wall came down, we 
celebrated in style 
in London with expensive champagne and strong weed. Power hungry US Presidents 
and Russian 
General Secretaries would no longer be aiming nuclear missiles at the major 
cities of Europe. The 
common people had shown that - with enough courage and determination – it was 
possible to 
overcome the violence and lies of a modern state. This time, the good guys were 
the winners. 

Two decades on, the participants at the Solidarity/solidarities conference 
faced the hard task of 
explaining what one contributor called the ‘double disappointment’ of the hopes 
of the 1989 
revolutions. Radicals in the West had expected that the collapse of Stalinism 
would lead to the 
emergence of a reinvigorated socialism in the East – and instead witnessed the 
nations of ‘new 
Europe’ embracing neo-liberalism in its most brutal forms. Oppositionists in 
the East had anticipated 
that the adoption of a free market economy would lead to consumer plenty for 
all like in the West – and 
instead saw the divisions between rich and poor within their societies growing 
ever wider. Of course, 
it is now all too easy to blame the shabby deals that allowed the Party bosses 
to plunder the state’s 
assets in return for relinquishing their grip over political power without 
bloodshed. What is more 
difficult to understand - twenty years on – is why there was mass support for 
the ‘shock therapy’ 
of privatisation, deregulation and cuts in welfare. Having rejected the failed 
social experiment of 
Russian-style Communism, sane and sensible people had voted in overwhelming 
numbers for a 
new social experiment: US-style neo-liberalism. It wasn’t as if there weren’t 
any other options. Just 
across the Baltic, there were the prosperous and egalitarian societies of 
Scandinavian Social 
Democracy, but, unfortunately, they lacked the ideological magic of the free 
market model. Above 
all, the American empire had seized the ownership of the imaginary future of 
the information society. 
As the transition gathered pace in the early-1990s, the arrival of the Net 
confirmed the correctness 
of this US-led path of modernisation for the nations of the East. In the same 
way that their parents 
had admired the industrial combines of Stalinist Russia, these ‘new Europeans’ 
were convinced 
that the dotcom entreprises of neo-liberal California represented the future in 
the present. No wonder 
that ‘double disappointment’ was the leitmotif of final panel at the 
Solidarity/solidarities conference…

In 2009, the Polish community in London is thriving. Unlike Elcia and her 
friends, a new wave 
of exiles has come here voluntarily to earn money, learn English and experience 
life in a foreign 
country. They take it for granted that they can move and back forth across 
Europe with no problems. 
The only thing that they’re escaping from back home is the conservative 
morality of the Church. 
You can move in with your partner without getting married as long as you do it 
abroad. Tellingly, 
most of the Polish students who I teach at Westminster University choose the 
‘liberal’ option for 
Political Views on their Facebook profile – and they mean it in both the social 
and economic 
senses of the term. These are the children of the defeat-in-victory of the 1989 
revolution. Solidarnösc 
smashed the Stalinist bureaucracy – and then the neo-liberal regime destroyed 
the organised 
working class in Poland. As this generation came to adulthood, the dream of 
dissidents like 
Elcia of founding the Self-Managed Socialist Republic of Poland must have 
seemed like a relic 
from a long forgotten theological debate. Let’s remember that – for them - 
Francis Fukyama 
had reinterpreted the ‘end of history’ to outlaw any alternative to US-style 
capitalism. There 
was only the American path to modernity.

The aim of this book is to help its readers to refute this ideological claim to 
imperial hegemony. 
On 15th September 2008, the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers marked the end of the 
neo-liberal ascendancy. George W. Bush – one of the most reactionary presidents 
in US 
history – was soon implementing the 5th demand of The Communist Manifesto: 
public 
ownership of the financial system. In such strange times, it is necessary to 
rediscover the 
complex history of the imaginary future of the information society. Here’s an 
interesting fact 
which is overlooked in the official accounts of the West. One of the first 
prophets of post-industrialism 
was Oscar Lange in the 1950s – and he was Polish. This visionary believed that 
the advent of the 
Net would provide the technological foundation for participatory democracy in 
both politics and 
the economy: cybernetic communism. With intellectual property withering away in 
cyberspace, 
his prediction does seem more prescient than it did a decade ago at the height 
of the dotcom 
bubble. If nothing else, Lange is telling us that the future is not necessarily 
neo-liberal California 
– and that the Polish Left can find its own path to a better future. The 
reformers of his generation 
opened the way for their successors to begin the process of dismantling of 
totalitarian rule. What 
they could have never envisaged was that one evil empire’s imaginary future 
would be replaced 
with that of its rival. As the last public act of his eventful life, Jacek 
Kuron wrote an open letter in 
support of the people protesting against the 28th–30th April 2004 meeting of 
the World Economic 
Forum in Warsaw. Castigating the neo-liberal orthodoxy with the same contempt 
that he once 
directed against Stalinism, he called upon the dissidents of the 21st century 
to ‘create a new 
conception of social cooperation, realise the ideals of freedom, equality and 
social justice.’ 
What more needs to be said? I hope that the Polish translation of my book can 
make a small 
contribution towards fulfilling this goal. You can use the tools of the Net to 
invent new futures 
for humanity. Enjoy the book – and be inspired! 


Richard Barbrook,
London,
England,
12th June 2009

http://www.imaginaryfutures.net/2010/05/18/imaginary-futures-introduction-to-the-polish-edition


#  distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission
#  <nettime>  is a moderated mailing list for net criticism,
#  collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets
#  more info: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l
#  archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nett...@kein.org

Reply via email to