Dispositivo Alteracion Mental
by Malditos Cyborgs.org
__________________________________________________________________________
Notes on Anarchism
Noam Chomsky, 1970
Published in For Reasons of State (1973)
A French writer, sympathetic to anarchism, wrote in the
1890s that "anarchism has a broad back, like paper
it endures anything" -- including, he noted those whose
acts are such that "a mortal enemy of anarchism could
not have done better."1 There have been many styles
of thought and action that have been referred to as "anarchist."
It would be hopeless to try to encompass all of these conflicting
tendencies in some general theory or ideology. And even
if we proceed to extract from the history of libertarian
thought a living, evolving tradition, as Daniel Guérin
does in Anarchism, it remains difficult to formulate its
doctrines as a specific and determinate theory of society
and social change. The anarchist historian Rudolph Rocker,
who presents a systematic conception of the development
of anarchist thought towards anarchosyndicalism, along lines
that bear comparison to Guérins work, puts the matter
well when he writes that anarchism is not
a fixed, self-enclosed social system but rather a definite
trend in the historic development of mankind, which, in
contrast with the intellectual guardianship of all clerical
and governmental institutions, strives for the free unhindered
unfolding of all the individual and social forces in life.
Even freedom is only a relative, not an absolute concept,
since it tends constantly to become broader and to affect
wider circles in more manifold ways. For the anarchist,
freedom is not an abstract philosophical concept, but the
vital concrete possibility for every human being to bring
to full development all the powers, capacities, and talents
with which nature has endowed him, and turn them to social
account. The less this natural development of man is influenced
by ecclesiastical or political guardianship, the more efficient
and harmonious will human personality become, the more will
it become the measure of the intellectual culture of the
society in which it has grown.2
One might ask what value there is in studying a "definite
trend in the historic development of mankind" that
does not articulate a specific and detailed social theory.
Indeed, many commentators dismiss anarchism as utopian,
formless, primitive, or otherwise incompatible with the
realities of a complex society. One might, however, argue
rather differently: that at every stage of history our concern
must be to dismantle those forms of authority and oppression
that survive from an era when they might have been justified
in terms of the need for security or survival or economic
development, but that now contribute to -- rather than alleviate
-- material and cultural deficit. If so, there will be no
doctrine of social change fixed for the present and future,
nor even, necessarily, a specific and unchanging concept
of the goals towards which social change should tend. Surely
our understanding of the nature of man or of the range of
viable social forms is so rudimentary that any far-reaching
doctrine must be treated with great skepticism, just as
skepticism is in order when we hear that "human nature"
or "the demands of efficiency" or "the complexity
of modern life" requires this or that form of oppression
and autocratic rule.
Nevertheless, at a particular time there is every reason
to develop, insofar as our understanding permits, a specific
realization of this definite trend in the historic development
of mankind, appropriate to the tasks of the moment. For
Rocker, "the problem that is set for our time is that
of freeing man from the curse of economic exploitation and
political and social enslavement"; and the method is
not the conquest and exercise of state power, nor stultifying
parliamentarianism, but rather "to reconstruct the
economic life of the peoples from the ground up and build
it up in the spirit of Socialism."
But only the producers themselves are fitted for this task,
since they are the only value-creating element in society
out of which a new future can arise. Theirs must be the
task of freeing labor from all the fetters which economic
exploitation has fastened on it, of freeing society from
all the institutions and procedure of political power, and
of opening the way to an alliance of free groups of men
and women based on co-operative labor and a planned administration
of things in the interest of the community. To prepare the
toiling masses in the city and country for this great goal
and to bind them together as a militant force is the objective
of modern Anarcho-syndicalism, and in this its whole purpose
is exhausted. [P. 108]
As a socialist, Rocker would take for granted "that
the serious, final, complete liberation of the workers is
possible only upon one condition: that of the appropriation
of capital, that is, of raw material and all the tools of
labor, including land, by the whole body of the workers."3
As an anarchosyndicalist, he insists, further, that the
workers' organizations create "not only the ideas,
but also the facts of the future itself" in the prerevolutionary
period, that they embody in themselves the structure of
the future society -- and he looks forward to a social revolution
that will dismantle the state apparatus as well as expropriate
the expropriators. "What we put in place of the government
is industrial organization."
