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	<title>khukuri &#187; Marxism</title>
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		<title>How to read Capital: Another view</title>
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		<dc:creator>John Steele</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Fredric Jameson, for some time one of this country&#8217;s foremost Marxist intellectuals, has recently published three studies related in some way to dialectics: Valences of the Dialectic (2009), The Hegel Variations (2010), and Representing Capital: A Reading of Volume One (2011). The following is a preview of this last, along with some thoughts on the [...]
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fredric_Jameson">Fredric Jameson</a>, for some time one of this country&#8217;s foremost Marxist intellectuals, has recently published three studies related in some way to dialectics: <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Valences-Dialectic-Fredric-Jameson/dp/1844674630/ref=sr_1_1_title_0_main?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1326119289&amp;sr=1-1">Valences of the Dialectic</a> (2009), <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Hegel-Variations-Phenomenology-Spirit/dp/1844676161/ref=pd_sim_b_5">The Hegel Variations</a> (2010), and <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Representing-Capital-Reading-Fredric-Jameson/dp/1844674541/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1326118788&amp;sr=1-1">Representing Capital: A Reading of Volume One</a> (2011). The following is a preview of this last, along with some thoughts on the current intellectual/political situation.</em></p>
<p><em>This essay originally appeared in <a href="http://www.mediationsjournal.org/articles/a-new-reading-of-capital">Mediations</a>. Thanks to onehundredflowers for pointing it out.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>It has often been lamented that Marxism seems to be a purely economic theory, which makes little place for a properly Marxian political theory. I believe that this is the strength of Marxism, and that political theory and political philosophy are always epiphenomenal. Politics should be the affair of an ever-vigilant opportunism, but not of any theory or philosophy; and even the current efforts to redefine mass democracy in this way or that are, to my mind, distractions from the central issue which is the nature and structure of capitalism itself.</p>
<p>Marxism is not a political radicalism but an economic radicalism. It incites us, not to contest or transform political power, but rather to change and transform capitalism as such, to change our whole economic system — a more radical ambition, which obviously entails political tactics which can however take various different forms, depending on the historical moment.</p></blockquote>
<article>
<h2>A New Reading of <cite>Capital</cite></h2>
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<div><strong>Fredric Jameson</strong></div>
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<p>My title promises a preview of my forthcoming book, <cite>Representing Capital</cite>, a commentary on Volume I of Marx’s <cite>Capital</cite>, which I read somewhat differently than many of the standard interpretations. So I will tell you something about that and then draw some practical conclusions about Marxism today and its political and intellectual mission.</p>
<p><span id="more-1872"></span></p>
<p>I am anxious that this work of mine not be understood as a “literary” reading of <cite>Capital</cite>: not only have those few such attempts been either weak generic classifications or fairly obvious notes on style and metaphor: indeed, the very term literary in this context is bound to trivialize the effort and to suggest that those debating the technical details of Marx’s economic analyses will have little interest in cultural epiphenomena like the textual status of the book as such. And it is true that I take little interest in Marx’s facts as he presents them or in the relevance of the laws he is alleged to have deduced from them. What I have wished to emphasize is the representation of capitalism as a totality, as an infernal machine which can only be described dialectically. I regard the truth of the labor theory of value as a metaphysical issue; I find the extrapolation of Marx’s model to the current third or globalized, postmodern, stage of capitalism to be of the greatest interest, but think that so far this can take many forms. And at the same time I consider that Marx’s description of capital is fully vindicated by recent events and remains as valid today as it ever was. Meanwhile, in this reading I limit myself to the only completed work, namely Volume I of <cite>Capital</cite>, and I claim that it gives a complete picture of capitalist totality. I should add, to justify my formal approach (which as I have said I would not want to call literary exactly, but which some will certainly continue to characterize as formalist in that way) — I should add that for me the central formal problem of <cite>Capital</cite> Volume I is the problem of representation: namely how to construct a totality out of individual elements, historical processes, and perspectives of all kinds; and indeed how to do justice to a totality which is not only non-empirical as a system of relationships, but which is also in full movement, in expansion, in a movement of totalization which is essential to its very existence and at the heart of its peculiar economic nature. Yet also essential to this structure is a process of perpetual breakdown: so we have here a machine which is necessarily and inevitably breaking down and which must therefore, to remain in existence, constantly repair itself by enlarging itself and its field of control. How such a peculiar and indeed such a unique phenomenon can be represented or made to appear in our mind’s eye is I believe explained by the equally unique and peculiar powers of dialectical thought, which might almost be considered a new type of thinking invented specifically to overcome the dilemmas of representation posed by this unique and peculiar totality called capital: but I will not pursue any more extensive account and defense or apologia of the dialectic here.</p>
<p>So now we begin, and with a scandalous proposal, namely to bracket the whole of Part One: it is of course the most famous section of the whole work, the one everyone reads even if they get no further; nor is my proposal motivated by quite the same concerns as those of Althusser and Korsch, both of whom suggested that the neophyte or working class reader skip these chapters, at least in part because both these thinkers were for different reasons adamantly opposed to the dialectic as such.</p>
<p>My reasons are somewhat different, though I would agree to this extent, namely that readers can become so mesmerized by the commodity form, fetishism and the like that they cease to explore Marxism any further. I remind you that Part One is what the <cite>Grundrisse’s</cite> editors call “The Chapter on Money”: it is not yet about capital, money has here not yet undergone its crucial metamorphosis into capital, and to that degree Part One stages something like capitalism’s pre-history (as does, in a very different way, Part Eight, on primitive accumulation), so that strictly speaking Marx’s description of capitalism as such can be limited to Parts Two through Seven. Certainly, in a society dominated by commodification, the analyses of Part One are politically more relevant today, just as the dimension of culture more generally is in our third stage of capitalism. Nonetheless in formal terms, I propose that Part One be considered a kind of complete work in its own right, a kind of overture to the main work, or better still a <cite>Vorspiel</cite> on the order of <cite>Das Rheingold</cite>, whose fundamental action will then come with the official <cite>Ring</cite> trilogy.</p>
<p>One of the reasons for doing so is that Part One has proven to be a <em>fausse piste</em> or as Heidegger calls it a <em>Holzweg</em>, a path leading nowhere. Part One is essentially an attack on the very notion of exchange, on the equation which suggests that there can be such a thing as an exchange of equals, or that the equation can be reversible. This means that there can be no such thing as a just price, and with this the whole project of social democracy or of the equitable reform of capitalism falls to the ground. But this result — politically productive — leaves us back at our starting point, with only one acquisition, namely a methodological one, which will now guide my reading of the rest of Volume One and which I will now briefly outline.</p>
<p>I want to understand plot in <cite>Capital</cite> as the solving of specific problems, the resolution of specific dilemmas. But as capitalism involves many problems and paradoxes, these resolutions will involve a variety of tentative explorations, and they will take the form of overlapping waves. A problem — paradox, aporia, contradiction — will declare itself; then, gradually, its solution will become apparent, but not without raising another problem in its wake. So by the time one wave has subsided, by the time one momentum has run its course, a new wave is beginning, and a new momentum established: a new problem has raised its head, demanding a fresh set of inquiries and chapters and a whole new movement forward. So this reading of <cite>Capital</cite> will seek to identify the point at which a new conundrum arises and to indicate how it is resolved and at the same time gives way to a new one. There are five or six waves which basically structure <cite>Capital</cite> Volume I, or in other words, organize that suspense — now how is this question to be answered? — which constitutes the plot of the work. (I hope it will not complicate this view of the text to add that from a dialectical point of view many of these problems turn out to be the same problem, and to involve the same answer — but in a different register, in different terms, from a different perspective.)</p>
<p>Meanwhile I want to underscore a somewhat different aspect of the reading, according to which the structure I have just described is also punctuated by certain climactic moments or revelations. The latter are not necessarily the same as the solutions to the specific problems already mentioned: they can be, as it were, truths revealed in the course of those examinations but not necessarily identical with their resolutions. I also mean to mark a duality in Marx’s investigations, which means that such climactic moments or revelations can sometimes come in two forms — positive and negative, say. In fact <cite>Capital</cite> Volume One has in this spirit two separate climactic endings, which I will characterize as heroic and comic respectively. Finally, on a surface level (rather than these deeper structural ones), I want to point out that there are several reading speeds that vary and succeed each other throughout the text, and which include three enormous chapters between the other, shorter ones and which also demand something of a shifting of gears and a modification of reading methods. Obviously it will be too long and complicated to do full justice to all these matters here, so I just resume the order of topics as simply and succinctly as I can.</p>
<p>The first problem begins with money, which was supposed to have solved the equation problem of Part One (on commodities): it is of course a false solution since money is not a solution but a mediation: it is a duality, a thing called upon to express a relationship but which in reality conceals relationship. This mysterious nature of money explains why so many Utopias, including More’s first one, have been organized around the principle that getting rid of money will get rid of the problem altogether. Because if money is a genuine solution, then something like a “just price” for commodities and labor is possible, and therefore social democracy itself is possible: it is possible to tinker with capitalism in such a way as to transform it into a just society. On the other hand Proudhon’s great slogan — “la propriété, c’est le vol” — is unsatisfactory as well, since it assumes that getting rid of money altogether in an anarchist spirit will do away with the deeper problem of which money is only a symptom. Money, property, capitalism itself, rest on a deep structural contradiction or at least a structural paradox (whose answer we know, for it is given to us in the labor theory of value), which cannot be solved by fiat or by tinkering either.</p>
<p>So at the beginning of what I am calling the main body of <cite>Capital</cite> (Parts Two through Seven), we must go back to the beginning and repose the question anew. Money is not the solution since it raises the new and more fundamental question, How does money beget money? And the answer is not, of course, Proudhon’s — namely, by cheating and by theft — nor does the answer reduce itself to the question of how we make a profit. Rather, the answer is more fundamental: money can only beget more money by being transformed into something very different, namely capital. This is then the reason for beginning with Part Two of <cite>Capital</cite>, because capital itself does not appear until Part Two.</p>
<p>We can rephrase all this methodologically: Marx is showing us that profit and new value cannot be derived from the process of circulation. So in order to solve the question, we are necessarily moved forward into the process of production — and this is alone where capital, and new capital at that, can be produced. So we have consumption on page one of the entire book: it is that quality which is quickly bracketed in favor of quantity, use value bracketed in favor of exchange value. We have circulation, whose dilemmas are rehearsed in Part One and end with the non-solution of money. And now finally we have production itself, which will quickly lead to the secret and the solution of the labor theory of value (something which also explains distribution as such). Now presumably our problems are solved: why does Marx not conclude his book here?</p>
<p>The problem is that suddenly time has been introduced, yet still in a merely quantitative and static, non-dialectical way. The labor theory of value leads to all kinds of calculations about rates of profit, on the number of hours of labor, on all those interesting combinations of variables which fed Marx’s own hobby, his secondary interest in mathematics and in the calculus. But suddenly these explorations come up against a brick wall: the limits of the working day, the legal limits of the working day, factory legislation requiring such limits and thereby suddenly blocking capital in its necessary expansion.</p>
<p>We thereby come up against the first of the three enormous interpolated chapters I mentioned, the most famous, namely that on “The Working Day.” It is a chapter which poses any number of problems, some of them ideological — how is it that government inspectors, bourgeois officials, have been able to force such legislation, and what is the effect now and in the future of working class organization? — and others practical, namely how the capitalists can get around these legislative limits. For they always do, or else social democracy would be possible.</p>
<p>So now the argument must enter a new register, a new level of intensity both in problem and in solution: and the answer (always provisional as we have seen) now takes the form of two great revelations. The first of these two climaxes is the celebration of collectivity, or cooperation as the period language has it. “A free gift to capital,” Marx exults: cooperative labor at once dialectically multiplies value and production.<a id="endref_1" href="http://www.mediationsjournal.org/articles/a-new-reading-of-capital#end_1">1</a> It was of course Adam Smith’s discovery, which here becomes, if I may put it that way, a Marxian metaphysic. Marxism is not a valorization of production, it is a valorization of collective production: and the chapter on cooperation is the beating heart of Capital Volume One itself.</p>
<p>But this jubilation is short-lived. The dialectic, as we know, is the union of opposites: and what is thus positive can at once also be revealed to be negative. The principle of cooperation thus celebrated for human beings becomes a veritable Frankenstein’s monster when translated into machinery. I omit these famous passages, but the new phenomenon fundamentally transforms the problem. It leads to a new and far more complex theory of temporality and of capitalism’s “extinction” of the past; but also to a whole new solution to the problem of the blockage or paralysis of absolute surplus value by the new legislation — a theory of increased productivity, of intensive rather than extensive production of value, which will be termed “relative surplus value.”</p>
<p>Dialectically, however, this solution — machinery, industrial technology — which might also have allowed Marx to conclude his book, makes for a whole new conceptual dilemma, which takes two forms: the first is this, how is it that a labor-saving device suddenly makes for a shocking increase in the number of hours worked by labor (a fact dramatized by child labor)?</p>
<blockquote><p>Hence &#8230; the economic paradox that the most powerful instrument for reducing labour-time suffers a dialectical inversion and becomes the most unfailing means for turning the whole lifetime of the worker and his family into labour-time at capital’s disposal for its own valorization.<a id="endref_2" href="http://www.mediationsjournal.org/articles/a-new-reading-of-capital#end_2">2</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Labor-saving machinery ought to reduce the number of laborers: well, of course it does that too in the form of unemployment. But then in that case our dilemma takes a different form: why is it, if value comes from labor, that you (capitalists) strive so diligently to reduce the number of your laborers, when the more laborers you have the more value will presumably be produced? Quesnay put it this way (yet a third form of the dilemma): “why does the capitalist, whose sole concern is to produce exchange-value, continually strive to bring down the exchange-value of commodities?”<a id="endref_3" href="http://www.mediationsjournal.org/articles/a-new-reading-of-capital#end_3">3</a></p>
<p>As for the theory of temporality, it will have one astonishing and quite unexpected result, namely that here (at the opening of Part Seven), Marx suddenly pauses and gives us a whole new program for a three-volume plan of <cite>Capital</cite>, separating his presentation now into three different temporalities of production. But then at this point also the truth of the whole process becomes clear and Marx will definitively enunciate what he calls “The General Law of Capitalist Accumulation,” the “absolute” law as he calls it in the same context: “the greater the social wealth, the functioning capital, the extent and energy of its growth, and therefore also the greater the absolute mass of the proletariat and the productivity of its labour, the greater is the industrial reserve army.”<a id="endref_4" href="http://www.mediationsjournal.org/articles/a-new-reading-of-capital#end_4">4</a> When we remember that this official-sounding term, “industrial reserve army,” simply means the unemployed, we have the dialectical paradox in a more dramatic and accessible form. It simply means that the absolute law of capitalism is the simultaneous increase in wealth and productivity on one hand and unemployment on the other.</p>
<p>Now we can step back and assess the meaning and import of <cite>Capital</cite> as a whole. This is a book about unemployment: its conceptual climax is reached with this proposition that industrial capitalism generates an overwhelming mass of potentially uninvestible capital on one hand, and an ever-increasing mass of unemployed people on the other: a situation we see fully corroborated today in the current crisis of third-stage or finance capital.</p>
<p>There follow some corollaries, which the orthodox are bound to find scandalous. For I would add that <cite>Capital</cite> is not about labor: it is about overwork, as exemplified by inhumanly long hours and, when those have been limited, by child labor. And it is about this famous “reserve army of labor,” that is to say, the unemployed. There is nothing here about labor proper, of the order of Harry Braverman’s classic book on Taylorization, <cite>Labor and Monopoly Capital</cite>. Yet it would be wrong to think that historical development has rendered this nineteenth-century representation of the capitalist totality obsolete or outmoded: on the contrary, what distinguishes our moment of capital from Marx’s is carefully sketched in for future development — and those spaces are credit and finance capital on one hand, and imperialism on the other (Marx’s own descriptions of imperialism touching essentially on settler colonies like Australia, as we shall see, although you can extrapolate the coda on primitive accumulation to what we call imperialism today).</p>
<p>I must conclude therefore that <cite>Capital</cite> is not a political book: its account of capital has no political consequences, except for a recommendation that workers organize. It has no descriptions of socialism, save for the hypothetical example of a society of associated workers in Part One. But let me explain myself more fully here: Marx was a truly political animal, no one has ever been more profoundly political in his instincts and thinking except for Lenin himself. He was extraordinarily opportunist, in the good Machiavellian sense of the word, and open to any and every possible path towards the transformation and abolition of capitalism: by unionization, by violence, by parliamentary victory, by a return to the peasant commune, or even by the self-destruction of capital in its own crisis, and so on and so forth. Every variety of political Marxist movement today, from social democracy to Leninism, Maoism, and even anarchism, is a viable candidate for Marx’s agenda, which changed as the historical situation and the development of capitalism itself changed and evolved. But there are no political programs or strategies advocated in <cite>Capital</cite> itself, which remains, in the Althusserian sense, scientific rather than ideological.</p>
<p>I have spoken of the twin textual climaxes of these texts, and this is the moment to bring them on as evidence for my claim: the first, the heroic one, comes in the historical coda to what I have called the main body of the text, and it summed up in the famous lines, like a hammerblow from Beethoven: “The knell of capitalist private property sounds. The expropriators are expropriated.”<a id="endref_5" href="http://www.mediationsjournal.org/articles/a-new-reading-of-capital#end_5">5</a> Nothing is said here about the way in which socialism replaces capitalism, all kinds of revolutionary possibilities remain conceivable at this stage. One would only wish to point out that at this point, in 1867, Marx foresees a far more immediate timetable than in the <cite>Grundrisse</cite> ten years earlier, where he asserts that socialist revolution cannot happen until the commodification of labor is universal, that is, until the world market reaches completion. But in Marx’s defense one would want to remind oneself that in 1867 we are on the eve of a virtual world war, the clash of the great national capitalisms in the Franco-Prussian war, and also on the eve of the Paris Commune: so Marx’s antennae were not altogether tone-deaf.</p>
<p>But now I need to add in the other alternative, the other textual climax, the comic one. In this second version of an outcome of <cite>Capital</cite> (like a book or film which posits two possible endings), capitalism simply dissolves. I give you this second, delicious climax in full:</p>
<blockquote><p>A Mr Peel &#8230; took with him from England to the Swan River district of Western Australia means of subsistence and of production to the amount of £50,000. This Mr Peel even had the foresight to bring, besides, 3,000 persons of the working class, men, women and children. Once he arrived at his destination, ‘Mr Peel was left without a servant to make his bed or fetch him water from the river.’ Unhappy Mr Peel, who provided for everything except the export of English relations of production to the Swan River!<a id="endref_6" href="http://www.mediationsjournal.org/articles/a-new-reading-of-capital#end_6">6</a></p></blockquote>
<p>This hilarious spectacle of the three thousand future laborers disappearing into the bush is the other possibility of the dissolution of the system, society’s agreement, as Kant puts it, to dissolve the social contract and disband. It is, no doubt, the anarchist solution. But I remind you that both possibilities — the triumph of socialism and the dissolution of society — were foretold already in the <cite>Manifesto</cite>: namely, that such momentous transitional moments consist in a class struggle that “each time end[s], either in a revolutionary reconstitution of society at large, or in the common ruin of the contending classes.”<a id="endref_7" href="http://www.mediationsjournal.org/articles/a-new-reading-of-capital#end_7">7</a></p>
<p>It has often been lamented that Marxism seems to be a purely economic theory, which makes little place for a properly Marxian political theory. I believe that this is the strength of Marxism, and that political theory and political philosophy are always epiphenomenal. Politics should be the affair of an ever-vigilant opportunism, but not of any theory or philosophy; and even the current efforts to redefine mass democracy in this way or that are, to my mind, distractions from the central issue which is the nature and structure of capitalism itself. There can never be satisfactory political solutions or systems: but there can be better economic ones, and Marxists and leftists need to concentrate on those.</p>
<p>I conclude with a few words on the current intellectual and political situation, and what postmodernity and globalization both imply about it. Both globalization and postmodernity are the result, I believe, of universal decolonization, of an immense transformation of the world into a multitude of subjects equal at least in their capacity to speak if not to resist oppression and domination of new post-colonial types. This is a transformation of the Other and of otherness, in which paradoxically the recognition of the Other entails the waning or disappearance of otherness, and in which a politics of difference becomes a politics of identity. If the experience of the Other is a wound to the existence of the ego, then this universal multiplicity of others marks its utter transformation. I have elsewhere interpreted Kojève’s (and Hegel’s) vision of the end of history as a kind of universal plebeianization on the social and political level; and this word is meant in some strong and positive Brechtian sense as an abandonment of privilege and a new and universal equality.</p>