Anarcho-syndicalists are convinced that a Socialist economic
order cannot be created by the decrees and statutes of a
government, but only by the solidaric collaboration of the
workers with hand and brain in each special branch of production;
that is, through the taking over of the management of all
plants by the producers themselves under such form that
the separate groups, plants, and branches of industry are
independent members of the general economic organism and
systematically carry on production and the distribution
of the products in the interest of the community on the
basis of free mutual agreements. [p. 94]
Rocker was writing at a moment when such ideas had been
put into practice in a dramatic way in the Spanish Revolution.
Just prior to the outbreak of the revolution, the anarchosyndicalist
economist Diego Abad de Santillan had written:
...in facing the problem of social transformation, the Revolution
cannot consider the state as a medium, but must depend on
the organization of producers.
We have followed this norm and we find no need for the hypothesis
of a superior power to organized labor, in order to establish
a new order of things. We would thank anyone to point out
to us what function, if any, the State can have in an economic
organization, where private property has been abolished
and in which parasitism and special privilege have no place.
The suppression of the State cannot be a languid affair;
it must be the task of the Revolution to finish with the
State. Either the Revolution gives social wealth to the
producers in which case the producers organize themselves
for due collective distribution and the State has nothing
to do; or the Revolution does not give social wealth to
the producers, in which case the Revolution has been a lie
and the State would continue.
Our
federal council of economy is not a political power but
an economic and administrative regulating power. It receives
its orientation from below and operates in accordance with
the resolutions of the regional and national assemblies.
It is a liaison corps and nothing else.4
Engels,
in a letter of 1883, expressed his disagreement with this
conception as follows:
The anarchists put the thing upside down. They declare that
the proletarian revolution must begin by doing away with
the political organization of the state....But to destroy
it at such a moment would be to destroy the only organism
by means of which the victorious proletariat can assert
its newly-conquered power, hold down its capitalist adversaries,
and carry out that economic revolution of society without
which the whole victory must end in a new defeat and a mass
slaughter of the workers similar to those after the Paris
commune.5
In contrast, the anarchists -- most eloquently Bakunin --
warned of the dangers of the "red bureaucracy,"
which would prove to be "the most vile and terrible
lie that our century has created."6 The anarchosyndicalist
Fernand Pelloutier asked: "Must even the transitory
state to which we have to submit necessarily and fatally
be a collectivist jail? Can't it consist in a free organization
limited exclusively by the needs of production and consumption,
all political institutions having disappeared?"7
I do not pretend to know the answers to this question. But
it seems clear that unless there is, in some form, a positive
answer, the chances for a truly democratic revolution that
will achieve the humanistic ideals of the left are not great.
Martin Buber put the problem succinctly when he wrote: "One
cannot in the nature of things expect a little tree that
has been turned into a club to put forth leaves."8
The question of conquest or destruction of state power is
what Bakunin regarded as the primary issue dividing him
from Marx.9 In one form or another, the problem has arisen
repeatedly in the century since, dividing "libertarian"
from "authoritarian" socialists.
Despite
Bakunin's warnings about the red bureaucracy, and their
fulfillment under Stalin's dictatorship, it would obviously
be a gross error in interpreting the debates of a century
ago to rely on the claims of contemporary social movements
as to their historical origins. In particular, it is perverse
to regard Bolshevism as "Marxism in practice."