<p>This equality seems to me to spell the end of the liberal notion of parliamentary or representative democracy, of that social democratic ideal which the Left has always criticized and condemned. But I want to caution that the newer Left ideals and programs of a direct or a radical democracy are no less vulnerable. Those concepts are not the solution to the new world of multiplicity, they are rather its symptom: they express the emergence of this multiplicity, they are not useful or practical political solutions or strategies. As this apparent attack on democracy may seem scandalous or even reactionary, I feel I must go all the way with my thinking in this area.</p>
<p>It begins with the dawning conviction that Marxism is not a political philosophy but rather an economic one. It is not a political radicalism but an economic radicalism. It incites us, not to contest or transform political power, but rather to change and transform capitalism as such, to change our whole economic system — a more radical ambition, which obviously entails political tactics which can however take various different forms, depending on the historical moment.</p>
<p>Perhaps I can make all this clearer by returning to my own work on Utopias and adding a new set of conclusions to it. I there posited two kinds of oppositions: the first one was the opposition between Utopian models or projects and the Utopian impulse. The former included the various proposals of the classic Utopian texts as well as the various historical attempts to realize Utopia in revolutionary practice. The latter, the Utopian impulse, designated the ever-present often unconscious longing for radical change and transformation which is symbolically inscribed in everything from culture and daily life to the official activities of politics and goal-oriented action. I now want to reidentify these two rather different manifestations of Utopia in a new and clearer way: for I have come to realize that the Utopian texts (and also the revolutions) are all essentially political in nature. They all embody so many tinkerings with possible political schemes in the future, new conceptions of governance, new rules and laws (or their absence), in short an endless stream of inventions, sophisticated and naïve alike, calculated to solve problems that exist on the political level. Thus, to give but one example, I will now claim that Thomas More’s inaugural Utopian gesture of the abolition of money (by no means original with him) was not an economic gesture but a political one, and expressly articulated as a means of solving any number of acute social problems.</p>
<p>In that case, I am led to affirm that the Utopian impulse, on the other hand, is profoundly economic, and that everything in it, from the transformation of personal relations to that of production, of possession, of life itself, constitutes the attempt to imagine the life of a different mode of production, that is to say, of a different economic system.</p>
<p>Now I turn to my other opposition which has to do with what can be imagined and what cannot, with the apparently outrageous proposition that Utopias do not embody the future but rather help us to grasp the limits of our images of the future, and indeed our impossibility of imagining a radically different future. Utopia, I claimed, is the radical disturbance of our sense of history and the disruption whereby we approach a thought of the radical or absolute break with our own present and our own system. But insofar as the Utopian project comes to seem more realizable and more practical, it turns into a practical political program in our world, in the here-and-now, and ceases to be Utopian in any meaningful sense.</p>
<p>I will now reidentify this thought with one of the premises of the Marxist tradition, namely the distinction between the two stages of social revolution or, if you prefer, the difference between the so-called dictatorship of the proletariat (which I will interpret as social democracy) and communism itself as such. You will now have understood that this distinction between politics and economics, between the achievable Utopia of the Utopian planners and the deep unconscious absolute Utopian impulse, is one between the social-democratic moment and the moment of communism. Communism can only be posited as a radical, even unimaginable break; socialism is an essentially political process within our present, within our system, which is to say within capitalism itself. Socialism is capitalism’s dream of a perfected system. Communism is that unimaginable fulfillment of a radical alternative that cannot even be dreamt.</p>
<p>If then Utopia is what allows us to become aware of the absolute limits of our current thinking, then such are the limits and such is the contradiction we have become able to confront. I have elsewhere described it as a contradiction between Utopia and Cynical Reason. If so, then it virtually produces its own slogan: Cynicism of the Intellect, Utopianism of the Will!</p>
<ol>
<li id="end_1">Karl Marx, <cite>Capital: A Critique of Political Economy</cite>, Volume I, trans. Ben Fowkes (London: New Left Review, 1976) 451.<a href="http://www.mediationsjournal.org/articles/a-new-reading-of-capital#endref_1">back</a></li>
<li id="end_2"><cite>Capital</cite> 532.<a href="http://www.mediationsjournal.org/articles/a-new-reading-of-capital#endref_2">back</a></li>
<li id="end_3">Marx’s paraphrase. <cite>Capital</cite> 437.<a href="http://www.mediationsjournal.org/articles/a-new-reading-of-capital#endref_3">back</a></li>
<li id="end_4"><cite>Capital</cite> 798.<a href="http://www.mediationsjournal.org/articles/a-new-reading-of-capital#endref_4">back</a></li>
<li id="end_5"><cite>Capital</cite> 929.<a href="http://www.mediationsjournal.org/articles/a-new-reading-of-capital#endref_5">back</a></li>
<li id="end_6"><cite>Capital</cite> 932-33.<a href="http://www.mediationsjournal.org/articles/a-new-reading-of-capital#endref_6">back</a></li>
<li id="end_7">Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, “Manifesto of the Communist Party,” in <cite>The Communist Manifesto: A Modern Edition</cite>, ed. Eric Hobsbawm (London: Verso, 1998) 35.<a href="http://www.mediationsjournal.org/articles/a-new-reading-of-capital#endref_7">back</a></li>
</ol>
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		<title>Capitalism: Some disassembly required</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 22 Dec 2011 02:18:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>John Steele</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Marxism]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Nicole Pepperill has been at work for some on a close reading of Marx, and especially of Capital, showing the ways in which Marx’s style and complex but precisely-thought organization must be taken into account in ways they have not been in readings which have historically been wooden and overly literal. What follows is an [...]
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>Nicole Pepperill has been at work for some on a close reading of Marx, and especially of Capital, showing the ways in which Marx’s style and complex but precisely-thought organization must be taken into account in ways they have not been in readings which have historically been wooden and overly literal. What follows is an excellent example, and statement, of this approach.</em></p>
<p lang="en-US"><em>Her aim is to show that Marx’s immanent critique of capitalist production is multi-dimensional in ways that introduces greater contingency into both the historical development of capitalism and, more importantly, the complex of emancipatory possibilities which it generates.</em></p>
<p lang="en-US"><em>The following is the text of a talk given by Pepperill in New York last February, and represents a slightly earlier version of what is now published in <a href="http://www.minorcompositions.info/?p=299">Communization ans its Discontents: Contestation, Critique, and Contemporary Struggles</a>, ed. Benjamin Noyes, where it has the title I&#8217;ve given above.</em></p>
<h2>The Higher Realms of Nonsense: Relections on <em>Capital</em>&#8216;s &#8216;Greatest Difficulty&#8217;</h2>
<p><strong>N. Pepperill</strong></p>
<p>Marx aims to present an immanent critique of the reproduction of capital. He aims, in other words, to show how the process by which capital is reproduced necessarily also reproduces the potential for the emancipatory transformation of capitalist society. In the <em>Grundrisse</em>, Marx uses the metaphor of mines that are ready to explode capitalist production from within, suggesting that emancipatory social movements mobilize an arsenal that has been inadvertently built by the very social practices they seek to transform:</p>
<blockquote><p>[W]ithin bourgeois society, the society that rests on <em>exchange value</em>, there arise relations of circulation as well as of production which are so many mines to explode it. (A mass of antithetical forms of the social unity, whose antithetical character can never be abolished through quiet metamorphosis. On the other hand, if we did not find concealed in society as it is the material conditions of production and the corresponding relations of exchange prerequisite for a classless society, then all attempts to explode it would be quixotic.)<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn1">[1]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>But how does Marx understand the generation of such explosive possibilities? By what means does the reproduction of capital necessarily reproduce the potential for alternative forms of collective life?</p>
<p><span id="more-1807"></span></p>
<p>By what means does the reproduction of capital necessarily reproduce the potential for alternative forms of collective life? Different answers have been proposed by the Marxist tradition.</p>
<h3>I. Three approaches to understanding emancipatory potential</h3>
<p>Two of these answers can be positioned on opposing sides of a dichotomy. On one side are approaches that emphasize how capitalism generates <em>objective</em> potentials for transformation – through the development of the forces of production, whose technical and social character drives a progression toward socialized forms of ownership and democratic forms of self-government. On the other side are approaches that focus more on how capitalism generates <em>subjective</em> potentials for transformation – through its dependence on an ever-expanding proletarian class whose material interests oppose the social relations on which capitalist production is based, and whose centrality to material production provides both emancipatory insight and transformative power.</p>
<p>Both of these approaches came under fire in the 20<sup>th</sup> century, as fascist mass movements and the development of totalitarian planned economies were interpreted as evidence that neither subjective nor objective conditions suffice to drive social transformation to emancipatory ends. One response to this historical experience was a turn to theories of “social forms” – structured patterns of social practice that are understood to determine both objective and subjective dimensions of capitalist societies. Contemporary social form theories generally point back to Lukács’ seminal “Reification and the Consciousness of the Proletariat”, which portrays capitalist society as a “totality” whose structures of subjectivity and objectivity are determined by the commodity form:</p>
<blockquote><p>… at this stage in the history of mankind there is no problem that does not ultimately lead back to that question and there is no solution that could not be found in the solution to the riddle of the commodity-<em>structure</em>… the problem of commodities must not be considered in isolation or even regarded as the central problem in economics, but as the central structural problem of capitalist society is all its aspects. Only in this case can the structure of commodity-relations be made to yield a model of all the objective forms of bourgeois society together with all the subjective forms corresponding to them.<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn2">[2]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>At first glance, theories of social form appear greatly to increase the depth and sophistication of Marx’s work. They reposition <em>Capital </em>as a general theory of modernity, rather than a narrow “economic” analysis, and they apply this theory to culture, psychological structure, governmental forms, and many other dimensions of social life. They also appear to account better for the difficulties facing transformative social movements, suggesting that such movements must wrestle with an internal battle against their members’ psyches, a symbolic battle against their cultures, and an institutional battle against forms of production and government that are all fundamentally shaped by the same core social forms.</p>
<p>Yet the very strength of such approaches in accounting for the failure of revolutionary expectations, has arguably handicapped them in the search for emancipatory possibilities. Since Lukács, theories of social form have tended to look <em>through</em> the diversity of social practice, in order to pick out an underlying formal pattern. Such theories are thus tacitly reductive – granting a privileged status to formal patterns visible beneath the flux of everyday social practice, while implicitly treating the diversity of social practice as epiphenomenal. This problem is related to the tendency for theories of social form to remain untethered from an analysis of how the formal pattern is <em>produced</em>. This both presumes that it is possible to define the form without a concrete analysis of its production – an assumption with which Marx would have strongly disagreed – and also tends to propel the analysis into idealist forms.</p>
<p>In the versions of social form theory dominant today, this latent idealism is expressed in several different forms: as pessimism<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn3">[3]</a>; as a claim that capital genuinely exhibits “idealist” properties<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn4">[4]</a>; or as the claim that the forms are “quasi-autonomous” from the social actors who create them<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn5">[5]</a>. While theories of social form often assert the possibility for emancipatory transformation – and even argue that this potential should be associated with dimensions of social life that cannot be fully characterized by formal structures – the failure to theorize the determinate properties of these other dimensions of social life, or to analyze how the social forms are generated, tends to render theories of social form essentially exhortative. Their relative sophistication does not extend to the theorization of concrete emancipatory possibilities.</p>
<p>So was the turn to social form theories a dead end? Would a return to theories of objective or subjective potential provide a better starting point for grasping concrete possibilities for social transformation?</p>
<p>I argue below that Marx’s work suggests another alternative: a non-reductive theory of how concrete social practices operate in tandem to generate overarching patterns of historical change (social forms), while also and simultaneously generating a diverse array of determinate possibilities for alternative forms of collective life.</p>
<h3>II. Political Economy as Intelligent Design</h3>
<p>In the opening chapter of <em>Capital</em>, in a rare explicit methodological discussion, Marx credits the political economists precisely for their insight into the social forms that characterize capitalist production:</p>
<blockquote><p>Political economy has indeed analysed value and its magnitude, however incompletely, and has uncovered the content concealed within these forms. But it has never once asked the question why this content has assumed that particular form, that is to say, why labour is expressed in value, and why the measurement of labour by its duration is expressed in the magnitude of the value of the product. These formulas, which bear the unmistakable stamp of belonging to a social formation in which the process of production has mastery over man, instead of the opposite, appear to the political economists’ bourgeois consciousness to be as much a self-evident and nature-imposed necessity as productive labour itself.<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn6">[6]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>This passage suggests that Marx does not regard the discovery of social forms to be his distinctive contribution to the critique of political economy. Instead, he singles out the question of how content comes to assume a specific form – which is to say, how a specific set of social forms themselves are produced.</p>
<p>He argues that, by contrast, the political economists stop short, evidently awestruck by the presence of structured patterns that appear to them to emerge “spontaneously” from a chaotic array of social practices, none of which is intentionally undertaken with the goal of producing this specific aggregate result. Apologistically, the political economists take the emergence of this unexpected, unplanned order to imply that an underlying rationality governs capitalist production. How else could order arise in the absence of conscious design, unless current forms of production were somehow tapping into the underlying natural order that latently governs material production?</p>
<p>For this reason, the political economists are able to declare capitalist production “natural”, and all previous forms of production “artificial” – in spite of their knowledge that capitalist institutions are recent historical developments. The emergence of an unplanned order – the apparent “intelligibility” of capitalist production, demonstrated by the political economists’ ability to discover non-random trends beneath the chaotic flux of everyday social practice – is taken as a sign that this historically specific mode of production has been ratified by Nature and Reason.</p>
<p>Marx is scathing towards this apologist conclusion. He compares the political economists to the Church fathers, and accuses them of treating their own historically contingent social institutions as an “emanation of God”:</p>
<blockquote><p>The economists have a singular way of proceeding. For them, there are only two kinds of institutions, artificial and natural. The institutions of feudalism are artificial institutions, those of the bourgeoisie are natural institutions. In this they resemble the theologians, who likewise establish two kinds of religion. Every religion which is not [t]heirs is an invention of men, while their own is an emanation of God… Thus there has been history, but there is no longer any.<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn7">[7]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>With this passage, Marx declares that his project – much like Darwin’s – is driven by the desire to explain the emergence of a particular kind of order, without falling back on mystical concepts of an intelligent designer, a <em>Geist</em>, or an invariant Natural Law.</p>
<p>From Marx’s perspective, political economy is only nominally secular. It may invoke the mantle of science and enlightened self-understanding, but it responds with a distinctly uncritical amazement when confronted by structured patterns of historical change that arise independently from conscious human will. This amazement is expressed in the unwarranted conclusion that the presence of unintentional order is evidence of the rationality or goodness of the system within which this order becomes manifest.</p>
<p>In <em>Capital</em>, Marx presents an alternative analysis of the process of “spontaneous self-organization” that reproduces capital. Marx portrays the reproduction of capital as a blind and oppressive juggernaut, accidentally generated as an unintentional side effect of a wide array of different social practices, none of which is directly oriented to achieving this aggregate result. This juggernaut may not be <em>random</em> – it may be characterized by theorizable trends and demonstrable forms of orderly historical change – and this non-random character may make it <em>intelligible</em> – it may be subject to systematic theorization.</p>
<p>This intelligibility, however, does not make the process <em>rational</em> in the sense of reflecting a desirable outcome from our collective social practice. The non-random character of the process cannot be taken as evidence that something beneficial will result if we allow this process to operate free of human interference. Marx attempts to show that a number of non-beneficial consequences will predictably be generated, so long as capital continues to be reproduced. At the same time, he tries to demystify the process of capital’s reproduction, by cataloguing the makeshift assemblage of contingent social practices that must operate in tandem to generate this “spontaneous, self-organizing” process.</p>
<p>Through this analysis, Marx seeks to invert the conventional “enlightened” narrative of political economy in two ways. First, Marx severs the enlightenment connection between law and reason, by demonstrating how a blind and accidental process could arise from purely contingent human behaviours, and yet still manifest lawlike qualities. Second, Marx contests the political desirability of grounding normative standards in the “spontaneous” trends of capitalist production. He argues that the reproduction of capital does generate emancipatory possibilities – but he insists that these  are hindered by capitalism’s spontaneous trends: deliberate political action is required to wrest emancipatory potentials from the process by which capital is reproduced.</p>
<p>Marx pursues these goals by cataloguing what he calls the “microscopic anatomy” of capitalist production.<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn8">[8]</a> This catalogue is intended to produce a systematic theory of the forms of internal social variability that must necessarily be generated, if capital is to continue to be reproduced. This necessary internal variability then becomes key to Marx&#8217;s argument that it is possible to speciate a new, more emancipatory, form of collective life by selectively inheriting already existing social potentials, in order to produce new institutions that are better adapted to emancipatory ends. To understand how this analysis plays out in <em>Capital, </em>we must take a brief detour through Marx’s idiosyncratic presentational style.</p>
<h3>III. The Higher Realms of Nonsense</h3>
<p>In an often-quoted passage from the postface to the second German edition of <em>Capital</em>, Marx famously distinguishes between his own method of inquiry – the forms of analysis he used to arrive at his conclusions – and his method of presentation – the way he displays his argument in <em>Capital</em>:</p>
<blockquote><p>Of course the method of presentation must differ in form from that of inquiry. The latter has to appropriate the material in detail, to analyze its different forms of development and to track down their inner connection. Only after this work has been done can the real movement be appropriately presented. If this is done successfully, if the life of the subject-matter is now reflected back in the ideas, then it may appear as if we have before us an <em>a priori</em> construction.<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn9">[9]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>While the passage is well-known, its implications for reading <em>Capital </em>are generally not fully appreciated. <em>Capital </em>does not give us – immediately and on the surface – an account of Marx’s own analytical procedure. Instead, what the text presents most immediately is a “method of presentation”. But what does this mean?</p>
<p>When we open the first chapter of <em>Capital</em> and begin reading, what we see first is a sort of arm-chair empiricist sociological analysis. This analysis invites us to take a look at the “elementary form” of the wealth of capitalist societies, and proceeds to break down the characteristics of this form, dividing it into use-value and exchange-value.<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn10">[10]</a> We do not know at this point what Marx is presenting, what function this analysis might serve. What we do know is that this analysis does not reflect Marx’s own personal method of inquiry. The form of reasoning and analysis displayed in these opening passages – whatever it is for – is not intended to illustrate a recommended means of arriving at critical sociological insights. It is, instead, part of Marx’s method of presentation. We need to keep this in mind, bracket the question of what is being presented for the moment, and move on.</p>
<p>In a couple of pages, the text invites us to “consider the matter more closely”<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn11">[11]</a> – by contrast, that is, to the sort of analysis with which the text started. We still do not know why we are being asked to do this – but we do know, now, that the analysis with which we were initially presented must somehow be too superficial. Otherwise, why would we need to consider the matter more closely?</p>
<p>The text now presents a new analysis of the wealth of capitalist societies – one that moves beyond the text’s empiricist beginnings to present a very strange sort of transcendental argument, which purports to logically deduce the necessity for a “supersensible” category beyond use-value and exchange-value: the category of value. It builds on this deduction to infer the need for the category of abstract labour, and then to analyze some of the properties of these new categories.<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn12">[12]</a></p>
<p>Many of the claims made in this section seem quite counter-intuitive, and the form of argument seems profoundly problematic. Both critics and supporters of Marx have expressed incredulity at these passages, baffled at why Marx is putting forward this analysis.<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn13">[13]</a> This bafflement arises because readers take these passages to exemplify Marx’s own method of inquiry.</p>
<p>At the beginning of the third section of the chapter, Marx uses a quick reference to Shakespeare to mock the forms of analysis that have just been on display. He compares political economy unfavourably to Dame Quickly, asserting that political economy does not know “where to have” its categories:</p>
<blockquote><p>The objectivity of commodities as values differs from Dame Quickly in the sense that ‘a man knows not where to have it.’<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn14">[14]</a> (138)</p></blockquote>
<p>The reference here is a crude sexual innuendo – Marx is impugning the analytical virility of the political economists by implying that they are unable to bed down their categories properly. The previous sections have left the ontological status of the wealth of capitalist society unclear: is it the straightforward, empirical object with which we started the chapter? Or the immaterial transcendental essence to which we later moved? If we had found ourselves identifying with either of these forms of analysis, the Dame Quickly joke breaks the spell. Both of these positions – and now we begin to get some small hint of what Marx is presenting – are associated here with political economy. They do not reflect Marx’s own analyses, but analyses he has set out to criticize.</p>