Rather, the left-wing critique of Bolshevism, taking account
of the historical circumstances surrounding the Russian
Revolution, is far more to the point.10
The anti-Bolshevik, left-wing labor movement opposed the
Leninists because they did not go far enough in exploiting
the Russian upheavals for strictly proletarian ends. They
became prisoners of their environment and used the international
radical movement to satisfy specifically Russian needs,
which soon became synonymous with the needs of the Bolshevik
Party-State. The "bourgeois" aspects of the Russian
Revolution were now discovered in Bolshevism itself: Leninism
was adjudged a part of international social-democracy, differing
from the latter only on tactical issues.11
If one were to seek a single leading idea within the anarchist
tradition, it should, I believe, be that expressed by Bakunin
when, in writing on the Paris Commune, he identified himself
as follows:
I am a fanatic lover of liberty, considering it as the unique
condition under which intelligence, dignity and human happiness
can develop and grow; not the purely formal liberty conceded,
measured out and regulated by the State, an eternal lie
which in reality represents nothing more than the privilege
of some founded on the slavery of the rest; not the individualistic,
egoistic, shabby, and fictitious liberty extolled by the
School of J.-J. Rousseau and other schools of bourgeois
liberalism, which considers the would-be rights of all men,
represented by the State which limits the rights of each
-- an idea that leads inevitably to the reduction of the
rights of each to zero. No, I mean the only kind of liberty
that is worthy of the name, liberty that consists in the
full development of all the material, intellectual and moral
powers that are latent in each person; liberty that recognizes
no restrictions other than those determined by the laws
of our own individual nature, which cannot properly be regarded
as restrictions since these laws are not imposed by any
outside legislator beside or above us, but are immanent
and inherent, forming the very basis of our material, intellectual
and moral being -- they do not limit us but are the real
and immediate conditions of our freedom.12
These ideas grew out of the Enlightenment; their roots are
in Rousseau's Discourse on Inequality, Humboldt's Limits
of State Action, Kant's insistence, in his defense of the
French Revolution, that freedom is the precondition for
acquiring the maturity for freedom, not a gift to be granted
when such maturity is achieved. With the development of
industrial capitalism, a new and unanticipated system of
injustice, it is libertarian socialism that has preserved
and extended the radical humanist message of the Enlightenment
and the classical liberal ideals that were perverted into
an ideology to sustain the emerging social order. In fact,
on the very same assumptions that led classical liberalism
to oppose the intervention of the state in social life,
capitalist social relations are also intolerable. This is
clear, for example, from the classic work of Humboldt, The
Limits of State Action, which anticipated and perhaps inspired
Mill. This classic of liberal thought, completed in 1792,
is in its essence profoundly, though prematurely, anticapitalist.
Its ideas must be attenuated beyond recognition to be transmuted
into an ideology of industrial capitalism.
Humboldt's
vision of a society in which social fetters are replaced
by social bonds and labor is freely undertaken suggests
the early Marx., with his discussion of the "alienation
of labor when work is external to the worker...not part
of his nature...[so that] he does not fulfill himself in
his work but denies himself...[and is] physically exhausted
and mentally debased," alienated labor that "casts
some of the workers back into a barbarous kind of work and
turns others into machines," thus depriving man of
his "species character" of "free conscious
activity" and "productive life." Similarly,
Marx conceives of "a new type of human being who needs
his fellow men....[The workers' association becomes] the
real constructive effort to create the social texture of
future human relations."13 It is true that classical
libertarian thought is opposed to state intervention in
social life, as a consequence of deeper assumptions about
the human need for liberty, diversity, and free association.
On the same assumptions, capitalist relations of production,
wage labor, competitiveness, the ideology of "possessive
individualism" -- all must be regarded as fundamentally
antihuman. Libertarian socialism is properly to be regarded
as the inheritor of the liberal ideals of the Enlightenment.
Rudolf
Rocker describes modern anarchism as "the confluence
of the two great currents which during and since the French
revolution have found such characteristic expression in
the intellectual life of Europe: Socialism and Liberalism."
The classical liberal ideals, he argues, were wrecked on
the realities of capitalist economic forms. Anarchism is
necessarily anticapitalist in that it "opposes the
exploitation of man by man." But anarchism also opposes
"the dominion of man over man." It insists that
"socialism will be free or it will not be at all. In
its recognition of this lies the genuine and profound justification
for the existence of anarchism."14 From this point
of view, anarchism may be regarded as the libertarian wing
of socialism. It is in this spirit that Daniel Guérin
has approached the study of anarchism in Anarchism and other
works.15 Guérin quotes Adolph Fischer, who said that
"every anarchist is a socialist but not every socialist
is necessarily an anarchist." Similarly Bakunin, in
his "anarchist manifesto" of 1865, the program
of his projected international revolutionary fraternity,
laid down the principle that each member must be, to begin
with, a socialist.