<p>Marx now launches into a convoluted and implausible series of dialectical analyses of the commodity form. At first glance, it could appear that we have now reached Marx’s method of inquiry: Marx may begin with taunting parodies of empiricist and transcendental analyses, but now that the dialectics has begun, surely we have reached his analysis proper.</p>
<p>If so, we should hold some severe reservations about Marx’s materialist <em>bona fides</em>. The third section of <em>Capital</em>’s opening chapter presents us with an idealist dialectic: it identifies a series of “defects” in categories derived from the commodity form; each defect drives toward a more adequate category, until finally the argument announces that we now understand the origins of money.<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn15">[15]</a> Read at face value, the passage strongly implies that the logical deficiencies of a set of conceptual categories resolve themselves by compelling the manifestation of a real sociological phenomenon: money exists, according to the logic of this section, because without it the concept of the commodity would be defective.</p>
<p>This section is shot through with gestures that suggest that Marx is deeply amused by this presentation. Sarcastic footnotes, ludicrous analogies, and sardonic asides strongly suggest that these passages are not meant to be taken literally. Francis Wheen has memorably described this section as a “picaresque journey through the higher realms of nonsense,” in which the reader is confronted with increasingly surreal meditations on the interactions of the linen and the coat, until finally driven to realize that the whole presentation is, in Wheen’s words, “a shaggy dog story”.<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn16">[16]</a> More analytically, Dominic LaCapra has argued that this section is best read as a series of dominant and counter-voices, with the effect of undermining the reader&#8217;s identification with the overt argument:</p>
<blockquote><p>Bizarre footnotes on Benjamin Franklin and on the problem of human identity appear to cast an ironic light on the concept of abstract labour power as the essence or “quiddity” of exchange values. An ironic countervoice even surfaces in the principal text to strike dissonant notes with respect to the seemingly dominant positivistic voice. (“The fact that [linen] is [exchange] value, is made manifest by its equality with the coat, just as the sheep’s nature of a Christian is shown in his resemblance to the Lamb of God.”) The reader begins to wonder whether he should take the concepts of abstract labour power and exchange value altogether at face value.<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn17">[17]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>The sarcastic tone of much of the section operates to distance the reader from the dialectical analysis of the wealth of capitalist societies, differentiating this presentation from Marx’s own method of inquiry.</p>
<p>Even for Marx, however, sarcasm eventually reaches its limits. This section of <em>Capital</em> also includes a moment where Marx finally breaks the fourth wall and provides some more explicit guidance on his own analytical approach. He does this in the form of a mischievous digression on Aristotle.<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn18">[18]</a></p>
<p>Prior to this digression, the text has displayed a series of analyses of the wealth of capitalist society, each of which operates as though decontextualized thought were sufficient to achieve sociological insight. The initial, empiricist, analysis of the wealth of capitalist societies suggested that one had only to observe the self-evident properties of the commodity, understood as a straightforward given – as data. The second, transcendental, analysis suggested that empirical observation might not be enough: the commodity also possesses properties that are not immediately perceptible by the senses. Fortunately, these properties can be logically intuited by reason. The third, dialectical, analysis suggested that commodities could not be understood in their static isolation – that a dynamic dialectical analysis is required to grasp how commodities develop in interaction with other commodities. For all their differences, these approaches share the presupposition that the mind’s brute force can penetrate all obstacles to arrive at a clear sense of the wealth of capitalist societies.</p>
<p>This presupposition is playfully destabilized when Marx suddenly asks why Aristotle was not able to deduce the existence of value.</p>
<p>This seemingly innocent question carries devastating implications. If the brute force of thought were all that were required to deduce value and to analyze its properties, then surely Aristotle would have been bright enough to deduce it. Indeed Aristotle is bright enough – Marx helpfully points out – to consider the possibility that something like value might exist. Nevertheless, he rejects it out of hand. But why?</p>
<p>What Aristotle lacked, Marx goes on to argue, was not intellect or brute logical force. It was a particular kind of practical experience:</p>
<blockquote><p>Aristotle was unable to extract this fact, that, in the form of commodity-values, all labour is expressed as equal human labour and therefore as labour of equal quality, by inspection from the form of value, because Greek society was founded on the labour of slaves, hence had as its natural basis the inequality of men and of their labour-powers. The secret of the expression of value, namely the equality and equivalence of all kinds of labour because and in so far as they are human labour in general, could not be deciphered until the concept of human equality had already acquired the permanence of a fixed popular opinion. This however becomes possible only in a society where the commodity-form is the universal form of the product of labour, hence the dominant social relation is the relation between men as possessors of commodities. Aristotle’s genius is displayed precisely by his discovery of a relation of equality in the value-expression of commodities. Only the historical limitation inherent in the society in which he lived prevented him from finding out what ‘in reality’ this relation of equality consisted of.<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn19">[19]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>This explanation ricochets back on everything that came before. If a specific kind of practical experience is required, in order for certain “logical” conclusions to be drawn, or observations made, then the forms of analysis prominently displayed so far in this chapter have not grasped why they are able to arrive at the conclusions they do. An adequate analysis would expose the relationship between practice and thought. Nothing that we have seen thus far in <em>Capital</em>’s opening chapter attempts this feat. We have instead been reading an exemplary presentation of several competing forms of analysis that Marx has caricatured in this chapter as the opening volley of his critique.</p>
<p>We have been given our first clear hint about Marx’s actual method of inquiry: that he seeks to explain the practical experiences that prime specific sorts of perception and cognition. We have also been given our first clear hint about what is being presented here: competing forms of theory that fail to recognize their own entanglement in determinate sorts of practical experience.</p>
<p>Over the course of <em>Capital</em>, Marx will develop these hints, recurrently putting on display competing forms of theory, gradually connecting each one with the sort of practical experience that renders that theory socially valid – but only for a bounded slice of social experience. To the extent that a particular kind of theory remains unaware of its current sphere of social validity, and thus over-extrapolates and hypostatizes a narrow slice of social experience to the exclusion of others, that theory can be convicted for expressing a partial and one-sided conception of capitalist society.</p>
<p>One of Marx’s goals, then, is to demonstrate the partial and one-sided character of competing theories of capitalist production. His analysis operates by demonstrating the narrow boundaries within which specific theoretical claims can be said to be valid, and then by panning back from those boundaries to show other dimensions of capitalist production, which render valid very different sorts of claims. In this way, Marx gradually explores the internal variability of capitalist production, and mines a much wider array of social experience than do competing forms of theory.</p>
<p>The breadth of his analysis is related to its critical power: by grasping the reproduction of capital as a much more internally diverse and multifaceted phenomenon than competing theories, he renders capitalist history citable in more of its moments. He is positioned to grasp, not simply the end result – the replication of a set of aggregate historical trends characteristic of capitalist production – but also the contradictory countercurrents that imply possibilities for the development of new forms of collective life. By systematically cataloguing each aspect of the complex process by which capital is reproduced – by refusing to reductively equate capitalist production with a small set of aggregate results of this process as a whole – Marx seeks to bring the internal variability of capitalist production squarely into view.</p>
<h3>IV. Post Festum Knowledge</h3>
<p>Why not declare that this is the intent? Why not explain the presentational strategy and state the actual analytical method overtly?</p>
<p>In part, no doubt, the explanation is that Marx did not anticipate how obscure his readers would find his presentational strategy. Marx viewed political economic discourse as self-evidently absurd – its categories as “deranged” – and he expected his readers to share his sense that these categories could be socially valid only for an irrational form of production. More problematic, he seems to have taken for granted that his readers would then understand that a burlesque style of presentation would be required to adequately express the absurdity of this system. He did not foresee how many readers would approach the text “straight”.</p>
<p>In part, however, Marx attempted to write the text in a way that exemplified his own understanding of the inter-dependence of thought and everyday social practice. In the fourth section of <em>Capital</em>’s opening chapter, in a passage that is seemingly specific to political economy’s discovery of the lawlike patterns generated by capitalist production, Marx describes how knowledge arises after the fact, as we are confronted with the consequences and implications of what we collectively do:</p>
<blockquote><p>Reflection on the forms of human life, hence also scientific analysis of those forms, takes a course directly opposite to their real development. Reflection begins <em>post festum</em>, and therefore with the results of the process of development already to hand.<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn20">[20]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>This passage is not an offhand description of the method of political economy, nor a general claim about human knowledge as such: instead, it represents an accidental historical insight that lies ready to hand due to the peculiar characteristics of capitalist production.<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn21">[21]</a> Once constituted by this accident of history, however, this insight is available to be appropriated and redeployed in a new form – in this case, as one of the cornerstones of <em>Capital</em>’s presentational strategy.</p>
<p>Consistently through the text, Marx will mobilize this <em>post festum </em>structure. The text will first enact a phenomenon and then – sometimes many chapters later – Marx will make explicit what that phenomenon implied, and explore how it can be appropriated. The text embodies its own claim that first we act, blindly and without a clear sense of the full implications and consequences of our actions – generating possibilities in a state of distraction. Once we have acted, we can then reflect consciously on our actions, tease out their implications – and become able to re-enact and creatively adapt our insights to novel ends.</p>
<p>Marx thus treats <em>Capital</em> as a <em>production</em> – and flags this in the opening chapter by treating the main text as a stage, onto which he casts actors who represent common approaches to theorizing the wealth of capitalist societies. Only after actually staging this play does he then – in chapter 2 – explicitly tell his readers that his investigation proceeds by exploring a series of “characters who appear on the economic stage”.<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn22">[22]</a> The explicit articulation takes place only <em>after</em> the practical enactment – first we act, then we appropriate insights from that enactment – and, in the process, we can transform our relationship to the original act, innovating around and adapting the original performance.</p>
<p>In much later chapters, Marx attaches explicit identities to the original actors. The empiricist figure who opens the chapter is associated with vulgar political economy,<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn23">[23]</a> while the transcendental figure is associated with classical political economy.<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn24">[24]</a> The “social forms” introduced in the original play are gradually revealed to be, not “elementary forms” from which other aspects of capitalist society can be derived, but rather aggregate results of a vast array of concrete practices  that Marx systematically catalogues through the remainder of the volume.<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn25">[25]</a></p>
<p>In each successive chapter, Marx makes explicit further implications of the practices and forms of theory articulated in previous chapters. Readers who do not recognize that this strategy is in play will commonly miss the strategic point of long passages of text – particularly early in the work, when less has been enacted, and little can be stated explicitly.</p>
<p>Many important implications of the social practices that reproduce capital are simply not visible from the standpoint of a single practice, or even a collection of several dozen practices. This is precisely why so many forms of theory derive such inadequate conceptions of capitalist production: they are focusing on too narrow a slice of social experience. Thus, for example, when Marx first introduces the category of capital in chapter 4, he has already explored dozens of different social practices. This exploration enables him to <em>introduce</em> the category – but only as it appears from the standpoint of those social practices associated with the circulation of goods on the market.</p>
<p>As it happens, when viewed from the standpoint of circulation, capital appears to be a self-organizing, autonomous entity, unbounded by material constraints. It appears, in other words, rather like it does to the political economists: as a spontaneously self-organizing system.</p>
<p>Marx distances himself from this interpretation with a heavy dose of sarcasm. He deploys Hegelian vocabulary to draw out the idealist mystification of this perspective, describing capital as a self-moving subject that is also substance – attributing to capital, in other words, the qualities of Hegel’s <em>Geist</em>.<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn26">[26]</a> Marx expects his readers to regard this image as self-evidently absurd but, just in case the reference is too obscure, he also compares this image of capital to the Christian Trinity<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn27">[27]</a> and to the fairy tale of the goose that lays the golden eggs.<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn28">[28]</a> This chapter presents, in other words, an infantile fantasy conception of capital as a <em>sui generis </em>phenomenon that spontaneously brings forth wealth from itself, unbounded and unrestrained. It does not outline Marx’s own conception of capital, but his mocking, sardonic critique of a set of blinkered economic theories and philosophies that mobilize only the smallest fraction of the insights that could be mined from the analysis of capitalist production, and thus remain awestruck by a phenomenon they only dimly understand. This is the description of capital as it appears from the standpoint of circulation. The phenomenon will appear very different once Marx can mobilize the insights available in other dimensions of social experience.</p>
<p>To articulate a more adequate understanding of capital, Marx must move past the sphere of circulation – into analyses of the sphere of production, the state, and the world system. He will only explicitly articulate his own conclusions, however, once he has explored <em>all</em> of the practical actions required to generate a particular social insight. Until then, sarcasm is his principal tool for flagging his personal distance from the perspectives explored in his main text.</p>
<p>Since text is necessarily linear, and not every practice can be explored simultaneously, the result is often that Marx must string together many chapters before he has assembled the insights needed to articulate important conclusions. By the time he can render the analysis explicit, the reader has often forgotten the many earlier passages in which he painstakingly assembled the diverse building blocks on which specific conclusions rely. Marx’s conclusions can thus seem ungrounded and obscure – dogmatic assertions, instead of carefully substantiated arguments.</p>
<p>By the same token, long sections of text can appear not to make any substantive contributions to the overarching argument – and are thus often not discussed, or even edited out!, by interpreters keen to zero in on what they take to be the heart of the argument (cf. Sekine 1997).<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn29">[29]</a> But these long, detailed passages are where Marx carries out the heart of his analysis – where he outlines capital’s “microscopic anatomy”.</p>
<h3>V. Microscopic Anatomy</h3>
<p>In this short piece, I cannot adequately explore how this microscopic anatomy plays out. I can, however, indicate what <em>sort</em> of analysis Marx is making – and explain how this analysis overcomes the subject/object divide in a very different way to that assumed by contemporary theories of social form.</p>
<p>In chapters 2 and 3 of <em>Capital</em>, Marx starts to explore a series of micrological social practices. He does this in excruciating detail, and with no explicit indication of what strategic purpose the analysis serves. He begins with practices associated with a petty bourgeois experience of capitalist production – practices that could all conceivably be undertaken by persons who produce goods using their own personal labour, bring these goods to market, and exchange them for other goods that they personally need.</p>
<p>Along the way, Marx highlights the material result of this process – the exchange of material good for material good. This material result is a real aspect of contemporary capitalist production: we really do move goods from one place to another, engaging in what Marx calls a process of “social metabolism”.<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn30">[30]</a> This real result, however, tells us nothing about the process through which the result has been achieved. The same material result would arise from direct barter, or from a customary process of the exchange of goods. If we focus entirely on the result, we will arrive at a very partial and one-sided understanding of the process.</p>
<p>At the same time, the material result cannot be disregarded. It generates real effects, which form part of the real internal variability of capitalist production. These real effects suggest specific possibilities for future social development – including some possibilities that would carry social development in directions that are not compatible with the continued reproduction of capital. In this sense, these real effects enable practical experiences that can be mobilized critically, to advocate alternative forms of collective life.</p>
<p>Some contemporary theorists have picked up on one possible emancipatory implication of this particular real effect, and have argued that Marx intends to advocate for a form of collective life in which social wealth is based on material wealth, rather than on value.<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn31">[31]</a> While this may indeed be an important potential, Marx’s actual understanding of emancipatory possibilities is much more complex, mining many different dimensions of the internal variability in the practices that reproduce capital. The end result is a rich and complex network of emancipatory resources that Marx catalogues throughout his text.</p>
<p>Having explored the implications of the material result, Marx pans back to look at the same phenomenon from a broader perspective – that of the process by which this material result has been achieved.<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn32">[32]</a> By panning back in this way, Marx can criticize as one-sided and partial any forms of theory that over-extrapolate from this small aspect of capitalist production. He can also begin assembling the resources to make a <em>prima facie</em> case that capitalist production itself suggests the possibility for alternative means to achieve this same result – thus refuting charges that his critique is utopian or impractical given current levels of technological sophistication or complexity of the division of labour.</p>
<p>This basic process will continue through the whole length of <em>Capital</em>. In each new section, Marx will systematically catalogue dimensions of social experience, point out which competing forms of theory fixate on the dimension just analyzed, ask what other social purposes could be pursued when deploying the same sorts of social actions, and then pan back to look at capitalist production from a different perspective.</p>
<p>But what does all this have to do with the subject/object divide?</p>
<p>When carrying out his microscopic anatomy, Marx stages a series of miniature plays. He is analyzing micrological social practices, and to do so he seeks to capture, not just what sorts of impacts people create in the external world, or what sorts of interactions they carry out with other people, but what sorts of bodily comportments, strategic orientations, forms of perception and thought, and other subjective states are part and parcel of a specific social performance. The narrative form of the play allows Marx to capture the subjective, intersubjective and objective elements of each social practice that he explores. It also allows him to thematize how what is superficially the “same” act, carried out with the same prop and on the same stage, might nevertheless be part of a very different performance, depending on the subjective orientations, intersubjective relations, or objective impacts enacted.</p>
<p>Thus, for example, the common prop we call “money” can be variously used by buyers and sellers, debtors and creditors, thieves and heirs, bankers and governments, and a wide cast of other characters who enact different sorts of performances facilitated by this same basic prop. These performances, however, constitute different sorts of subjective stances, intersubjective relations, and objective consequences – they generate different immediate consequences, and different potentials for current and future social development. Unless this diversity is recognized, theorists may conflate fundamentally different kinds of social performance, overlook contradictory social trends, and fail to grasp important potentials for alternative forms of collective life.</p>
<p>The theatrical narrative style of Marx’s work is designed to maximize his ability to keep track of the performative diversity that can differentiate superficially similar kinds of social practices. It enables Marx to map several different dimensions of social practices simultaneously, in a way that clearly demarcates and preserves social diversity.</p>
<p>This approach allows Marx to relate social forms of subjectivity and objectivity to one another, not because these forms all share the same fractal structure, but because determinate subjective stances, intersubjective relations, and objective consequences are always part and parcel of any given social practice. For this reason, Marx does not end up pointing all social performances back to a small number of social forms that purportedly permeate social interaction. Instead, he ends up cataloguing dozens and dozens of differentiated types of performances, each integral to the reproduction of capital, but each also generating their own distinctive consequences and potentials when considered in isolation or when grouped together with a subset of the other practices required for capitalist production.</p>
<p>Many of the performances Marx traces are fleeting and ephemeral moments embedded in longer chains of related practices. We enact many of these performances in a state of distraction, while focusing on more overarching goals. And yet these fleeting practical experiences, which may fly beneath the radar of ordinary awareness, nevertheless provide a reservoir of experience that can be mined and rendered explicit for emancipatory ends.</p>
<p>The experience of human equality figures as one of these fleeting moments – contradicted by many more prominent aspects of social experience, so that the conviction that humans are equal emerges initially, in Marx’s words, as a “fixed popular opinion”<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn33">[33]</a> – something we intuitively feel is correct, but whose origins we have difficulty tracing, because we enact a peculiar kind of equality accidentally, in the course of a performance that has very different overt goals. Once enacted, however, human equality becomes a particularly important component of the reservoir of practical experience that can be wielded for emancipatory ends.</p>
<h3>VI. Selective Inheritance</h3>
<p>How does all this relate to the question with which I opened – the question of how Marx understands the immanent generation of emancipatory potential? A seemingly throwaway line in <em>Capital</em>’s opening chapter provides an important hint. Ostensibly speaking about “production” in a narrow economic sense, Marx argues:</p>
<blockquote><p>When man engages in production, he can only proceed as nature does herself, i.e. he can only change the form of the materials.<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftn34">[34]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>I suggest that Marx understands this principle also to apply to our production of human history. For Marx, emancipatory potentials are not created <em>ex nihilo</em>, through some sort of abstract leap outside history. Instead, they are appropriated – seized from the circumstances in which they originated, repurposed, and institutionalized anew. Once again, the spirit of the argument is Darwinian: although there is no <em>telos</em> driving historical development in a particular direction, later forms of social life are descended, with modification, from earlier forms.</p>
<p>Moreover, the development of new forms of social life does not take place in a completely random way. It is mediated by an opportunistic process of selective inheritance that draws upon the pre-existing variability present in the original society in adapting to a changing historical environment.</p>
<p>Within this framework, Marx’s microscopic anatomy serves two crucial purposes. First, it shows how an extremely diverse array of micrological social practices could unintentionally generate the sorts of social forms described in <em>Capital</em>’s opening chapter – how order could arise without the need for a mystical designer. Second, it demonstrates how inadequate it would be, to reduce our social experience to the set of aggregate patterns that are captured by these social forms. These patterns are <em>part</em> of the internal variability of capitalist production – a particularly striking and, for political economy at least, awe-inducing part, which requires for its generation the tandem operation of all of the social practices Marx catalogues in <em>Capital</em>. Yet the same practices that operate together to generate such aggregate effects, also generate effects at much more local scales, which do not require the continued operation of the system as a whole, and which suggest alternative ways of institutionalizing the aspects of capitalist production we might want to preserve.</p>
<p><em>Capital</em>’s critical standpoint relies on keeping firmly in view this vast reservoir of internal social variability. It refuses to look <em>through</em> this complex, chaotic content, in order to reductively grasp capitalism as a system defined only by the reproduction of a small set of social forms. Instead, it sees the reproduction of capital as dependent on a vast assemblage of social practices that possesses high internal variability. Through a process of selective inheritance, it is possible to mobilize this internal variability, adaptively improvizing new forms of collective life. Communism would be capitalism, some disassembly required: a speciation from our existing form of social life, which would creatively adapt existing social potentials to emancipatory ends.</p>
<h3>Notes</h3>
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<p>[<a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref1">1]</a>           Karl Marx, <em>Grundrisse: Foundations of the Critique of Political Economy (Rough Draft),</em> trans, M. Nicolaus, Harmondsworth, England: Penguin Books, 1973, p. 159.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref2">[2]</a>           Georg Lukács, &#8216;Reification and the Consciousness of the Proletariat&#8217;, in <em>History and Class Consciousness: Studies in Marxist Dialectics</em>, trans. R. Livingstone, London: Merlin Press, 1971, p. 83.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref3">[3]</a>           Max Horkheimer and Theodor W. Adorno, <em>Dialectic of Enlightenment: Philosophical Fragments</em>, trans. E. Jephcott, Standord, Claifornia: Stranford University Press, 2002.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref4">[4]</a>           Christopher J. Arthur, <em>The New Dialectic and Marx&#8217;s Capital</em>, Leiden; Boston: Brill, 2004.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref5">[5]</a>           Moishe Postone, <em>Time, Labour and Social Domination: A Reinterpretation of Marx&#8217;s Critical Theory</em>, Cambridge, England; New York, USA: Cambridge University Press, 1993.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref6">[6]</a>           Karl Marx, <em>Capital: A Critique of Political Economy, Volume One,</em> trans, B. Fowkes, London: Penguin Books in association with New Left Review, 1990, pp. 173-5.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref7">[7]</a>           Marx, <em>Capital</em>, p. 175 n35.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref8">[8]</a>           Marx, <em>Capital</em>, p. 90.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref9">[9]</a>           Ibid., p. 102.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref10">[10]</a>          Ibid., p. 125-6.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref11">[11]</a>          Ibid., p. 126.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref12">[12]</a>          Ibid., pp. 121-6.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref13">[13]</a>          Cf. Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk, <em>Karl Marx and the Close of His System</em>, London: T.F. Unwin, 1898, ch. 4.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref14">[14]</a>          Marx, <em>Capital</em>, p. 138.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref15">[15]</a>          Ibid., pp. 138-63.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref16">[16]</a>          Francis Wheen, <em>Marx&#8217;s </em>Das Kapital<em>: a Biography</em>, Vancouver: Douglas &amp; McIntyre, 2007, p. 42.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref17">[17]</a>          Dominick LaCapra, <em>Rethinking Intellectual History: Texts, Contexts, Language</em>, Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1983, p. 333.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref18">[18]</a>          Marx, <em>Capital</em>, pp.151-2.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref19">[19]</a>          Ibid., pp. 151-2.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref20">[20]</a>          Ibid., p. 168.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref21">[21]</a>          Ibid., pp. 166-8.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref22">[22]</a>          Ibid., p. 179.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref23">[23]</a>          Ibid., pp. 421-2.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref24">[24]</a>          Ibid., pp. 678-82.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref25">[25]</a>          Ibid., pgs. 716, 724; cf. also Karl Marx, &#8216;Results of the Immediate Process of Production&#8217;, in <em>Capital</em>, 1990, pp. 949-53.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref26">[26]</a>          Marx, <em>Capital</em>, p. 255.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref27">[27]</a>          Ibid., p. 256.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref28">[28]</a>          Ibid., p. 255.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref29">[29]</a>            Cf. Thomas T. Sekine, <em>An Outline of </em>The Dialectic of <em>Capital</em>, New York: St. Martin&#8217;s Press, 1997.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref30">[30]</a>          Marx, <em>Capital</em>, p. 199.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref31">[31]</a>          Postone, <em>Time, Labour and Social Domination</em>.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref32">[32]</a>          Marx, <em>Capital</em>, p. 200.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref33">[33]</a>          Ibid., p. 152.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/Higher%20Realms.doc#_ftnref34">[34]</a>          Ibid., p. 133.</p>
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		<title>Some contributions to thinking in the present moment</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 26 Oct 2011 15:40:02 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>John Steele</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Alan Badiou]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bill Martin]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[There&#8217;s a new wind  blowing across this globalized world, from Tunisia to Egypt to Greece to Spain to Occupy Wall Street. How do the theoretical investigations of this site relate to this, to what&#8217;s new and emerging?  This question of the emergence of novelty, of understanding this very changing world so as to help to [...]
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>There&#8217;s a new wind </em></p>
<p><em><a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/wp-content/uploads/Occupy-Wall-Street-Sept-302.jpg"><img class="alignright size-medium wp-image-1718" title="Occupy-Wall-Street-Sept-30" src="http://www.khukuritheory.net/wp-content/uploads/Occupy-Wall-Street-Sept-302-300x207.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="207" /></a>blowing across this globalized world, from Tunisia to Egypt to Greece to Spain to Occupy Wall Street. How do the theoretical investigations of this site relate to this, to what&#8217;s new and emerging? </em></p>
<p>This question of the emergence of novelty, of understanding this very changing world so as to help to change it fundamentally, has always been central to this site. And some pivotal issues of the Occupy movement (Who are the 1%? for example) have been explored here as well.</p>
<p>At the urging of Mike Ely from <a href="http://kasamaproject.org/">Kasama</a>, we&#8217;ve put together a guide to some important writings on khukuri, organized by topic:</p>
<p><strong>What is current the structure of global capital?</strong> See essays concerning a transnational capitalist class (TNC) &#8212; truly the global 1% (or less) &#8211; by <a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/a-transnational-capitalist-class/">Leslie Sklair</a>, by <a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/transnational-capital-an-interview/">William Robinson</a>, <a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/a-global-ruling-class/">Jerry Harris</a>, and by <a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/transnational-capitalist-linkages-and-class-formation/">William K. Carroll</a>, as well as in the recent piece on <a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/global-corporate-networks/">global corporate networks</a>.</p>
<p><strong>How do we analyze the present crisis, and how do we go forward from it?</strong> See this by <a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/how-can-communism-be-brought-about/">David Harvey</a>, as well as essays by Don Hamerquist, on <a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/the-crisis-of-the-capitalist-state-and-the-crisis-of-the-left/">the crisis of both capitalism and the left</a>, and <a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/austerity-butterflies-and-the-future/">hollow states in a time of austerity and chaos</a>, and John Steele’s <a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/the-crisis-now-and-possible-futures/">notes from a conference</a> devoted to this subject.</p>
<p><strong>What is the relevance of Marxism today?</strong> This important question is explored in <a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/should-marxism-have-a-privileged-status/">this essay</a> by Vern Gray and in these by John Steele:</p>
<p><a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/our-relation-to-revolutionary-tradition/">Our Relation to Revolutionary Tradition</a>;</p>
<p><a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/marxism-or-anarchism-or/">We Need a Politics We Haven’t Got</a>;</p>
<p>and <a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/to-what-extent-is-revolutionary-theory-detachable/">To what extent is revolutionary theory detachable?</a></p>
<p>as well as Bill Martin’s extensive essay <a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/wp-content/uploads/bill_martin_into_the_wild.pdf">Into the Wild</a>.</p>
<p><strong>How can we understand the present historical moment in a way that can also prepare us for the eruption of something new?</strong> And what is the relevance of <strong>the contemporary thinker Alain Badiou?</strong></p>
<p>John Steele has written a series of essays: <a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/alain-badiou-another-take-on-revolutionary-theory/">Another take on revolutionary theory</a>; on <a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/when-everything-seems-to-change-badiou-and-the-event/">Badiou and the event</a>; <a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/john-steele-revolutionary-faithfulness-and-the-radically-new/">Revolutionary fidelity and the radically new</a>; on <a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/why-is-badiou-of-political-value/">Badiou&#8217;s political value</a>; and on <a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/is-badiou-a-maoist/">Badiou&#8217;s Maoism</a>.</p>
<p>Relatedly, there is J. Ramsey’s <a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/what-is-badious-communism/">essay addressing the question</a>.</p>
<p>And see these by Don Hamerquist: <a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/barack-badiou-and-bilal-al-hasan/">Barack, Badiou, and Bilal-al-hasan</a>; and <a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/financialization-and-hegemony/">“…that which in them divides itself from the old”</a>.</p>
<p>(And here too, Bill Martin, in <a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/wp-content/uploads/bill_martin_into_the_wild.pdf">the essay cited above</a>.)</p>
<p>Finally, in terms of understanding the &#8220;new wind,&#8221; although this is a topic we’ll have more on, for now it&#8217;s worth noting <a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/students-of-these-movements-not-their-stupid-professors/">an essay by Don Hamerquist on the earlier parts of this sequence</a>.</p>
<p>Related posts:<ol>
<li><a href='http://www.khukuritheory.net/could-the-present-crisis-be-an-opening-to-communism/' rel='bookmark' title='Could the present crisis be an opening to communism?'>Could the present crisis be an opening to communism?</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.khukuritheory.net/financialization-and-hegemony/' rel='bookmark' title='Financialization and hegemony'>Financialization and hegemony</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.khukuritheory.net/marxism-politics-and-evil-part-2/' rel='bookmark' title='Marxism, politics, and evil, part 2'>Marxism, politics, and evil, part 2</a></li>
</ol></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Financialization and hegemony</title>
		<link>http://www.khukuritheory.net/financialization-and-hegemony/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Oct 2011 00:20:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>John Steele</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Current events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Don Hamerquist]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Marxism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Political Economy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Revolutionary Strategy]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[How does (or can) theoretical investigations relate to the rapidly developing &#8220;Occupy&#8230;.&#8221; movement? This is a question I was asked recently, and to which I don&#8217;t have a ready answer. But the following essay covers a lot of important ground whose relationship to the present moment should be clear &#8212; the need for a revolutionary subject, [...]
Related posts:<ol>
<li><a href='http://www.khukuritheory.net/a-crisis-of-financial-hegemony/' rel='bookmark' title='A crisis of financial hegemony?'>A crisis of financial hegemony?</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.khukuritheory.net/the-crisis-financialization-and-cognitive-capitalism/' rel='bookmark' title='The crisis, financialization, and &#8220;cognitive capitalism&#8221;'>The crisis, financialization, and &#8220;cognitive capitalism&#8221;</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.khukuritheory.net/some-contributions-to-thinking-in-the-present-moment/' rel='bookmark' title='Some contributions to thinking in the present moment'>Some contributions to thinking in the present moment</a></li>
</ol>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>How does (or can) theoretical investigations relate to the rapidly developing &#8220;Occupy&#8230;.&#8221; movement? This is a question I was asked recently, and to which I don&#8217;t have a ready answer. But the following </em><em>essay covers a lot of important ground whose relationship to the present moment should be clear &#8212; the need for a revolutionary subject, on the one hand; how state power is exercised through the development of an illusory general interest, on the other; and how transnational financialization, and the consequent contradictions for existing state structures, has brought issues of the legitimacy of state power closer to the surface.</em></p>
<p><em>Don Hamerquist has published <a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/category/authors/don-hamerquist/">several essays</a> previously on khukuri.</em></p>
<h2>&#8220;&#8230;that which in them divides itself from the old”</h2>
<p><strong>Don Hamerquist</strong></p>
<p>I would like to say a few things on the form and the content of the argument in <a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/can-capitalism-exit-from-this-crisis/">Anselm Jappe&#8217;s article</a>, in order to open up some issues that hopefully will go beyond this starting point.</p>
<p>Jappe, who I only know through this short piece, advances a generic Marxist conception of the limits of capitalist accumulation as if that is sufficient demonstration that most of what the contemporary left is writing and thinking about the current crisis is just stupidity – and probably reformist as well. While the conclusion has undeniable merit, the method falls well short of what we need. Jappe states:</p>
<blockquote><p>(Karl Marx) also foresaw the eventuality that some day the capitalist machine would stop running on its own, through the exhaustion of its dynamic. Why? Capitalist commodity production contains, from its very inception an internal contradiction, a veritable time bomb built into its very structure.</p></blockquote>
<p>We have waited a long time on this&#8230; “veritable time bomb.<em>&#8220;</em></p>
<p>I have big questions about any explanations and prescriptions from decades in the past (in this instance, centuries) that are presented as what is needed for us to properly understand the politics of our present and immediate future.</p>
<p><span id="more-1663"></span></p>
<p>It’s not as if propositions such as “&#8230;the capitalist machine would stop running on its own&#8230;” have been validated by historical experience. Putting questionable hypotheses from a distant past in a more forceful manifesto or a better set of theses tends to be a waste of our political resources. Whether Jappe provides a good rendering of Marx is open to a discussion that I will avoid for now, but regardless of what Marx said or meant – and both questions are quite debatable &#8211; it will hardly be sufficient for current circumstances.</p>
<p>My friend and long time comrade, Ken Lawrence, has written an interesting draft piece on his experience with <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Facing_Reality">C.L.R. James and the Facing Reality political tendency</a> that relates to some of these issues. Lawrence reluctantly comes to some political conclusions – not ones that I fully share – from a critical appraisal that I do share of another familiar proposition from the Communist Manifesto:</p>
<blockquote><p>All fixed, fast frozen relations, with their train of ancient and venerable prejudices and opinions, are swept away, all new-formed ones become antiquated before they can ossify. All that is solid melts into air, all that is holy is profaned, and man is at last compelled to face with sober senses his real condition of life and his relations with his kind.</p></blockquote>
<p>As Ken argues, little in our collective experience demonstrates a capitalist compulsion on the working class to soberly confront, <em>“real conditions”</em> and <em>“relations”</em> and a good deal of our experience supports very different conclusions. This highlights the common problem with the proclamatory first principles methods of Jappe and too many others. They gloss over the indeterminacy and the reversibility of the processes through which a revolutionary anti capitalist subject will develop. But without such a subject, armed with a revolutionary program and the organized will to respond to the mass potentials created in a capitalist crisis, communism will “&#8230;remain an ideal that will be always yet to come.” (Bosteels, <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Badiou-Politics-Post-Contemporary-Interventions-Bosteels/dp/0822350769/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1318199424&amp;sr=1-1">Badiou and Politics</a>, p. 280)</p>
<p>Ken approaches these issues through the concept of <em>“punctuated equilibria”</em> that he adapts from evolutionary science. In this framework, moments of <em>“great upheaval”,</em> the punctuation, are normally followed by a more prolonged period of a new equilibrium with its unique functional methods of incremental adaptation. Assume, at least for purposes of discussion, that we are experiencing a disruption of a previous equilibrium, perhaps the situation that the Italians describe as “Fordism”, combined with what others of us have termed “imperialism”. We might be seeing some hopeful signs in these circumstances of disrupted equilibrium, but it seems quite clear that these fall well short the necessary and sufficient grounds for revolutionary outcomes. Without a plausibly adequate revolutionary subject, a new equilibrium –- but one that is still essentially capitalist, or at least not emancipatory and communist – will be the most likely outcome.</p>
<p>We know very well that every upsurge of mass resistance contains a tendency to fetishize various short- of-revolution possibilities that are more likely to fit into a new, non-emancipatory, equilibrium than to provide a foundation for a revolutionary advance. The elasticity of capitalist power is shown in limitations on the anti-capitalist counterpower that emerges at the moments of heightened contradiction and crisis. This conservative elasticity facilitates the elevation of illusory popular objectives into political substitutes for revolutionary communism that can dominate radical politics for generations.</p>
<p>So how should we respond? I like this formulation from the younger Badiou (circa 1975) as a starting point – and it is also the point where I will end this piece when I eventually get there:</p>
<blockquote><p>It is never ‘the masses’, nor the ‘movement’ that as a whole carry the principle of engenderment of the new, but that which in them divides itself from the old.” (Cited from Badiou in Bosteels, p. 136)</p></blockquote>
<p>The new potentials that develop in the explosively expanded struggles of periods of capitalist crisis aren’t necessarily cumulative and irreversible. They don’t emerge in a linear process. I think that Badiou’s formulation raises the contradictory character of this process and the necessity to counter the strategic unevenness through organized political interventions in a strong and beneficial way. Before capitalism can be overthrown, a number of very uncomfortable elements of the internal dialectic between a revolutionary communist component of a mass movement and the mass popular constituency of that movement will have to be worked through. This will be necessary to prevent popular insurgencies from overdosing on their own victories – real and illusory. As Badiou also points out, far too often: “&#8230;once the mass festivals of democracy and discourse are over, things make place for the modernist restoration of order among workers and bosses.&#8221; (Cited in Bosteels, P.279).<em> </em></p>
<p>Capitalism will not topple<em> “&#8230;through&#8230;exhaustion&#8230;”</em>. It will not <em>“&#8230;stop running on its own&#8230;” </em>as Jappe suggests. It must be overthrown by a politically conscious mass counter force, and the primary issues for us concern how such a force might develop. I’m more a Leninist than a Marxist on such questions which will probably raise eyebrows &#8211; and not only from the anarchist crew. I think that this particular strategic process and its associated dilemmas underscore the importance of Lenin’s position on the <em>‘art’</em> of revolution. And, although Lenin would certainly have disagreed, I think that rather than an extension and elaboration of Marx, this is a break with Marx – certainly it is a break with the Marx of Jappe, that implies that capitalism might collapse from the working out of a simple internal contradiction.</p>
<p><strong>Financialization</strong></p>
<p>These issues of inevitability and of the complex relationship between the necessity and the possibility of revolution are important, but there is a different, and perhaps more relevant, weakness in the Jappe article. He shows little interest in any connection between such general questions of revolutionary process and this particular capitalist crisis. He dismisses the possibility that <em>“financialization”</em> might provide a key to features of this crisis without proposing any alternative way to understand the specific features that it does exhibit. Unlike Jappe, I think the development of financialization is a root source of a significant and unique disturbance to the capitalist equilibrium of our recent past, and this disturbance is central to this current crisis. I will try out a tentative approach to these issues below, but first, I want to spend a moment on Jappe’s view as I understand it.</p>
<p>He argues that the expanded system of financialization may have deferred and redirected a more basic crisis in capitalist accumulation, but it is not an important causal factor in its own right. Instead, it is more of a surface manifestation of an underlying reality that it partially disguises by projecting a false opposition between a ‘good’ and a ‘bad’ form of capitalism. In a certain sense this is right, but, in this same general sense it is also not particularly controversial among anti-capitalist revolutionaries. It’s true enough that the global financial system and its crisis should not &#8211; really cannot &#8211; be approached separately from the global circumstances for capitalism. But who on the anti-capitalist left thinks differently on this question? For the most part, the distinctions between a ‘bad’ capitalist financial system and a ‘good’ productive capitalism are features of populist tendencies and institutional reformists &#8211; with some neo-fascists among the former, and some social democrats among the economic nationalists in the latter. Not many of those folks regard themselves as revolutionary anti-capitalists and fewer still merit such a description.</p>