A
consistent anarchist must oppose private ownership of the
means of production and the wage slavery which is a component
of this system, as incompatible with the principle that
labor must be freely undertaken and under the control of
the producer. As Marx put it, socialists look forward to
a society in which labor will "become not only a means
of life, but also the highest want in life,"16 an impossibility
when the worker is driven by external authority or need
rather than inner impulse: "no form of wage-labor,
even though one may be less obnoxious that another, can
do away with the misery of wage-labor itself."17 A
consistent anarchist must oppose not only alienated labor
but also the stupefying specialization of labor that takes
place when the means for developing production
mutilate the worker into a fragment of a human being, degrade
him to become a mere appurtenance of the machine, make his
work such a torment that its essential meaning is destroyed;
estrange from him the intellectual potentialities of the
labor process in very proportion to the extent to which
science is incorporated into it as an independent power...18
Marx saw this not as an inevitable concomitant of industrialization,
but rather as a feature of capitalist relations of production.
The society of the future must be concerned to "replace
the detail-worker of today...reduced to a mere fragment
of a man, by the fully developed individual, fit for a variety
of labours...to whom the different social functions...are
but so many modes of giving free scope to his own natural
powers."19 The prerequisite is the abolition of capital
and wage labor as social categories (not to speak of the
industrial armies of the "labor state" or the
various modern forms of totalitarianism since capitalism).
The reduction of man to an appurtenance of the machine,
a specialized tool of production, might in principle be
overcome, rather than enhanced, with the proper development
and use of technology, but not under the conditions of autocratic
control of production by those who make man an instrument
to serve their ends, overlooking his individual purposes,
in Humboldt's phrase.
Anarchosyndicalists sought, even under capitalism, to create
"free associations of free producers" that would
engage in militant struggle and prepare to take over the
organization of production on a democratic basis. These
associations would serve as "a practical school of
anarchism."20 If private ownership of the means of
production is, in Proudhon's often quoted phrase, merely
a form of "theft" -- "the exploitation of
the weak by the strong"21 -- control of production
by a state bureaucracy, no matter how benevolent its intentions,
also does not create the conditions under which labor, manual
and intellectual, can become the highest want in life. Both,
then, must be overcome.
In
his attack on the right of private or bureaucratic control
over the means of production,, the anarchist takes his stand
with those who struggle to bring about "the third and
last emancipatory phase of history," the first having
made serfs out of slaves, the second having made wage earners
out of serfs, and the third which abolishes the proletariat
in a final act of liberation that places control over the
economy in the hands of free and voluntary associations
of producers (Fourier, 1848).22 The imminent danger to "civilization"
was noted by de Tocqueville, also in 1848:
As long as the right of property was the origin and groundwork
of many other rights, it was easily defended -- or rather
it was not attacked; it was then the citadel of society
while all the other rights were its outworks; it did not
bear the brunt of attack and, indeed, there was no serious
attempt to assail it. but today, when the right of property
is regarded as the last undestroyed remnant of the aristocratic
world, when it alone is left standing, the sole privilege
in an equalized society, it is a different matter. Consider
what is happening in the hearts of the working-classes,
although I admit they are quiet as yet. It is true that
they are less inflamed than formerly by political passions
properly speaking; but do you not see that their passions,
far from being political, have become social? Do you not
see that, little by little, ideas and opinions are spreading
amongst them which aim not merely at removing such and such
laws, such a ministry or such a government, but at breaking
up the very foundations of society itself?23
The workers of Paris, in 1871, broke the silence, and proceeded
to abolish property, the basis of all civilization! Yes,
gentlemen, the Commune intended to abolish that class property
which makes the labor of the many the wealth of the few.