<p>When this ‘bad capitalism’ approach appears to be adopted by a genuinely radical tendency, perhaps through fixating on bank nationalization as a strategic political demand; the cause is less likely to be a mistaken understanding of the <em>“capitalist machine”</em>, than a reasonable, although slightly desperate, lack of confidence that Jappe’s <em>‘veritable time bomb’ </em>will ever actually detonate. And as I have said above, there are grounds for such pessimism that Jappe would be well advised to consider. (This shouldn’t be seen as a backhanded endorsement of the Panitch/Gindin approach to bank nationalization which I think it is mistaken, but for reasons related to ‘transitional demand’ strategic conceptions that are not apparently a part of Jappe’s critique.)</p>
<p>When financialization is seen as an independent variable with only a contingent relationship to some idealized capitalism, or when it is reduced to that same idealized ‘simple’ capitalism; our ability to understand its actual impact will be severely reduced. And in the same process, so will our ability to clarify and implement the political interventions that can counter the tendencies for the emerging mass resistance to collapse back into itself; greasing the emergence of some new non-liberatory stage that might or might not be something that looks like an equilibrium.</p>
<p>I’d like to develop a counter argument to Jappe’s with respect to financialization and the unique role the capitalist state assumes in the current crisis, but some preliminary points are needed. What I intend to argue begins from material that is fairly new to me – although possibly not so much to others – and I’d welcome questions and challenges. In part this material is based on the Bosteel’s book on Badiou, <em>Badiou and Politics</em>, which I’ve cited a few times in the earlier argument. I find Bosteels useful, although I disagree with a major thrust of his argument that is peripheral to this discussion. This area of disagreement covers what appears to me to be an impressively academic, but rather unpersuasive attempt to project Badiou as a Marxist critic of “pure leftism” (Bosteels, p. 283-286). (<em>“Pure leftism”</em>, now that’s a camp where I probably fit, but perhaps not so pure).</p>
<p><strong>Arrighi</strong></p>
<p>However, my primary point of reference is the argument presented in Giovanni Arrighi’s book, <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Long-Twentieth-Century-Origins-Updated/dp/1844673049/ref=sr_1_1_title_0_main?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1318200160&amp;sr=1-1">The Long Twentieth Century</a>. Arrighi covers a different subject matter than Bosteels, one that is primarily historical rather than philosophical. In my opinion, he also has far more to offer than Bosteels (although not Badiou). If his book hadn’t been finished well before the current crisis, Arrighi might have worked out some better resolutions of the dilemmas of juxtaposing patterned long wave historical cycles of capitalist accumulation with chaos theory. These are problems that that he shares with his friend and co-thinker, Wallerstein, in my opinion.</p>
<p>I did find some debatable themes in what I have read from Arrighi. One that is relevant to an understanding of this crisis is his recurring fixation on finding a new capitalist hegemon emerging between the <em>“signal”</em> and the <em>“terminal” </em>crisis of the current, <em>“’organic core’ of the capitalist world-economy”</em> (Arrighi, p. 332). At an earlier date, a greater Japan was Arrighi’s candidate for hegemon. More recently, shortly before Arrighi’s death and with Japan in a prolonged stagnation that was stretching into its third decade, he appears to assign the role to China. Laying aside whether or not these estimates were properly based in socio-economic fact, this strand of Arrighi’s approach is biased towards the possibility of a new long wave of capitalist accumulation, a <em>‘new equilibrium’</em>, with all of the non-revolutionary implications that this would involve.</p>
<p>In my opinion this lingering reluctance to see a break in the pattern of essentially repetitive cycles of capital accumulation, although on larger scales and with shorter durations, is a major weakness. This is the case even taking into account Arrighi’s recognition that there are some qualitative changes from one cycle to the next that do imply broader and deeper questions about future possibilities. However, I think that this limited approach is at odds with another strand of Arrighi’s presentation that I like much more. Consider this passage from the concluding chapter of the book:</p>
<blockquote><p>The uncontainability of violence in the contemporary world is closely associated with the withering away of the modern system of territorial states as the primary locus of world power&#8230;Combined with the internalization of world-scale processes of production and exchange within the organizational domains of transnational corporations, and with the resurgence of suprastatal world financial markets, these unprecedented restrictions and expectations have translated into strong pressures to relocate the authority of nation-states both upward and downward.” (Arrighi, p. 331)</p></blockquote>
<p><strong>&#8220;Hollow states&#8221;</strong></p>
<p>Arrighi died in early 2009 and all versions and updates of this book were finished well before the events of 2008. Nevertheless I find this passage extremely relevant to the period that was initiated by the current crisis. The <em>‘withering away of the modern system of territorial states”</em> seems to me to raise the ‘hollow state’ issue that I’ve been kicking around recently. The “suprastatal world financial markets,” that Arrighi sees as major active factors precipitating the “withering” process, are just another way of presenting the disruptive impacts of an active and growing – and increasingly problematic &#8211; global financial system.</p>
<p>I wouldn’t characterize the results quite as Arrighi does in this citation: “strong pressures to relocate the authority of national-states both upward and downward.” Rather than relocating the authority up and down, it seems to me that the new sources of authority trends are relocating at a diagonal from the previous institutional frameworks. More important, the processes of breakdown in hegemony and command occur at a distance in both space and time from the counter processes of that might activate new and relocated sites of command and acquiescence; the new “&#8230;networks of coercion&#8230;” (Arrighi, p. xi), that will be essential to any new cycle of capitalist accumulation. But perhaps this is more a disagreement with language than substance. In any case, I like this Arrighi. Consider another aspect of his argument:</p>
<blockquote><p>In the scheme of things proposed here, the close historical tie between capitalism and the modern inter-state system is just as much one of contradiction as it is one of unity&#8230;capitalism and national states grew up together, and presumably depended on each other in some way, yet capitalists and centers of capital accumulation often offered concerted resistance to the extension of state power&#8230;the division of the world into competing political jurisdictions does not necessarily benefit the capitalist accumulation of capital.” (Arrighi, p. 32)</p></blockquote>
<p>According to Arrighi, the emergence of the worldwide capitalist system has involved distinct historic cycles of accumulation that have been linked to the emergence of dominant hegemonic  political structures, primarily nation states, that, “&#8230;can credibly claim to be the motor force of a general expansion of the <strong>collective</strong> power of rulers <em>vis a vis</em> subjects” (Arrighi, p. 30 his emphasis). These hegemonic political structures play a distinct role in both expediting and defending specific capitalist accumulation processes. However, Arrighi perceptively notes that they also are the center of <em>“territorialist” </em>complexes of state formations and civil societies that embody, “&#8230;modes of rule&#8230; logics of power&#8230;” (Arrighi, p. 33), that are distinct from those of capitalist modes of production.</p>
<p>These differences are currently exacerbated to the point of rupture by the increasing influence of the suprastate elements of capital accumulation; transnational corporations; global productive processes and labor flows, and, above all, global financial markets dealing with magnitudes far in excess of any measure of the values of actual production, and more and more commonly, far in excess of the economic resources commanded by and encompassed within any state formation. All of this becomes less and less compatible with the viability and the success of any of these, <em>“competing political jurisdictions”</em>.</p>
<p>So let me turn around the Arrighi citation a bit and ask, isn’t it also true and perhaps more relevant, that the current mode of “&#8230;accumulation of capital&#8230;”, the business model as they say on CNBC, does not fully “benefit” any “&#8230;political jurisdiction&#8230;”? And if the growing organization of production within transnational economic structures and the pervasiveness of the global pursuit of ficticious capital translates, “&#8230;<em> into strong pressures to relocate the authority of nation-state both upward and downward&#8230;”</em>; these same pressures also qualitatively disrupt the traditional state forms, and raise the question of the viability of the essentially bourgeois category of nation-state. This makes for large difficulties in either relocating the various state functions “upward,” to the transnational level, or “downward,” to more local forms or to those emerging quasi-state functional capacities in what previously was considered the private sphere. (Perhaps this latter development shouldn’t be depicted as “downward.”) Thus the emergence of the phenomena of ‘hollow states’ which can’t effectively provide the essential <em>‘networks of coercion’</em> and the viable common ruling class project on which further development of new sites of capitalist accumulation depend.</p>
<p>I think that where Arrighi emphasizes the division of the world into competing territorial political jurisdictions that don’t adequately facilitate capital accumulation; the other side of the contradiction is equally, if not more, important. The current accumulation of (ficticious) capital does not benefit any unique array of ‘political jurisdictions’, and, indeed, it undermines most without much discrimination. This extends from the inability of local and regional governments to control adequate revenue streams to allow them to deliver political goods to their constituents, to the inability of supranational capitalist governmental structures to impose discipline on their national or regional components &#8211; or on particular segments of capital. I think that the tendency towards various types of financial crisis in this late stage of a cycle of capitalist development is presenting the ‘territorialist’ state complexes with major dilemmas. Specifically, it is proving very difficult to implement a capitalist resolution of a financial crisis through the existing territorial nation state institutional structures without disrupting those structures and eroding essential elements of their internal hegemonic character. This is a reality that we can see in the news of the day – and I mean this quite literally.</p>
<p><strong>State power</strong></p>
<p>I would like to end this by briefly attempting to tie it to some recent discussions of the state and state power. Let’s begin with another reference from a different article, on <a href="http://libcom.org/library/karl-marx-state">Marx and the State</a>. (I owe this reference to John Garvey, an editor at <a href="http://insurgentnotes.com/">Insurgent Notes</a>.) The following is a surprisingly valuable passage from an article which otherwise is a routine defense of a ‘good’ Marx against a bad Kautsky and, particularly, a bad Lenin. The article argues that, according to the relatively early Marx:</p>
<blockquote><p>The state is alien and detached from civil society precisely because bourgeois civil society is inherently divided. As Marx would put it in <em>The German Ideology</em>, “the practical struggle of these particular interests, which actually constantly run counter to the common and illusory common interests, necessitates practical intervention and restraint by the illusory ‘general’ interest in the form of the state.</p></blockquote>
<p>This conception of the capitalist state, and note that it is the capitalist state, not the state in general that we are discussing, clarifies some potential stress lines. Capitalist political stability requires a state form that can effectively embody a common (capitalist) class interest derived from a mess of conflicting <em>“particular</em> (capitalist) <em>interests”.</em> But this same state form must integrate this common capitalist interest with a set of “illusory common interests,” based in the subordinated side of the consciousness of the oppressed and exploited; the side in which their needs and possibilities are confined within the limits of capital. This all then is aggregated into a “general interest” which is illusory in the sense that it needs to abstract from real differences and disguise real antagonisms as commonalities. Capitalist stability depends on the maintenance of an “&#8230;illusory ‘general’ interest”; illusory precisely because it integrates the real, but divergent interests common to capital with the fake <em>‘illusory common interests’</em> that rest on capital’s hegemony over the classes it oppresses and exploits. (I see this as an argument of Marx’s that anticipates Gramsci’s notion of the hegemonic capacity of the <em>“classe dirigente.”</em>) And as the earlier references to Badiou implied, it is the inadequacy of the break with this <em>“illusory common” </em>that dilutes revolutionary consciousness and deflects the trajectory of insurgent movements.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, capitalism does have this complex functional problem of disguising the fact that they are ‘ruled’ to those that actually are ruled &#8211; a problem with constantly changing characteristics requiring that the shape of the <em>‘rule</em>’ must constantly be reset to adapt to changing circumstances, but without jeopardizing its capacity to appear as a manifestation of <em>“common interest.”</em> In terms of this discussion, these changing circumstances are those provided by the metastasized crisis of the global financial system and that is why it is so specifically important to the current situation.</p>
<p>Transnational financialization has created situations where particular competitive interests of blocs of capital can’t be adequately restrained by the intervention of any state since they have accumulated and can wield economic and political power that often exceeds and always compromises that which is available to any existing state or sub-state formation &#8211; including the most powerful of them, the U.S. nation state. This inability of the capitalist state formations to discipline the disparate competing tendencies in the class(es ?) they represent, undermines the material foundation for maintaining the illusory common interests on which the incorporation and subordination of the working classes have depended. This brings the issues of the legitimacy of state power closer to the surface and challenges to it develop more frequently and sharply. And, of course, any forceful exercise of state power against the working classes evokes a broader and deeper resistance, while exacerbating the contradictory elements of the <em>“particular interests”</em> within the ruling class.</p>
<p>I want to cut this off here with just one disconnected conclusion. While it will never be self evident just what this involves; our efforts should go to exacerbate this contradiction by focusing on the aspect of collective resistance that, as Badiou said, <em>“divides itself from the old.” </em>Not as easy to do as it is to say – but a point to be kept in mind.</p>
<p>Related posts:<ol>
<li><a href='http://www.khukuritheory.net/a-crisis-of-financial-hegemony/' rel='bookmark' title='A crisis of financial hegemony?'>A crisis of financial hegemony?</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.khukuritheory.net/the-crisis-financialization-and-cognitive-capitalism/' rel='bookmark' title='The crisis, financialization, and &#8220;cognitive capitalism&#8221;'>The crisis, financialization, and &#8220;cognitive capitalism&#8221;</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.khukuritheory.net/some-contributions-to-thinking-in-the-present-moment/' rel='bookmark' title='Some contributions to thinking in the present moment'>Some contributions to thinking in the present moment</a></li>
</ol></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Can capitalism exit from this crisis?</title>
		<link>http://www.khukuritheory.net/can-capitalism-exit-from-this-crisis/</link>
		<comments>http://www.khukuritheory.net/can-capitalism-exit-from-this-crisis/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 09 Oct 2011 22:15:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>John Steele</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Current events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Marxism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Political Economy]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.khukuritheory.net/?p=1610</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Perhaps it&#8217;s time to resume some discussion of the economic crisis. The author of the following, Anselm Jappe, teaches philosophy in Italy and is a member of the Krisis-Gruppe.  Translated from the Spanish translation posted at Comunización: Materiales para una concepción integral del movimiento comunista, and republished here from libcom. Who Is To Blame? Anselm Jappe [...]
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>Perhaps it&#8217;s time to resume some discussion of the economic crisis. The author of the following, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anselm_Jappe">Anselm Jappe</a>, teaches philosophy in Italy and is a member of the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Krisis_Groupe">Krisis-Gruppe</a>. </em></p>
<p><em>Translated from the Spanish translation posted at <a href="http://comunizacion.org/page/4/">Comunización: Materiales para una concepción integral del movimiento comunista</a>, and republished here from <a href="http://libcom.org/library/who-blame-anselm-jappe">libcom</a>.</em></p>
<h2>Who Is To Blame?</h2>
<p><strong>Anselm Jappe</strong></p>
<p>This time, all the commentators agree: what is now taking place is not a simple temporary adjustment of the financial markets. We are facing a crisis that is deemed to be the worst since the Second World War, or since 1929. But whose fault is it, and how can it be overcome? The answer is almost always the same: the “real economy” is healthy; the world economy is endangered by the insane mechanisms of a financial system that is totally out of control. The most facile answer, but also the most widespread, attributes all responsibility for this to the “greed” of a clique of speculators who have been gambling with everyone’s money as if they were in a casino.</p>
<p>However, this artifice of reducing the arcana of the capitalist economy, when the latter is not functioning properly, to the schemes of an evil conspiracy, has a long and dangerous history. The search for scapegoats, for “Jewish bankers” or other culprits, to serve as targets for the indignation of the “honest folk” composed of workers and small savers, would be the worst possible solution.</p>
<p>To contrast a “bad”, predatory and unbridled “Anglo-Saxon” capitalism with a “good”, more responsible “continental” capitalism, is not a serious proposition either. During the last few weeks we have seen that they are distinguishable only by minor details. All who demand—from ATTAC to Sarkozy—“more regulation” of the financial markets perceive the madness of the stock markets as merely an “excess”, or a tumor on an otherwise healthy body.</p>
<p>But what if financialization, far from having ruined the real economy, has helped it to survive past its expiration date?</p>
<p><span id="more-1610"></span></p>
<p>What if financialization has breathed some life into a moribund body? Why are we so sure that capitalism is exempt from the cycle of birth, growth and death? May it not contain intrinsic limits to its development, limits that do not reside solely in the existence of a declared enemy (the proletariat, oppressed peoples), or in the exhaustion of natural resources?</p>
<p>These days it has once again become fashionable to quote Karl Marx. But the German philosopher did not speak only about the class struggle. He also foresaw the eventuality that some day the capitalist machine would stop running on its own, through the exhaustion of its dynamic. Why? Capitalist commodity production contains, from its very inception, an internal contradiction, a veritable time bomb built into its very structure.</p>
<p>Capital can only be made fruitful, and thus be accumulated, by the exploitation of labor power. The worker, however, in order to generate a profit for his employer, must be equipped with the necessary tools, and today this means cutting-edge technologies. This results in a permanent race—compelled by competition—to use the newest technologies. At each step, the first employer to adopt the newest technologies wins, because his workers produce more than those who do not use these new tools. But the system as a whole loses because technology is progressively replacing human labor. The value of each commodity consequently contains a constantly diminishing portion of human labor—which is, however, the only source of surplus value, and therefore of profit. The development of technology reduces the profit of the system as a whole. During the last century and a half, however, the expansion of commodity production on a global scale was capable of compensating for this tendency of the value of each commodity to fall.</p>
<p>Since the 1970s, this mechanism—which was nothing but a flight forward—has stalled. Paradoxically, it was the increase in productivity derived from the use of microelectronics that plunged capitalism into crisis. In order to make the labor of the few remaining workers conform to the standards of productivity of the world market, ever more gigantic investments were necessary. The real accumulation of capital threatened to come to a halt. This was the moment when “fictitious capital”, as Marx called it, came to the fore. The suspension of the dollar’s convertibility to gold in 1971 eliminated the last failsafe, the last connection between finance and real accumulation. Credit is nothing but an anticipation of expected future profits. But when the production of value, and therefore of surplus value, stagnated in the real economy (which has nothing to do with stagnation with regard to the production of things: capitalism functions on the basis of surplus value production and not on that of products with use value), the only thing that henceforth allowed the owners of capital to obtain the profits that were impossible to obtain in the real economy, was finance.</p>
<p>The rise of neo-liberalism after 1980 was not a sinister maneuver on the part of the most greedy capitalists, nor was it a coup d’état staged with the help of a few complacent politicians, as some on the “radical” left would have us believe (who must now decide: either graduate to a straightforward critique of capitalism, even if the latter does not proclaim its adherence to neo-liberalism; or participate in the management of an emerging form of capitalism that would include some of the critiques directed against its “excesses”). To the contrary, neo-liberalism was the only possible way to extend the life of the capitalist system just a little longer, a system whose fundamentals were never seriously questioned by anyone, on either the right or the left.</p>
<p>Numerous businesses and individuals could preserve an illusion of prosperity for a little longer thanks to credit. Now this crutch is broken, too. The return to Keynesianism, however, which has been suggested to some degree from all sides, will be utterly impossible: there is no longer enough “real” money in the hands of the States. For the moment, “those in charge” have managed to postpone the Mene, Tekel, Peres of their system by adding another zero to the whimsical numbers written on their screens, to which nothing corresponds. The loans recently conceded to save the Stock Markets are ten times larger than the losses that made the markets tremble ten years ago—real production, however (GDP, let’s say) has increased by approximately 20-30%! This “economic growth” has no real basis of its own, but was caused by the financial bubbles. But when these bubbles burst, there will be no “soft landing” after which everything can begin all over again.</p>
<p>Maybe there will not be a “Black Tuesday” like there was in 1929, or a “Judgment Day”. But there are good reasons to believe that we are experiencing the end of a long historical epoch. The epoch in which productive activity and products are not used to satisfy needs, but to feed the incessant cycle of labor that valorizes capital and capital that employs labor. Commodity and labor, money and government regulation, competition and market: after the financial crises that have repeatedly struck over the last twenty years with increasing intensity, there looms the crisis of all these categories. Categories which, it is always good to recall, have not always and everywhere formed part of human existence. These categories took possession of human life during the last few centuries, and could evolve into something different: something better or something worse. Whatever the outcome, it is not the type of decision that can be made at a meeting of the G-8. . . .</p>
<p><em>Spanish translation by Carlos Lagos.</em></p>
<p>No related posts.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>To what extent is revolutionary theory detachable?</title>
		<link>http://www.khukuritheory.net/to-what-extent-is-revolutionary-theory-detachable/</link>
		<comments>http://www.khukuritheory.net/to-what-extent-is-revolutionary-theory-detachable/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 12 Sep 2011 22:44:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>John Steele</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[John Steele]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Marxism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Revolutionary Strategy]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.khukuritheory.net/?p=1600</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[John Steele We’ve had a continuing discussion on this site of the status, relevance, and use of Marxism (and other ‘-isms’ &#8211; Lenin, Mao, and anarch) today, in relation to revolutionary work or the possibilities of an emancipatory politics in today’s world. Most recently, we’ve had some debate and a series of contributions, beginning with [...]
Related posts:<ol>
<li><a href='http://www.khukuritheory.net/alain-badiou-another-take-on-revolutionary-theory/' rel='bookmark' title='John Steele: Badiou &#8212; Another Take on Revolutionary Theory'>John Steele: Badiou &#8212; Another Take on Revolutionary Theory</a></li>
</ol>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>John Steele</strong></p>
<p>We’ve had a continuing discussion on this site of the status, relevance, and use of Marxism (and other ‘-isms’ &#8211; Lenin, Mao, and anarch) today, in relation to revolutionary work or the possibilities of an emancipatory politics in today’s world. Most recently, we’ve had some debate and a series of contributions, beginning with my “Marxism or Anarchism or &#8212;-,” continuing through Vern Gray’s response, “One, Two, Many Marxisms?” and the comments to this by Nat W., myself, and Vern Gray.</p>
<p>Here I want to continue one strand of that discussion: the question of the adequacy of Marxism (or Maoism, or —) as <em>the basis</em> for an emancipatory politics today. My own position is that, although I’ve been and in some sense still am a Marxist and a Maoist (a sense which will hopefully be made clearer below), I don’t believe that either or both provide such a basis. We need what we haven’t got.</p>
<p><span id="more-1600"></span></p>
<p>At one point in the discussion I polemicized against the model of moving from Marxist (or Marxist-Leninist, or MLM) theory and its conclusions, applying them to our present situation, using creativity and “the Marxist method” to overcome the problems stemming from the fact that the world has changed, and thereby creating a revolutionary synthesis which would serve as a foundation for a revolutionary praxis.</p>
<p>I then said,</p>
<blockquote><p>This is the model that I am contesting. Such a process will not result in a revolutionary praxis today. Something like this model may have been sufficient in the past (and this is worth discussing much further), but it’s radically inadequate today. Why? Not simply because the world has changed. But because the basic Marxist template, in all its permutations, has become exhausted—not Marxism as analysis, but Marxism as an unfolding nexus of social theory-and-practice. (In Badiou’s terms, this truth-process has become saturated.)</p></blockquote>
<p>Vern Gray replies:</p>
<blockquote><p> I must admit that I do not understand how it could be that Marxism as analysis has not been “exhausted,” but that it has become exhausted as an “unfolding nexus of social theory-and-practice.” What sort of process of unfolding theory-and-practice is not informed by, and then more than that, integrated with, a good analysis?</p></blockquote>
<p>Nat W. states that he looks at</p>
<blockquote><p>MLM [Marxism-Leninism-Maoism] as method and a launching pad from which to start reconception&#8230;. It maybe true that starting from any method of analysis (and certainly any “body of doctrine”) will not necessarily lead to a revolutionary praxis. That being said, I think that certain methods of analysis (particularly MLM) give us a better chance at arriving at such a praxis&#8230;.If it is indeed true that Marxism has become saturated then that is one thing. That must be shown in its own right.</p></blockquote>
<p><strong>What’s at issue</strong></p>
<p>The issue that has been most explicit within this back-and-forth is that of Marxism (and Maoism) in their relation to an active politics, especially today. The relation between these, in my view, is not simple and requires delicate and thoughtful treatment (which some of our formulations, mine included, have not embodied).</p>
<p>In the intellectual work and questing which is a strong aspect of what we need today, we need a wide intellectual horizon, and active exploration, including in unlikely places. But the idea that all our resources are on a level, that every thinker is of equal potential value – this sort of flaccid eclecticism (which what I’ve said has been taken to imply) is very far from anything I’ve ever held or thought. We are situated historically in relation to a revolutionary tradition which is broadly Marxist, and so we have a particular and continuing relation to Marx. (At the risk of drawing fire from a different quarter, I would say that this is also true of anarchism in its revolutionary strands. But that’s another discussion.)</p>
<p>But the nature of this relation, as well as of its terms, require careful delineation. Above I used the phrase “a revolutionary tradition which is broadly Marxist,” and it is here that the question of “many Marxisms”should be situated. Analytically the unity and diversity of Marx’s work, as well as of Marxism, is an important and interesting topic, which would require a very long discussion. Politically the question is simpler, in that a politics which takes there to be a “one true Marxism” whose articulation and defense is a primary political task, or which will guide the “one true revolutionary politics” – this, I hold, is a mistaken and sterile approach to politics and to the search for a political way forward, especially now. Likewise, if the thought is that Marx formulated a science which has been and should be the basis of a politics (a position which has historically had currency) – no.</p>
<p>What is needed, and what has sometimes existed (but does not now), is theory within the context of which an actual emancipatory politics is situated, lives and grows. Marxism has played that role – or, rather, Marxism is the name for a trajectory of a nexus of revolutionary striving and aspiration, of thinking/acting,</p>
<p>This mention of thinking/acting points to what I believe is the central issue here. I will use, for the purposes of this short essay, some of the vocabulary with which we’re all familiar – practice/theory, primarily – rather than Badiou’s terminology (event, truth-process, fidelity, etc.), and I want to start with some remarks about the concept of practice as I understand it.</p>
<p><strong>The primacy of practice</strong></p>
<p>We are all familiar with the thesis that practice is primary within the practice/theory dialectic. This statement has, as I conceive it, <em>two senses</em>, which are analogous to the two senses of the priority of production in relation to distribution, exchange and consumption, delineated by Marx in the <a href="http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1857/grundrisse/ch01.htm">Introduction to the Grundrisse</a>. Production is primary within the entire process described by the four terms, in that it is the point of departure within a process, which overall forms unity; but production is also primary over all the elements of the process, including itself in its more restricted identity within the process.</p>
<p>Likewise, practice is primary in that it forms the point of departure within the process of practice/theory; but practice is also primary overall, in relation to both itself and theory as elements within the process. (There are analogies in this – but also disanalogies – to Mao’s distinction between principal aspect of a contradiction and principal contradiction.)</p>
<p>To state it in another way: we could say that there are certain practices in which we are engaged. Within a practice – a project, a life activity – there is both theory and practice: these are the dialectical moments within the process. Of these moments, practice is the point of departure, primary as between them. But practice as the overall project, which may be said to constitute <em>a</em> practice, is primary or principal with regard to both its moments. (It was this relation that I have been trying to point to, no doubt obscurely, by talking of the “practice/theory nexus.”)</p>
<p><strong>Detachability</strong></p>
<p>I think that this understanding of practice has strong implications for how we construe the body of what we’ve been accustomed to call revolutionary theory. Specifically: Is this theory a <em>knowledge</em>, achieved and detachable, or is it the theory of a revolutionary practice – in the larger sense of practice sketched above – integral to that practice and bound to it by a thousand threads? I hold that it is the latter.</p>
<p>(I borrow the term <em>detachable</em> from logic: once a conclusion &#8211; a theorem perhaps &#8211; has been proved, it can be detached from the premises and the proof-process through which it was generated, and asserted in itself.)</p>
<p>It will be objected that this contrast is too stark, that this is not a strict dichotomy; and in a certain complex way (which I hope to be able to explain at a later time) this is true. But drawing the contrast sharply serves a purpose: it is the integrality of emancipatory theory to its practice which requires emphasis – always, but especially today.</p>
<p>What happens when that practice, the practice to which the theory is bound and of which it is a part, comes to an end (or virtually so)? That is the question that frames our situation, the question that has been at issue, in reality, for more than 30 years (unrecognized though it may have been by many of us). It is the question, in Badiou’s terms, of the saturation of a truth process.</p>
<p><strong>Continuity and break</strong></p>
<p>There is a strong continuity – recognized by us and felt by those who participated – running from Marx and Engels, the “red edge” of the revolutions of 1848, and then later the Paris Commune, through Lenin and the Russian Revolution and the Chinese Revolution and Mao. (For Badiou there are some discontinuities and differences of truth-processes here, but I’ll leave that aside for now.)  I do not view this sequence, let me make clear, as a march of orthodoxy or “the correct line,” proved through “successful revolutions” and excluding assorted others (anarchists, Trotskyists, council communists, “Western Marxist” thinkers, etc.) as traitors, heretics, or utterly mistaken wanderers in the swamp. The relationships here are far more complex.</p>
<p>Historically there is a relatively continuous trajectory. That continuity has been broken, not simply as a form of thinking or as a theoretical matter, but as a practice or chain of practices in the world. Popular upheavals from the late 1970s on, from the Iranian Revolution and Solidarity inPoland, through the recent “Arab spring,” have not occurred, have not had their reference points, within this Marxist tradition. The continuity of this trajectory has been decisively broken.</p>
<p>Thirty years plus – this is a long stretch of world history, which demands real investigation, thought, and explanation. To declare that “nonetheless, I remain true to the principles of Marxism (of Maoism, of —)” is not an instance of any of these. And to attribute this more than thirty-year break to the errors or betrayals of leaders or “the subjective forces,” or on the other hand to “objective factors,” is not an explanation but simply a refusal to think. (To be clear, none of these descriptions is a reference to anyone who has contributed to the discussion on this site; but we’re probably all familiar with exemplars of these attitudes.)</p>
<p>We are left with the residue of an exhausted truth-process, or to put it differently, theories for which the social practice has for the most part died or ceased – the social practice, that is, of which these theories were once a living, changing part.</p>
<p>We cannot simply use these theories as a basis or guide to resurrect the practice or practices of which they were once an integral part. Nor can we wait for an outbreak or an upsurge, then expect to come into them with our assured theories (our Marxism, our Maoism, our specific strand of anarchism) and have those theories take hold and play a leading role. (All of us with much political experience can think of tens or hundreds of examples here.)</p>
<p>But we also stand in a position to this revolutionary tradition, and to the theories which have been part of it – a trajectory which is not just “our tradition” but that of the struggles and highest aspirations of “the masses” – of humanity in fact, which is a continuing tradition and present actuality. The question now is what form – in both practice and theory – these strivings can take, in order to continue as a communist quest, to reassert “the communist hypothesis.”</p>
<p>That, in short form, is our situation today, and the conditions of our work.</p>
<p>Related posts:<ol>
<li><a href='http://www.khukuritheory.net/alain-badiou-another-take-on-revolutionary-theory/' rel='bookmark' title='John Steele: Badiou &#8212; Another Take on Revolutionary Theory'>John Steele: Badiou &#8212; Another Take on Revolutionary Theory</a></li>
</ol></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Should Marxism have a privileged status?</title>
		<link>http://www.khukuritheory.net/should-marxism-have-a-privileged-status/</link>
		<comments>http://www.khukuritheory.net/should-marxism-have-a-privileged-status/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 29 Aug 2011 14:10:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>John Steele</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Marxism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Revolutionary Strategy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Vern Gray]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.khukuritheory.net/?p=1578</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Following is a response to Steele&#8217;s August 1 piece below.  Vern Gray has written several essays appearing on khukuri. I think it is confusing, and leads in a wrong direction, to conclude that there were or are “many Marxisms.”&#8230; I would argue that some ideologies and politics should be assigned a “privileged position”—not that our conclusions should be limited [...]
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>Following is a response to </em><em>Steele&#8217;s August 1 piece below. </em></p>
<p><em><a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/wp-content/uploads/karl_marx_cropped1.gif"><img class="alignright size-medium wp-image-1591" title="karl_marx_4" src="http://www.khukuritheory.net/wp-content/uploads/karl_marx_cropped1-300x300.gif" alt="" width="300" height="300" /></a>Vern Gray has written <a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/category/authors/vern-gray/">several essays</a> appearing on khukuri.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>I think it is confusing, and leads in a wrong direction, to conclude that there were or are “many Marxisms.”&#8230; I would argue that some ideologies and politics <em>should </em>be assigned a “privileged position”—not that our conclusions should be limited by them (we have to see where our investigation and exploration go) but that they should be given emphasis in the “palette” we draw from in going forward&#8230;I am a Maoist but not an “unreconstructed Maoist.” I am not prepared (not yet, anyway) to uphold the idea of “post-Maoism.”</p></blockquote>
<h2>Two, Three, Many Marxisms&#8230;?</h2>
<p><strong>Vern Gray</strong></p>
<p>Here I will make some comments on John Steele’s article “Marxism or Anarchism or —?“ and discuss at more length a few of the questions it addresses. I will go beyond what he has written but, I hope, maintain a focus on the logic of it so as to see where some of his arguments may lead.</p>
<p>Steele is right, I think, that there is no clearly existing “left,” certainly on a world scale, either subjectively or objectively. The reason is not that the imperialist system does not create the urgent need for the formation of a left; the core reason is that there is nowhere near the clarity, coherence, or correctness of political and ideological line that needs to be at the core of it. Accordingly, forging that kind of line, and the practical/political experimentation that Steele speaks of, are of critical importance if there is to be a chance of revolution.</p>
<p><span id="more-1578"></span></p>
<p>I agree, completely, that circling the wagons and posing the question as “Marxism <em>vs. </em>anarchism” is not a fruitful way of approaching the need for a new understanding of a politics that can change the world. Rather, there is clearly a need to learn from both of these trends, to take the insights of both, critically sum up the history of revolutionary practice, and dig into the enormous problems facing us.</p>
<p>So the pivotal thing is to begin to make progress on identifying key questions and finding the answers to them. Here, we need to draw on all possible sources of understanding in every sphere. To the extent that Marxism, as developed up to this point in history, is able to help us chart this course, it is of value; to the extent that it is not, it needs to be shed. And the same for anarchism. The point is not to declare an allegiance to either or an opposition to the other but to deeply investigate and analyze conditions, engage in political experimentation (Steele borrows from Badiou and I think it’s a phrase that conveys the right novelty and flexibility), and forge an ideology and politics that can guide and learn from revolutionary practice. This is a brief summary of my understanding of the basic points in Steele’s article, and as far as this goes, I agree with it.</p>
<p>That said, I think there are some problems in his approach. Here I will speak to three of them: (I) the question of “many Marxisms”; (II) the character of Marxism as a science (or not); (III) the role of practice in evaluating the history and current status of Marxism. I want to draw out some of what I consider to be potential implications of Steele’s approach to these questions, even where he does not state them. I don’t mean to say that all these implications <em>necessarily </em>follow from what he has written, any more than the historical development of Marxism consisted of a simple emergent process that was all coded in the fundamental DNA of Marx’s views—a position whose invalidity Steele points out. (That point leads to an interesting discussion that I will take up at another time.) But it’s important to get into the logic of some of Steele’s arguments. In doing so, I may run the risk of putting some words into his mouth. But if I do so, I’m sure he’ll point it out.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><strong>I</strong></p>
<p>Steele is right to call attention to the fact that during his life Marx’s thought underwent considerable development and change on many key issues. It would be wrong to look at only one or two aspects or periods in it and generalize to all the others. His views on the state changed, particularly as a result of the Paris Commune experience. In political economy, <em>Capital </em>went well beyond, and contradicted, some of his earlier writings<em>.</em> In philosophy, an earlier, more abstract view of dialectics increasingly gave way to an integration of dialectics and materialism into his writings on economics (and history). His views on the possibility of basing a communist politics on rural communes in Russia in the 1880s constituted a significant departure from his earlier and largely exclusive focus on the proletariat’s class struggle as a revolutionary instrument. These are all very important considerations, and it would be possible to multiply them. Anyone who latches on to only one or a few of the aspects of Marx’s thought and declares them to be the whole of Marxism commits a grave error.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, I think it is confusing, and leads in a wrong direction, to conclude that there were or are “many Marxisms.” Part of the reason I want to look at this is that Steele used the same formulation in <a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/why-is-badiou-of-political-value/">his article</a> “Why Is Badiou of Political Value?” I will digress briefly here to compare the situation in a few other fields.</p>
<p>Darwin’s work showed major shifts in emphasis between his beginning, overwhelmingly empirical summations of his vast collection of specimens in the 1830s, to the theoretical structure he began to build in the late 1830s and early 1840s (which reflected a significant reliance on Malthusian economics), and on to the later refinement and further development of his views on a vast range of questions including selection, speciation, extinction, the pace of change, the relationship of biological and geological changes, sexual selection, the implications of evolutionary theory for human prehistory, and so forth. Yet summing up his work in terms of “many Darwins,” or the work of those who have followed in his wake as “many Darwinisms,” is very problematic.</p>
<p>Similarly, Einstein’s early writings do not “contain in embryo” or imply his most significant theoretical contribution, the general theory of relativity, formulated roughly a decade after the special theory and his work on the particle-like character of light. Bohr formulated his theory of the atom more than a decade before the discovery of quantum mechanics, which developed a new atomic theory that supplanted his, but he nevertheless became the leading exponent of the new theory. But were there many Einsteins? Many Bohrs? Would there be some advantage to seeing things in those terms?</p>
<p>It seems to me that the theoretical understanding of these thinkers underwent development as they considered new problems, applied their best understanding of method, and came to new, sometimes contradictory conclusions. Further, it was the more developed, later views at which they eventually arrived that were most comprehensive and characteristic of their thought as a whole (even while they addressed new problems, and even though some of Einstein’s later thinking about quantum mechanics was, I believe, incorrect).</p>
<p>But wasn’t this the case with Marx as well?—a difference being that he was concerned with phenomena that were actually changing during his lifetime whereas the physicists, for example, studied parts of reality that had existed for a much longer period and did not undergo significant change during their lives.</p>
<p>There is a systematic, comprehensive character to Marxism as it has developed since the 1840s, Marx’s famous statement that he was “not a Marxist” notwithstanding. Althusser argues as much in the article that Steele linked to his own (I am grateful to Steele for making me aware of this article). While making many criticisms of the methodology and some of the conclusions of <em>Capital, </em>delving into Marx’s and Lenin’s theories of the state, dissecting Lenin’s (and Kautsky’s) views on the relationship between the development of theory and the workers’ movement, and identifying many of the contradictions, “gaps,” and “silences” to which Steele refers, Althusser nevertheless says:</p>