It aimed at the expropriation of the expropriators. It wanted
to make individual property a truth by transforming the
means of production, land and capital, now chiefly the means
of enslaving and exploiting labor, into mere instruments
of free and associated labor.24
The Commune, of course, was drowned in blood. The nature
of the "civilization" that the workers of Paris
sought to overcome in their attack on "the very foundations
of society itself" was revealed, once again, when the
troops of the Versailles government reconquered Paris from
its population. As Marx wrote, bitterly but accurately:
The civilization and justice of bourgeois order comes out
in its lurid light whenever the slaves and drudges of that
order rise against their masters. Then this civilization
and justice stand forth as undisguised savagery and lawless
revenge...the infernal deeds of the soldiery reflect the
innate spirit of that civilization of which they are the
mercenary vindicators....The bourgeoisie of the whole world,
which looks complacently upon the wholesale massacre after
the battle, is convulsed by horror at the destruction of
brick and mortar. [Ibid., pp. 74, 77]
Despite the violent destruction of the Commune, Bakunin
wrote that Paris opens a new era, "that of the definitive
and complete emancipation of the popular masses and their
future true solidarity, across and despite state boundaries...the
next revolution of man, international in solidarity, will
be the resurrection of Paris" -- a revolution that
the world still awaits.
The
consistent anarchist, then, should be a socialist, but a
socialist of a particular sort. He will not only oppose
alienated and specialized labor and look forward to the
appropriation of capital by the whole body of workers, but
he will also insist that this appropriation be direct, not
exercised by some elite force acting in the name of the
proletariat. He will, in short, oppose
the organization of production by the Government. It means
State-socialism, the command of the State officials over
production and the command of managers, scientists, shop-officials
in the shop....The goal of the working class is liberation
from exploitation. This goal is not reached and cannot be
reached by a new directing and governing class substituting
itself for the bourgeoisie. It is only realized by the workers
themselves being master over production.
These remarks are taken from "Five Theses on the Class
Struggle" by the left-wing Marxist Anton Pannekoek,
one of the outstanding left theorists of the council communist
movement. And in fact, radical Marxism merges with anarchist
currents.
As
a further illustration, consider the following characterization
of "revolutionary Socialism":
The revolutionary Socialist denies that State ownership
can end in anything other than a bureaucratic despotism.
We have seen why the State cannot democratically control
industry. Industry can only be democratically owned and
controlled by the workers electing directly from their own
ranks industrial administrative committees. Socialism will
be fundamentally an industrial system; its constituencies
will be of an industrial character. Thus those carrying
on the social activities and industries of society will
be directly represented in the local and central councils
of social administration. In this way the powers of such
delegates will flow upwards from those carrying on the work
and conversant with the needs of the community. When the
central administrative industrial committee meets it will
represent every phase of social activity. Hence the capitalist
political or geographical state will be replaced by the
industrial administrative committee of Socialism. The transition
from the one social system to the other will be the social
revolution. The political State throughout history has meant
the government of men by ruling classes; the Republic of
Socialism will be the government of industry administered
on behalf of the whole community. The former meant the economic
and political subjection of the many; the latter will mean
the economic freedom of all -- it will be, therefore, a
true democracy.
This programmatic statement appears in William Paul's The
State, its Origins and Functions, written in early 1917
-- shortly before Lenin's State and Revolution, perhaps
his most libertarian work (see note 9). Paul was a member
of the Marxist-De Leonist Socialist Labor Party and later
one of the founders of the British Communist Party.25 His
critique of state socialism resembles the libertarian doctrine
of the anarchists in its principle that since state ownership
and management will lead to bureaucratic despotism, the
social revolution must replace it by the industrial organization
of society with direct workers' control. Many similar statements
can be cited.
What
is far more important is that these ideas have been realized
in spontaneous revolutionary action, for example in Germany
and Italy after World War I and in Spain (not only in the
agricultural countryside, but also in industrial Barcelona)
in 1936. One might argue that some form of council communism
is the natural form of revolutionary socialism in an industrial
society. It reflects the intuitive understanding that democracy
is severely limited when the industrial system is controlled
by any form of autocratic elite, whether of owners, managers
and technocrats, a "vanguard" party, or a state
bureaucracy. Under these conditions of authoritarian domination
the classical libertarian ideals developed further by Marx
and Bakunin and all true revolutionaries cannot be realized;
man will not be free to develop his own potentialities to
their fullest, and the producer will remain "a fragment
of a human being," degraded, a tool in the productive
process directed from above.
The
phrase "spontaneous revolutionary action" can
be misleading. The anarchosyndicalists, at least, took very
seriously Bakunin's remark that the workers' organizations
must create "not only the ideas but also the facts
of the future itself" in the prerevolutionary period.
The accomplishments of the popular revolution in Spain,
in particular, were based on the patient work of many years
of organization and education, one component of a long tradition
of commitment and militancy. The resolutions of the Madrid
Congress of June 1931 and the Saragossa Congress in May
1936 foreshadowed in many ways the acts of the revolution,
as did the somewhat different ideas sketched by Santillan
(see note 4) in his fairly specific account of the social
and economic organization to be instituted by the revolution.
Guérin writes "The Spanish revolution was relatively
mature in the minds of libertarian thinkers, as in the popular
consciousness." And workers' organizations existed
with the structure, the experience, and the understanding
to undertake the task of social reconstruction when, with
the Franco coup, the turmoil of early 1936 exploded into
social revolution. In his introduction to a collection of
documents on collectivization in Spain, the anarchist Augustin
Souchy writes:
For many years, the anarchists and the syndicalists of Spain
considered their supreme task to be the social transformation
of the society. In their assemblies of Syndicates and groups,
in their journals, their brochures and books, the problem
of the social revolution was discussed incessantly and in
a systematic fashion.26
All of this lies behind the spontaneous achievements, the
constructive work of the Spanish Revolution.
The
ideas of libertarian socialism, in the sense described,
have been submerged in the industrial societies of the past
half-century. The dominant ideologies have been those of
state socialism or state capitalism (of increasingly militarized
character in the United States, for reasons that are not
obscure).27 But there has been a rekindling of interest
in the past few years. The theses I quoted by Anton Pannekoek
were taken from a recent pamphlet of a radical French workers'
group (Informations Correspondance Ouvrière). The
remarks by William Paul on revolutionary socialism are cited
in a paper by Walter Kendall given at the National Conference
on Workers' Control in Sheffield, England, in March 1969.
The workers' control movement has become a significant force
in England in the past few years. It has organized several
conferences and has produced a substantial pamphlet literature,
and counts among its active adherents representatives of
some of the most important trade unions. The Amalgamated
Engineering and Foundryworkers' Union, for example, has
adopted, as official policy, the program of nationalization
of basic industries under "workers' control at all
levels."28 On the Continent, there are similar developments.
May 1968 of course accelerated the growing interest in council
communism and related ideas in France and Germany, as it
did in England.
Given
the highly conservative cast of our highly ideological society,
it is not too surprising that the United States has been
relatively untouched by these developments. But that too
may change. The erosion of cold-war mythology at least makes
it possible to raise these questions in fairly broad circles.
If the present wave of repression can be beaten back, if
the left can overcome its more suicidal tendencies and build
upon what has been accomplished in the past decade, then
the problem of how to organize industrial society on truly
democratic lines, with democratic control in the workplace
and in the community, should become a dominant intellectual
issue for those who are alive to the problems of contemporary
society, and, as a mass movement for libertarian socialism
develops, speculation should proceed to action.
In
his manifesto of 1865, Bakunin predicted that one element
in the social revolution will be "that intelligent
and truly noble part of youth which, though belonging by
birth to the privileged classes, in its generous convictions
and ardent aspirations, adopts the cause of the people."
Perhaps in the rise of the student movement of the 1960s
one sees steps towards a fulfillment of this prophecy.
Daniel
Guérin has undertaken what he has described as a
"process of rehabilitation" of anarchism. He argues,
convincingly I believe, that "the constructive ideas
of anarchism retain their vitality, that they may, when
re-examined and sifted, assist contemporary socialist thought
to undertake a new departure...[and] contribute to enriching
Marxism."29 From the "broad back" of anarchism
he has selected for more intensive scrutiny those ideas
and actions that can be described as libertarian socialist.
This is natural and proper. This framework accommodates
the major anarchist spokesmen as well as the mass actions
that have been animated by anarchist sentiments and ideals.
Guérin is concerned not only with anarchist thought
but also with the spontaneous actions of popular revolutionary
struggle. He is concerned with social as well as intellectual
creativity. Furthermore, he attempts to draw from the constructive
achievements of the past lessons that will enrich the theory
of social liberation. For those who wish not only to understand
the world, but also to change it, this is the proper way
to study the history of anarchism.