<blockquote><p>Let us sum up. If we untangle all the theoretical, political, semantic and other difficulties in the texts of Marx and, especially, Lenin—difficulties that all too often encumber these texts and turn them against the ‘general line’ of a body of thought which has to be given its coherence if we are to <em>think </em>what it <em>designates</em>—we discover, precisely, a coherent body of thought. (“Marx in His Limits,” in <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Philosophy-Encounter-Later-Writings-1978-1987/dp/184467553X/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1314385886&amp;sr=1-1">Philosophy of the Encounter</a>, </em>p. 94.)</p></blockquote>
<p>A “general line”; a coherent body of thought; but one whose overall contours and substance is only arrived at through a rigorous process of “untangling” and synthesis (which, of necessity, continues). There is no “ready-made” Marxism in final form whether in the texts of Marx, Lenin, or Mao.</p>
<p>I believe the emphasis on “many Marxes” points away from this understanding and tends to elevate some of the positions that Marx discarded for sound reasons to the level of others that he did not. It tends to flatten out a variety of “Marxisms” and in doing so to make Marxism a less sharp—and, perhaps, less flexible—instrument for understanding and changing the world. According to Steele, because any Marxism might hold something of value, no version of it, nor Marxism as a whole, holds a “privileged position.”</p>
<p>My point here is not that various trends should not be critically studied, or that anything of value in them can be ignored and not critically assimilated. Rather, it is that the starting point cannot simply be “let’s look anywhere, let’s not close any doors.” Now there is, of course, an element of truth to that. But if we let things rest there, we will not be able to find our way through the maze and come out the other end with the new revolutionary ideology and politics that Steele wants to create. I would argue that some ideologies and politics <em>should </em>be assigned a “privileged position”—not that our conclusions should be limited by them (we have to see where our investigation and exploration go) but that they should be given emphasis in the “palette” we draw from in going forward.</p>
<p>Again, this does not mean that we will necessarily end up with Maoism, or “post-Maoism,” or even Marxism more generally, as the basis for revolutionary politics. Mao himself did not make this assumption. As he comments in his speeches, after Khrushchev came to power in the USSR, the Chinese Communist Party, striving to understand what had happened, considered the possibility that Marxism itself was wrong.</p>
<p>Obviously very different from Steele’s perspective: Lenin’s view of the “three sources and three component parts of Marxism”—French socialism, German idealist philosophy, and English political economy. Marxism also drew on other sources, for example Greek philosophy, anthropological studies, environmental studies, and many others, and it developed beyond all those sources. But even though Lenin’s formulation is narrow, looking at Marxism as a whole, there is an overall body of work that adopted some basic positions and had a certain orientation toward them after Marx and Engels had died. The same is true of Lenin’s and Mao’s theoretical and practical work taken as a whole. They developed it “on the shoulders” of Marx and Engels’s contributions even as they took up new, more complex problems and constructed new theories.</p>
<p>I am not well versed in anarchist thought but I do not believe that it has this overall systematic character. If that is correct, it is fundamentally different from Marxism in this respect. This does not mean that anarchists have not had some penetrating insights about capitalism—and about elements of Marxism. But there is a huge gap between the two in terms of historical impact, theoretical development, revolutionary advances to learn from—but also, Marxists must honestly admit, errors and disasters to learn from.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><strong>II</strong></p>
<p>Regarding the scientific character of Marxism: There is a tendency now, and it is expressed in Steele’s article, to deny or perhaps more precisely to marginalize the idea that there is any. This denial is often associated with certain other positions. One, which he explicitly suggests, is that the idea that there are scientific aspects to Marxism rests on the idea of a science of history, and further, that the idea of a science of history is bound up with the view that class society passes through a determined series of stages, from slavery to socialism and ultimately issuing forth with communism, whose eventual triumph is inevitable. It is true that this view is part of Marx’s thinking, from the <em>Communist Manifesto </em>to his later work, but it is not true that it is essential to Marxism as such or that it is a necessary consequence of a view that aspects of Marxism constitute a science. This is one of the things that must be “untangled.”</p>
<p>Marx of course did view his later work as a science. This is particularly evident regarding the science of political economy (or the scientific “critique of political economy”) in <em>Capital, </em>with its well-known statement at the beginning of the book about the need for science if one is to penetrate beyond surface appearance.</p>
<p>But in twentieth-century Marxism there are numerous other areas that should be understood as science: for example, Mao’s military theory; his views on the class struggle in socialist society; Lenin’s (now outdated) analysis of imperialism, etc. The fact that these are theories that were forged in times and places where the terrain has changed significantly, but in only very partially understood ways, does not mean that the approach in those theories was not scientific. Even though errors were made, and there are new phenomena that require going beyond the old theories, that does not mean that those theories were not, or not principally, scientific. For example, that socialism and communism are not truly inevitable does not refute the scientific character of (parts of) Marxism but upholds it; don’t we arrive at the “post-inevitablist” conclusion, in part, by applying a scientific Marxism (as well as other sciences)? Likewise, Marxist political economy is scientific even though Marx made some unwarranted assumptions. If the criterion of “true science” were that it be perfect, then, never mind a “science of history”—there would be no history of science either.</p>
<p>I am concerned about the tendency of some people nowadays to restrict the idea of science to natural science, or controlled laboratory experiments, or highly quantified science. These views restrict the idea of science and set up a gap between phenomena that can allegedly be understood scientifically, usually seen as those in the natural world, and those that cannot, whether those that are studied in politics, anthropology, or other fields (and some of these phenomena cannot be placed only in the natural or in the social world alone). This view not only rules out most of Marx’s work, but Darwin’s as well. Now it must be said that in various ways, greater quantification does not always make these theories more scientific. But a one-sided focus on that fact does not mean the theories are not nevertheless scientific, unless, again, one holds the view that quantification is a defining characteristic of any science.</p>
<p>To be clear, I am not on board with the notion that Marxism as a whole is a science. There are many components of it, including ethics, aesthetics, and some aspects of politics, that do not and need not meet the criteria of science; and while not denying that there is a dialectic between these aspects and the scientific aspects of Marxism, I think it is wrong to reduce everything to a science. It makes the idea of science lose all specificity, gives rise to “scientistic” errors, and contorts much of Marxism. I think that Marxism overall is a philosophy and at its core is Mao’s view that it is an orientation toward revolutionary practice.</p>
<p>The idea that there is a scientific character to aspects of Marxism, such as political economy, actually goes against the dogmatic tendency that Steele identifies—to see it as a set of pat answers to already articulated questions that have been already thought through, leaving us only to apply the pat answers to arrive at an overall path to liberation that can deviate from what is expected only with regard to some secondary contingencies and relatively unimportant details.</p>
<p>We have many new phenomena to analyze and come to grips with, and while Marxism offers a method and an example of how some perhaps similar problems have been solved in the past, a theoretical understanding of the new phenomena is yet to be forged. An orientation toward science is an essential part of this effort. This work largely remains ahead of us. At present the understanding of any number of areas is entirely inadequate to guide revolutionary practice, though there are seeds of understanding.</p>
<p>I do not attempt here to analyze the statement by Badiou that Steele cites, concerning what Marxism is and is not (and in particular that it is <em>not </em>a science of history). I will note, though, that in some ways it is similar to Mao’s “It’s right to rebel!” in its emphasis on creative human activity rather than some sort of deterministic view. (Mao not only “boiled down” Marxism to “one Marxism” but to one sentence!) But I hope Steele will write more about this.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><strong>III</strong></p>
<p>On how to evaluate different political practices, ideologies, theories, etc.: I believe the principal criterion must be revolutionary practice in the broadest sense, historically and today. Steele makes no reference to this. As a result, a certain detachment from practice creeps in and affects some of his formulations. He does not pose the central question: which elements of Marxism (or often at the heart of his stated conception, which of Marx’s writings, or “which Marxism”) have been associated with a revolutionary practice that has actually changed the world at various times and places, moving in the direction of classless society, even though the efforts that drew on and were guided by Marxism eventually failed or were defeated (that time around, and so forth)?</p>
<p>He does not even raise this criterion when briefly referring to his own political history. He writes: “I take up Marx and Marxism simply because this is the tradition out of which I come, and which I know well. (And Marx is a figure—I’ll admit it—dear to me.)” That is all well and good, but it doesn’t get down to bedrock. Why does he come out of the Marxist tradition? Why did he enter it in the first place? Why is it the tradition he knows well? Because he engaged in revolutionary practice and he studied Marxism, not to the exclusion of anything else but as what became for him a core set of ideas. I have known Steele for a long time, and I think he took up, and takes up, Marxism because, first, of what happened in the world in the 1960s—and the role within the Chinese revolution, the Black liberation movement, or other movements that he came to understand Marxism, especially Maoism, to play—and then further because he studied it and found that it helped give him a method with which to take up many questions, not only in politics but in philosophy, political economy, and the arts. In other words, because, at least in its revolutionary form, Marxism was a key part of changing the world: this is what drew him to it. Here again, the criterion of revolutionary practice emerges as dominant. That, at any rate, is roughly how I understand Steele’s political history.</p>
<p>None of this is negated by the more critical, questioning attitude toward Maoism that he has developed over the years following the defeat of the revolutionary forces in China, the smashing or petering out of revolutionary movements in nearly all the other countries where they existed in the 1960s and 1970s, and the fractionation, disorientation, paltriness of vision, and ultimate passing of “the left” today.</p>
<p>Despite all these reversals and setbacks, there is much to learn from Maoism and the 1960s, and I think it is essential to differentiate between a Marxism that led a revolutionary struggle that came to victory and built a socialist society that advanced along the revolutionary road to a certain point, much further than any other; and the variety of “Marxisms” that have never succeeded in changing anything on anywhere near this level. This is not to dismiss the contributions of other Marxists (or “semi-Marxists,” etc.)—how wrong (and “Cominternist”) that would be. But there is a huge difference “on the scales of history,” so to speak.</p>
<p>This may be, or may seem to be, less “ecumenical” in its attitude toward anarchism, but it is accurate nonetheless.</p>
<p>This is the criterion of revolutionary practice. Steele does not refer to it in his article. His basic point, that we need to reexamine and learn from what is best in different ideologies and political trends, within the context of and focus on identifying and solving new problems, is right. But again, he has defined a plane of resources so that, in a sense, everything is everything. That’s the wrong “topology.” If the orientation is not firmly based on looking at things from the angle of changing the world, and centering our study of history on how different theoretical and political approaches have related to that standard, then it is not possible to learn the appropriate lessons from history and really put them to the service of changing the world.</p>
<p>It is on the basis of this criterion more than any other that I believe that in the history of hitherto existing Marxist or semi-Marxist trends, the Marxist-Leninist-Maoist trend is distinguished. We can learn from all these trends but first and foremost from this one. The question of its efficacy in changing the world on a large scale, up to a certain point, in the twentieth century is closely related to its being the most systematic and, yes, scientific trend in Marxism. The only real Marxism? I do not think it is correct to say that but if I had to choose between saying that and saying that there are “many Marxisms” and not distinguishing among them on the basis of practice, theoretical cogency, and effect, then yes, I would say that the only real Marxism of the second half of the twentieth century was Maoism. But I would prefer not to be boxed into that position.</p>
<p>While I do not think the position of “many Marxisms” is correct, I do think we should recognize a broad Marxist current that has mainly not been part of the Leninist tradition, akin to <a href="http://kasamaproject.org/2008/10/16/bill-martin-on-conception-collectivity-pt-2-burnout-cover-bands-and-need-for-the-new/">what Bill Martin calls the “philosophical Marxists,”</a> that has maintained its radical integrity and not been co-opted into the social democratic or modern revisionist trends. I don’t know that “philosophical Marxists” is the best way to refer to these thinkers, but I do not think Marxism should be defined so narrowly that they are not under its umbrella. Mapping out the political and ideological field within today’s Marxism in this “bipartite” way—Maoism and philosophical Marxism—is, I think, preferable to the “many Marxisms” formulation. (To be clear: these are not the only revolutionary trends—there are revolutionary anarchism, revolutionary nationalism, and others.)</p>
<p>It is possible that the reason why Steele assigns less emphasis to what have been the most world-changing events and how they bear on what ideology should get a “preferential position” today is that, either he does not think the advances, especially in the USSR and China, were so profound as they are thought to be by the Maoists (and perhaps some of the post-Maoists); or that he thinks that the world has changed so much that today, Maoism no longer has such great currency as I am saying; or maybe that, in a world that has changed quite a bit, he finds it unproductive and distracting to spend much time contemplating the history of previous socialist revolutions. Or perhaps it’s a combination of all of these, or something else. But then it would be interesting to know what Steele thinks about those questions, or whether they bear very much on his views about revolutionary ideology and politics in today’s world.</p>
<p><strong>In conclusion</strong></p>
<p>So then where do things stand now? It is surely no good simply to “stand on Maoism” as though it were some sort of perfect, frozen system. I am a Maoist but not an “unreconstructed Maoist.” Yet I am not prepared (not yet, anyway) to uphold the idea of “post-Maoism” (though I respect the work of many who do, more or less, take this position, including Steele, Martin, and some of the other writers on this site). I think the question of “Maoism or post-Maoism” is related to the question of “many Marxisms,” so I will explore it a bit.</p>
<p>It seems that to be a post-Maoist one would have to have a fairly clear notion of what parts of Maoism would need to be discarded or were “saturated,” of at least a few of the key problems it cannot solve, and why. And then I think even more is required: there should be not only an identification of some problems that elude the “old paradigm,” but some serious movement toward new solutions. Without this, I don’t think the “post-“ prefix is merited. (To draw on another analogy from physics: I would say that Einstein was not yet a “post-Newtonian” because he realized, sometime in the 1890s, that Newtonian physics contained certain contradictions and could not explain certain phenomena, such as the results of the Michelson-Morley experiment in 1887. But the designation “post-Newtonian” probably was appropriate, or at least partially appropriate, by the time he published the special theory of relativity in 1905.)</p>
<p>By this argument, it would be right to see Maoism as it developed over several decades as a (form of) “post-Leninism.” But it would not be right to call it that (and it was not yet Maoism either) merely on the basis that, by the mid- to late 1920s, Mao had realized the disastrousness of the Leninist inheritance of urban insurrection as a military strategy for China.</p>
<p>The fact that Maoism did not solve some of the old problems—and I think Badiou is right in identifying the “party-state” formation as one of the key ones—or that it has not, and truly cannot on its own, come to a clear understanding of many of the new phenomena (such as today’s global economy) does not yet, in my view, mean that we should see ourselves as being in the stage of “post-Maoism.”</p>
<p>One of the most important questions is precisely: how do we understand today’s global economy? The understanding of objective conditions in this overall sense is basic to any revolutionary undertaking, certainly on a world scale, which is the only possible and sustainable one in today’s world. Pre-existing Marxism, even in its most advanced twentieth-century form, Maoism, has no ready answer to this. Neither does anarchism. Another example: how do we understand the type of political organization needed to lead and sustain a revolution; how is it similar to or different from previous forms of revolutionary (including Leninist) organization; and how does all of that relate to the construction of a “people’s state” (if there is such a thing) under socialism? Here, it seems to me, both Marxism and anarchism have some important things to say.</p>
<p>With regard to these questions, and others, both Marxism and anarchism have to be learned from (though I am, clearly, far from saying to an equal extent). But in some sense they have to “fall into position” with regard to a number of big, challenging, urgent questions. It is particularly in this light that the formulation of “Marxism <em>vs. </em>anarchism” begs the question. We must focus on identifying and solving the problems. The value of Marxist, anarchist, or other understandings, including entirely new ones, will come to be appreciated in this process.</p>
<p>Toward the end of his article, Steele writes:</p>
<blockquote><p>The question is: where does politics, and communist praxis, begin—where does it start from? What I am saying: it does not start from Marxism (or any other basic philosophy or theory). Rather, Marxism is a resource for politics.</p>
<p>Now there are all kinds of ways in which a theory can be a resource (in the case of Marxism, some of these might be: to help understand the dynamics of capitalism, to help understand human history, perhaps, to help understand the relation of emancipatory politics and communist praxis to history). In this sense of resource, though (as a help to understanding, for example), Marxism has no privileged status: it’s a rich resource, but not the only one. It’s certainly not a complete theory that ‘explains everything,’ as it’s sometimes been taken to be.</p></blockquote>
<p>My first observation is that most of this does not really go beyond Maoism. Yet more important, there is a straw-man argument running through it. Politics and communist praxis do not start from Marxism, philosophy, or theory: yes, Mao was very clear on that. He gave an argument, however, for where it does start from, and if we do not understand that so narrowly as “just our own practice” but as “world-historic revolutionary (and communist) practice,” which is then theorized, as in Marxism—then we have an answer to Steele’s question, at least a good one to start from. But he does not venture any answer.</p>
<p>Contrary to Steele, as I’ve argued above, Marxism <em>does </em>have a privileged status. Of course this does not mean it’s the <em>only </em>resource; but Steele blurs these two questions. Of course it does not “explain everything”: again, Mao is quite clear, with his formulation about how Marxism embraces <em>but does not replace</em> scientific and artistic theories, and so forth.</p>
<p>Why make these straw-man or question-begging arguments? What purpose do they serve?</p>
<p>By no means are they necessary in order to oppose the dogmatic, fruitless dance of “Marxism vs. anarchism” that he rightly rejects, or to look at all ideologies from the standpoint of what needs to be understood and how to understand it, grounded in what needs to be transformed.</p>
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		<title>Marxism or anarchism or &#8212;?</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 01 Aug 2011 14:38:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>John Steele</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[John Steele]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Marxism]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[We need a politics we haven&#8217;t got John Steele In another context in which I’m involved the subject has come up, sometimes rather heatedly, of the critique of Marxism from an anarchist perspective. Now this is a debate I’ve heard for 40+ years, from both sides, and usually posed in the same rather abstract terms. [...]