Guérin
describes the anarchism of the nineteenth century as essentially
doctrinal, while the twentieth century, for the anarchists,
has been a time of "revolutionary practice."30
Anarchism reflects that judgment. His interpretation of
anarchism consciously points toward the future. Arthur Rosenberg
once pointed out that popular revolutions characteristically
seek to replace "a feudal or centralized authority
ruling by force" with some form of communal system
which "implies the destruction and disappearance of
the old form of State." Such a system will be either
socialist or an "extreme form of democracy...[which
is] the preliminary condition for Socialism inasmuch as
Socialism can only be realized in a world enjoying the highest
possible measure of individual freedom." This ideal,
he notes, was common to Marx and the anarchists.31 This
natural struggle for liberation runs counter to the prevailing
tendency towards centralization in economic and political
life.
A
century ago Marx wrote that the workers of Paris "felt
there was but one alternative -- the Commune, or the empire
-- under whatever name it might reappear."
The empire had ruined them economically by the havoc it
made of public wealth, by the wholesale financial swindling
it fostered, by the props it lent to the artificially accelerated
centralization of capital, and the concomitant expropriation
of their own ranks. It had suppressed them politically,
it had shocked them morally by its orgies, it had insulted
their Voltairianism by handing over the education of their
children to the frères Ignorantins, it had revolted
their national feeling as Frenchmen by precipitating them
headlong into a war which left only one equivalent for the
ruins it made -- the disappearance of the empire.32
The miserable Second Empire "was the only form of government
possible at a time when the bourgeoisie had already lost,
and the working class had not yet acquired, the faculty
of ruling the nation."
It
is not very difficult to rephrase these remarks so that
they become appropriate to the imperial systems of 1970.
The problem of "freeing man from the curse of economic
exploitation and political and social enslavement"
remains the problem of our time. As long as this is so,
the doctrines and the revolutionary practice of libertarian
socialism will serve as an inspiration and guide.
Notes
This essay is a revised version of the introduction to Daniel
Guérin's Anarchism: From Theory to Practice. In a
slightly different version, it appeared in the New York
Review of Books, May 21, 1970.
1
Octave Mirbeau, quoted in James Joll, The Anarchists, pp.
145-6.
2
Rudolf Rocker, Anarchosyndicalism, p. 31.
3
Cited by Rocker, ibid., p. 77. This quotation and that in
the next sentence are from Michael Bakunin, "The Program
of the Alliance," in Sam Dolgoff, ed. and trans., Bakunin
on Anarchy, p. 255.
4
Diego Abad de Santillan, After the Revolution, p. 86. In
the last chapter, written several months after the revolution
had begun, he expresses his dissatisfaction with what had
so far been achieved along these lines. On the accomplishments
of the social revolution in Spain, see my American Power
and the New Mandarins, chap. 1, and references cited there;
the important study by Broué and Témime has
since been translated into English. Several other important
studies have appeared since, in particular: Frank Mintz,
L'Autogestion dans l'Espagne révolutionaire (Paris:
Editions Bélibaste, 1971); César M. Lorenzo,
Les Anarchistes espagnols et le pouvoir, 1868-1969 (Paris:
Editions du Seuil, 1969); Gaston Leval, Espagne libertaire,
1936-1939: L'Oeuvre constructive de la Révolution
espagnole (Paris: Editions du Cercle, 1971). See also Vernon
Richards, Lessons of the Spanish Revolution, enlarged 1972
edition.
5
Cited by Robert C. Tucker, The Marxian Revolutionary Idea,
in his discussion of Marxism and anarchism.
6
Bakunin, in a letter to Herzen and Ogareff, 1866. Cited
by Daniel Guérin, Jeunesse du socialisme libertaire,
p. 119.
7
Fernand Pelloutier, cited in Joll, Anarchists. The source
is "L'Anarchisme et les syndicats ouvriers," Les
Temps nouveaux, 1895. The full text appears in Daniel Guérin,
ed., Ni Dieu, ni Maître, an excellent historical anthology
of anarchism.
8
Martin Buber, Paths in Utopia, p. 127.
9
"No state, however democratic," Bakunin wrote,
"not even the reddest republic -- can ever give the
people what they really want, i.e., the free self-organization
and administration of their own affairs from the bottom
upward, without any interference or violence from above,
because every state, even the pseudo-People's State concocted
by Mr. Marx, is in essence only a machine ruling the masses
from above, from a privileged minority of conceited intellectuals,
who imagine that they know what the people need and want
better than do the people themselves...." "But
the people will feel no better if the stick with which they
are being beaten is labeled `the people's stick' "
(Statism and Anarchy [1873], in Dolgoff, Bakunin on Anarchy,
p. 338) -- "the people's stick" being the democratic
Republic.
Marx,
of course, saw the matter differently.
For
discussion of the impact of the Paris Commune on this dispute,
see Daniel Guérin's comments in Ni Dieu, ni Maître;
these also appear, slightly extended, in his Pour un marxisme
libertaire. See also note 24.
10
On Lenin's "intellectual deviation" to the left
during 1917, see Robert Vincent Daniels, "The State
and Revolution: a Case Study in the Genesis and Transformation
of Communist Ideology," American Slavic and East European
Review, vol. 12, no. 1 (1953).
11
Paul Mattick, Marx and Keynes, p. 295.
12
Michael Bakunin, "La Commune de Paris et la notion
de l'état," reprinted in Guérin, Ni Dieu,
ni Maître. Bakunin's final remark on the laws of individual
nature as the condition of freedom can be compared to the
creative thought developed in the rationalist and romantic
traditions. See my Cartesian Linguistics and Language and
Mind.
13
Shlomo Avineri, The Social and Political Thought of Karl
Marx, p. 142, referring to comments in The Holy Family.
Avineri states that within the socialist movement only the
Israeli kibbutzim "have perceived that the modes and
forms of present social organization will determine the
structure of future society." This, however, was a
characteristic position of anarchosyndicalism, as noted
earlier.
14
Rocker, Anarchosyndicalism, p. 28.
15
See Guérin's works cited earlier.
16
Karl Marx, Critique of the Gotha Programme.
17
Karl Marx, Grundrisse der Kritik der Politischen Ökonomie,
cited by Mattick, Marx and Keynes, p. 306. In this connection,
see also Mattick's essay "Workers' Control," in
Priscilla Long, ed., The New Left; and Avineri, Social and
Political Thought of Marx.
18
Karl Marx, Capital, quoted by Robert Tucker, who rightly
emphasizes that Marx sees the revolutionary more as a "frustrated
producer" than a "dissatisfied consumer"
(The Marxian Revolutionary Idea). This more radical critique
of capitalist relations of production is a direct outgrowth
of the libertarian thought of the Enlightenment.
19
Marx, Capital, cited by Avineri, Social and Political Thought
of Marx, p. 83.
20
Pelloutier, "L'Anarchisme."
21
"Qu'est-ce que la propriété?" The
phrase "property is theft" displeased Marx, who
saw in its use a logical problem, theft presupposing the
legitimate existence of property. See Avineri, Social and
Political Thought of Marx.
22
Cited in Buber's Paths in Utopia, p. 19.
23
Cited in J. Hampden Jackson, Marx, Proudhon and European
Socialism, p. 60.
24
Karl Marx, The Civil War in France, p. 24. Avineri observes
that this and other comments of Marx about the Commune refer
pointedly to intentions and plans. As Marx made plain elsewhere,
his considered assessment was more critical than in this
address.
25
For some background, see Walter Kendall, The Revolutionary
Movement in Britain.
26
Collectivisations: L'Oeuvre constructive de la Révolution
espagnole, p. 8.
27
For discussion, see Mattick, Marx and Keynes, and Michael
Kidron, Western Capitalism Since the War. See also discussion
and references cited in my At War With Asia, chap. 1, pp.
23-6.
28
See Hugh Scanlon, The Way Forward for Workers' Control.
Scanlon is the president of the AEF, one of Britain's largest
trade unions. The institute was established as a result
of the sixth Conference on Workers' Control, March 1968,
and serves as a center for disseminating information and
encouraging research.
29
Guérin, Ni Dieu, ni Maître, introduction.
30
Ibid.
31
Arthur Rosenberg, A History of Bolshevism, p. 88.
32
Marx, Civil War in France, pp. 62-3.
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