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<li><a href='http://www.khukuritheory.net/marxism-politics-and-evil-part-1/' rel='bookmark' title='Marxism, Politics, and Evil, part 1'>Marxism, Politics, and Evil, part 1</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.khukuritheory.net/marxism-politics-and-evil-part-3/' rel='bookmark' title='Marxism, politics, and evil, part 3'>Marxism, politics, and evil, part 3</a></li>
</ol>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>We need a politics we haven&#8217;t got</h2>
<p align="left"><strong>John Steele</strong></p>
<p align="left">In another context in which I’m involved the subject has come up, sometimes rather heatedly, of the critique of Marxism from an anarchist perspective. Now this is a debate I’ve heard for 40+ years, from both sides, and usually posed in the same rather abstract terms. There are vital issues embedded within this debate, from revolutionary strategy and organization to historical determinism and freedom. But rooting these issues within this abstract and global dichotomy – anarchism <em>versus</em> Marxism – doesn’t offer a very fruitful context for carrying out the very necessary explorations and debates around these issues, particularly now.</p>
<p align="left">I’ll start from a critique of the terms in which this debate is usually cast, and of a particular form of argument, but my aim is to move beyond debate and critique and to point toward a different conception of the relation between doctrine and revolutionary praxis. The point at which I end will probably raise more questions than it answers, and I hope these questions will be raised and serve as a basis for fruitful discussion.</p>
<p align="left"><strong>The Debate</strong></p>
<p align="left">I believe debates such as this – Marxism: for and against; Marxism or anarchism – suffer from a number of problems which make them not only irresolvable but politically unproductive. In the first place, it’s fairly useless to debate the rightness or wrongness, correctness or incorrectness, of either anarchism or of Marxism in themselves. We might as well debate the correctness of ‘the left’. The first question would have to be, Which left, and when? &#8211; and the same question applies to anarchism and Marxism. All of these terms cover a much too various territory to be analytic terms in themselves. (I’ll come back to this.)</p>
<p align="left">But more importantly, what does the present historical moment call for?</p>
<p align="left"><span id="more-1510"></span></p>
<p align="left">What does the present historical moment call for? I believe it does <em>not</em> call for holding fast to principles and positions as they have come down to us, nor for restating traditional dichotomies and lines of demarcation. This is a time of crisis for capitalism, but it is also a moment which has thrown into relief what was already clear: a deep crisis of the left, to the point where the term has become virtually meaningless. To say that the problem is a lack of any popular movement from the left, or of any significant emancipatory social force, is simply to state the obvious. The question is, why is this? The reason is primarily, in my view, ideological and theoretical. By this I do <em>not</em> mean that the problem is one compromise and deviation from true revolutionary principles (not being true anarchists, not being true Marxists, etc., etc.). The problem is that we do not <em>have</em> an emancipatory ideology and theoretical structure which is adequate to this time, which will meet the needs of the people (intellectual and inspirational needs as well as others) and show a way to human liberation.</p>
<p align="left">What the present historical moment requires is a deep-cutting and overdue reconception of revolutionary theory. (The aim of this site is to aid in this task.) Of course this involves critique – clear-eyed and unsparing – of the traditions out of which we have come: Marxist, anarchist, Leninist, libertarian communist, etc. But the emphasis has to be on the creation of the theory, the ideology, the forms of organization and the modes of practice – all of what we need and do not have.</p>
<p align="left">That said: I hope the above will be a sufficient context for what I want to do next, which may superficially appear to be a defense of Marxism. My aim, though, rather than that, is simply to argue briefly for an historically (and textually) contextualized approach to our revolutionary heritage. To say that this heritage doesn’t give us what we need today is not to say that it’s not a valuable and necessary resource. (More on this below.) It is capable of being such a resource, but only if it’s understood accurately and in its full historical complexity. I take up Marx and Marxism simply because this is the tradition out of which I come, and which I know well. (And Marx is a figure – I’ll admit it – very dear to me.)</p>
<p align="left"><strong>What is Marxism?</strong></p>
<p align="left">In approaching Marx, I want to speak in favor of complexity, nuance and an appreciation of the fact that what we have in Marx&#8217;s writings is the output of a long arc of intellectual (and political) change and development. There is not just &#8220;early Marx&#8221; (<a href="http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1844/manuscripts/preface.htm">Economic-Philosophical MS</a>) and &#8220;later Marx&#8221; (from <em><a href="http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1845/german-ideology/">German Ideology</a></em> on). There were several stages or permutations within the &#8220;later Marx.&#8221; Roughly, there&#8217;s <em>German Ideology</em> and the <em><a href="http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1848/communist-manifesto/">Manifesto</a></em>, then there&#8217;s the <em><a href="http://books.google.com/books?id=bDyemaqiZjUC&amp;pg=PA906&amp;lpg=PA906&amp;dq=marx+Grundrisse&amp;source=bl&amp;ots=wJxIwoBRRZ&amp;sig=eKnlquXx-HZzk2A48HpwHFiyijM&amp;hl=en&amp;ei=gpk2Tqu_K-mysALFg5z6Cg&amp;sa=X&amp;oi=book_result&amp;ct=result&amp;resnum=9&amp;sqi=2&amp;ved=0CGwQ6AEwCA#v=onepage&amp;q&amp;f=false">Grundrisse</a></em> and then <em><a href="http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/subject/economy/index.htm">Capital</a></em>, and later still, the writings after the Paris Commune and Marx’s correspondence with Vera Zasulich in Russia (<em><a href="http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1871/civil-war-france/index.htm">Civil War in France</a></em>, <em><a href="http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1875/gotha/index.htm">Critique of Gotha Programme</a></em>, and the Vera Zasulich correspondence*) – and there are major differences between these &#8220;stages,&#8221; not least with respect to what he says about the state.</p>
<p align="left">Marx was not simply saying one thing all his life.</p>
<p align="left">That&#8217;s one aspect. But then the other is that, even within a period, there are gaps and silences and unresolved problems. The fact is that Marx did not create a completely integrated and self-consistent theoretical structure – let alone an integrated theoretical/strategic/practical edifice. (Althusser – yes, Althusser – has a very good essay on some of the gaps, incompletenesses, and ‘limits’ of Marx’s thinking; it is called &#8220;Marx in his Limits&#8221; and was written in 1978 but only published posthumously. A pdf is available <a href="http://www.after1968.org/app/webroot/uploads/Althusser-MIHL.pdf">here</a>.)</p>
<p align="left">After his death, though, Engels and Kautsky did their best to forge such a smooth and complete edifice, which became the official Marxism of the Second International. But that, too, was not the only Marxism, looking at the past 100+ years. Besides those strains existing earlier, the 75 years following the Russian Revolution saw not only Second International social democracy <em>versus</em> Third International communism, but “western Marxism,” various strains of both Trotskyism and libertarian communism, Maoism, Eurocommunism&#8230;. There’s not much point in arguing (nor do I believe) that some of these were “not really Marxism.” It’s more accurate, I think, as well as more politically fruitful, to view these as stemming from a combination of the contradictions and incompletenesses of Marx’s theory and different approaches to the problems posed by new historical circumstances.</p>
<p align="left">Several Marxes, many Marxisms. And haven&#8217;t there been (aren&#8217;t there now) many anarchisms?</p>
<p align="left">I began political life (just about 50 years ago – gulp!) conceiving myself as an anarchist (I was a pacifist as well), positions that it took me quite a while (years and years) to work through, with my finally concluding that my position amounted to a form of liberalism. The point of this being <em>not</em> to say “I once was an anarchist too, so therefore…”, but simply to point out that there can be liberal forms of anarchism, just as there are liberal forms of Marxism (as well as many other forms and permutations of both), and to ask again how useful it is, in seeking political orientation today, to pose the question as Marxism <em>vs</em>. anarchism. I don’t think we can get very far unless we zero in on more tightly defined questions, and unless we’re consciously oriented toward trying to build the sort of theory needed today. (There are a lot of questions and problems just in that last sentence that would be much more valuable to explore than that of Anarchism <em>vs</em>. Marxism.)</p>
<p align="left"><strong>How not to argue against Marxism</strong></p>
<p align="left">Another point I want to raise has to do with a common and seductive way of arguing for the useless or pernicious character of Marxism. This is, to say it very shortly: State systems whose ideological legitimacy-structures rested on or appealed to Marxism (the Soviet Union under Stalin being exhibit number one) – these states were in fact tyrannical and evil. Since Marxism developed into this, and was capable of playing this ideological role, we can or should therefore conclude that Marxism constitutes a pernicious political framework and should be discarded as a resource for emancipatory politics.</p>
<p align="left">One form of objection to this argument is to say that it isn’t really Marxism that was at work in the USSR under Stalin. While there’s <em>a</em> truth in this objection, it does not end up as a very satisfying or valuable point, eventuating typically in the assertion that Stalin (or perhaps Lenin) distorted Marxism, which in turn tends to imply (or be part of the assertion that) there is a true or correct Marxism which must or should form the basis of a true politics of emancipation. This is precisely what I do not want to say, for reasons along the lines of what I’ve sketched above.</p>
<p align="left">Rather than this route, let’s look at the form of reasoning here, which is one which I’ve <a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/john-steele-marxism-politics-and-evil/">elsewhere </a>called reverse implication to origins – the idea that a characteristic of a phenomenon can be imputed back to the phenomenon’s origins. The argumentative move, in other words, might begin from the wrongness or evil of a phenomenon, call it X; this characteristic of X is projected back to a beginning or seed of X, which is then itself presumed to be wrong or evil.</p>
<p align="left">As I just said, I don’t want to follow the line of objection to this move, that the seed from which Stalinism grew is not really Marxism. But regardless of whether this is true or not, this move from result to origin is not, as logicians say, a valid <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logical_form">argument-form</a>: it does not follow (pretty obviously), from the fact that a characteristic is true of the end result of a process, that the same characteristic can be attributed to the origin or beginning of that process. If this were the case, for example, then the properties of a full-grown human being would be true of the initial union of sperm and egg from which it originated. (This example obviously highlights the fact that the form of reasoning here is that often used by opponents of abortion, who begin from the wrongness of killing a person, projecting this ethical predicate [<em>wrong to kill</em>] back to the moment of conception.)</p>
<p align="left">But I think the discussion so far also highlights how abstract is this whole mode of approach – as if there were an essence or inherent characteristic, born in Marx’s thinking, which developed and came to fruition in Stalin. Not only is this not how historical development takes place (as if developments in this country could be understood as the coming into being of “the ideas of the founding fathers”), but – and this is really where I want to go – this is not how politics can really be practiced, as an attempt to grapple with the forms and development of human social being in the world.</p>
<p align="left"><strong>How not to argue <em>for</em> Marxism</strong></p>
<p align="left">Here I just want to indicate a direction. There have been many, many bad arguments for Marxism, often advanced with great arrogance and assurance. (I’ve made a few of them myself, at points in my life.) Usually they have been put forward under the mantle of science (of history or of society). Sometimes the subtext – or the source of assurance in its espousal &#8212; has been the power of an existing state structure.</p>
<p align="left">Marxism as science and Marxism as ideology of state power are not any part of what I espouse. Nor do I believe in the conception of Marxism as a recipe for revolution; it is not a blueprint which communists try to put into practice politically. (That, at any rate, is a conception of Marxism – and politics – that I reject.) The point is not to deny that Marxism is, or strives to be, a general theory. The question is: where does politics, and communist praxis, begin – where does it start from? What I am saying: it does not start from Marxism (or any other basic philosophy or theory). Rather, Marxism is a resource for politics.</p>
<p align="left">Now there are all kinds of ways in which a theory can be a resource (in the case of Marxism, some of these might be: to help understand the dynamics of capitalism, to help understand human history, perhaps, to help understand the relation of emancipatory politics and communist praxis to history). In this sense of resource, though (as a help to understanding, for example), Marxism has no privileged status: it’s a rich resource, but not the only one. It’s certainly not a complete theory that “explains everything,” as it’s sometimes been taken to be.</p>
<p align="left">To indicate how Marxism can be a resource, not just for understanding, but for a communist political practice, I want to quote Badiou, from his 1982 <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Theory-Subject-Alain-Badiou/dp/0826496733">Theory of the Subject</a></em>:</p>
<blockquote>
<p align="left">Science of history? <em>Marxism is the discourse with which the proletariat sustains itself as subject</em>. We must never let go of this idea….Marxism is the practical discourse for sustaining the subjective advent of a politics….For Marxism, seized from any point which is not its effective operation which is entirely of the order of politics within the masses, does not deserve one hour of our troubles. (44, 129, 128)</p>
</blockquote>
<p>In an extreme and intransigent form, this may show the direction I wish to indicate. Whatever deep value Marxism has had and may have for an emancipatory politics, it is not as a knowledge, but as a “practical discourse for sustaining the subjective advent of a politics.&#8221;</p>
<p>______________________________</p>
<p>* Marx wrote four drafts of a reply to Zasulich, who had written in 1881 asking about the possibilities of the Russian rural commune in the transition to to communism. Unfortunately most of the drafts do not seem to be available online. The first draft is available <a href="http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1881/03/zasulich1.htm">here</a>, and a recent piece on Marx&#8217;s &#8220;later period&#8221; <a href="http://republicancommunist.org/blog/2002/07/26/roads-to-freedom-or-did-marx-change-his-mind/">here</a>.</p>
<p>Related posts:<ol>
<li><a href='http://www.khukuritheory.net/marxism-politics-and-evil-part-2/' rel='bookmark' title='Marxism, politics, and evil, part 2'>Marxism, politics, and evil, part 2</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.khukuritheory.net/marxism-politics-and-evil-part-1/' rel='bookmark' title='Marxism, Politics, and Evil, part 1'>Marxism, Politics, and Evil, part 1</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.khukuritheory.net/marxism-politics-and-evil-part-3/' rel='bookmark' title='Marxism, politics, and evil, part 3'>Marxism, politics, and evil, part 3</a></li>
</ol></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>What is communization?</title>
		<link>http://www.khukuritheory.net/what-is-communization/</link>
		<comments>http://www.khukuritheory.net/what-is-communization/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 23 Jun 2011 02:19:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>John Steele</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Communism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Marxism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Revolutionary Strategy]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.khukuritheory.net/?p=1437</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Communization (to give it anon-British spelling) is the name for a theory or approach developed by Gilles Dauvé and others. Perhaps its central thesis is that a communist revolution begins its work of &#8220;communization&#8221; from the very first day. But, although the approach stems from this basic anti-stagist thesis, it does not represent a revolutionary [...]
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>Communization (to give it anon-British spelling) is the name for a theory or approach developed by <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gilles_Dauv%C3%A9">Gilles Dauvé</a> and others. <a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/wp-content/uploads/ManifestEquals.jpg"><img class="alignright size-medium wp-image-1438" title="ManifestEquals" src="http://www.khukuritheory.net/wp-content/uploads/ManifestEquals-300x261.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="261" /></a></em></p>
<p><em>Perhaps its central thesis is that a communist revolution begins its work of &#8220;communization&#8221; from the very first day. But, although the approach stems from this basic anti-stagist thesis, it does not represent a revolutionary program (&#8220;We are not talking about a plan to be fulfilled one day,&#8221; as the authors say below. &#8220;Communisation   depends on what the proletarian is and does.&#8221;)</em></p>
<p><em>The present article is reprinted from <a href="http://www.troploin.fr/textes/60-communisation-uk">Troploin</a>.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>In English, the word has been used for a long while, to convey something very different from what we are dealing with here. <em>To communise </em>was often a synonym for <em>to sovietize</em>,   i.e. to implement the full program of the communist party in the   Leninist (and later Stalinist) sense. This is of course not what we are talking about. <strong> </strong></p>
<p>More rarely, <em>communisation</em> has been used as a synonym for radical <em>collectivisation</em>,<em> </em> with special reference to Spain in 1936-39, when factories, farms,   rural and urban areas were run by worker or peasant collectives. These collectives functioned as worker-managed enterprises, for   the benefit of the people, yet enterprises all the same. <strong> </strong></p>
<p>We are dealing with something else.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p></blockquote>
<h2>Communisation</h2>
<div>
<div><strong>Gilles Dauvé et Karl Nesic</strong></div>
</div>
<p>What is meant and what do <em>we</em> mean by  &#8220;communisation&#8221; ? Actually, we have often dealt with this theme, for  instance in our answers to the German group Revolution Times&#8217;  questionnaire, published in English as <em><a href="http://libcom.org/library/whats-it-all-about-questions-answers-troploin">What&#8217;s It All About ?</a> </em>(2007), and in other texts, including<em> <a href="http://libcom.org/library/a-contribution-critique-political-autonomy-gilles-dauve-2008">A Contribution to the Critique of Political Autonomy</a></em> (2008). <strong> </strong></p>
<p><strong> </strong> If we speak of <em>communisation</em> and not just <em>communism</em>,  it is not to invent a new concept which would provide us with the  ultimate solution to the revolutionary riddle. Communisation denotes no  less than the content and process of a future revolution. For example,  only communisation gives meaning to our critique of democracy.</p>
<p><span id="more-1437"></span>In recent years, communisation has become one of the radical in-words, even outside what is known as the &#8220;communisers&#8221; (<em>communisateurs</em> in French).</p>
<p>As far as we are concerned, we do not regard ourselves any more  members of this communising current than we feel close to &#8211; or far from &#8211;  a number of other communist groups.</p>
<p>The communisation issue is further complicated by the emergence of the<em> commons</em> theory, according to which deep social change could come from  collective usage and extension of what is already treated as common  resources and activities (for instance, the open field system in still  existing traditional societies, and free software access in the most  modern ones). In other words, these &#8220;creative commons&#8221; would allow us a  gradual and peaceful passage toward a human community.</p>
<p>The successive refutation of theories we regard as incomplete or  wrong would have obscured our central points. As we wish to keep away  from any war of the words, the following essay will try and address the  communisation issue as <em>directly</em> as possible.</p>
<h3>A few words about the word</h3>
<p>In English, the word has been used for a long while, to convey something very different from what we are dealing with here. <em>To communise </em>was often a synonym for <em>to sovietize</em>,  i.e. to implement the full program of the communist party in the  Leninist (and later Stalinist) sense: &#8220;The fundamental task of Comintern  was to seek opportunities to communise Europe and North  America.&#8221; (R.  Service, <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Trotsky-Biography-Robert-Service/dp/0674036158/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1308749693&amp;sr=1-1"><em>Trotsky. A Biography</em></a>, Macmillan, 2009, p. 282) This was the <em>Webster&#8217;s</em> dictionary definition in 1961 and 1993, and roughly the one given by  Wikipedia in 2010. This is of course not what we are talking about. <strong> </strong></p>
<p>More rarely, <em>communisation</em> has been used as a synonym for radical <em>collectivisation</em>,<em> </em> with special reference to Spain in 1936-39, when factories, farms,  rural and urban areas were run by worker or peasant collectives.  Although this is related to what we mean by communising, most of these  experiences invented local currencies or took labour-time as a means of  barter. These collectives functioned as worker-managed enterprises, for  the benefit of the people, yet enterprises all the same. <strong> </strong></p>
<p>We are dealing with something else.</p>
<p>It is not sure who first used the word with the meaning this essay is  interested in. To the best of our knowledge, it was Dominique Blanc :  orally in the years 1972-74, and in writing in <a href="http://www.reocities.com/~johngray/mondtitl.htm"><em>Un Monde sans argent</em></a> (A World Without Money), published in 3 booklets in 1975-76 by the OJTR (the same group also published D. Blanc&#8217;s <a href="http://www.geocities.com/~johngray/milititl.htm"><em>Militancy, the Highest Stage of Alienation</em></a>).  Whoever coined the word, the idea was being circulated at the time in  the small milieu round the bookshop La Vieille Taupe (&#8220;The Old Mole&#8221;,  1965-72). Since the May 68 events, the bookseller, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre_Guillaume">Pierre Guillaume</a>,  ex-Socialisme ou Barbarie and ex-Pouvoir Ouvrier member, but also for a  while close to <a href="http://www.librarything.com/author/debordguy">G. Debord</a> (who himself was a member of  S. ou B. in  1960-61), had been consistently putting forward the idea of revolution  as a communising process, maybe without using the phrase. Yet D. Blanc  was the first to publicly emphasize its importance. <em>Un Monde sans argent</em> said the difference between communist revolution and all variants of  reformism was not that revolution implied insurrection, but that this  insurrection would have to start communising society&#8230; or it would have  no communist content. In that respect,<em> Un Monde sans argent</em> remains a pivotal essay.</p>
<h3><strong> In a nutshell</strong></h3>
<p>The idea is fairly simple, but simplicity is often one of the most  difficult goals to achieve. It means that a revolution is only communist  if it changes all social relationships into communist relationships,  and this can only be done if the process starts in the very early days  of the revolutionary upheaval. Money, wage-labour, the enterprise as a  separate unit and a value-accumulating pole, work-time as cut off from  the rest of our  life, production for value, private property, State  agencies as mediators of social life and conflicts, the separation  between learning and doing, the quest for maximum and fastest  circulation of everything, all of these have to be done away with, and  not just be run by collectives or turned over to public ownership: they  have to be replaced by communal, moneyless, profitless, Stateless, forms  of life. The process will take time to be completed, but it will start  at the beginning of the revolution, which will not create the <em>pre</em>conditions of communism: it will create communism.</p>
<p>&#8220;Those who developed the theory of communisation rejected this posing of revolution in terms of <em>forms</em> of organisation, and instead aimed to grasp the revolution in terms of its <em>content</em>.  Communisation implied a rejection of the view of revolution as an event  where workers take power followed by a period of transition: instead it  was to be seen as a movement characterised by immediate communist  measures (such as the free distribution of goods) both for their own  merit, and as a way of destroying the material basis of the  counter-revolution. If, after a revolution, the bourgeoisie is  expropriated but workers remain workers, producing in separate  enterprises, dependent on their relation to that workplace for their  subsistence, and exchanging with other enterprises, then whether that  exchange is self-organised by the workers or given central direction by a  &#8220;workers&#8217; state&#8221; means very little: the capitalist content remains, and  sooner or later the distinct role or function of the capitalist will  reassert itself. By contrast, the revolution as a communising movement  would destroy &#8211; by ceasing to constitute and reproduce them &#8211; all  capitalist categories: exchange, money, commodities, the existence of  separate enterprises, the State and &#8211; most fundamentally &#8211; wage labour  and the working class itself.&#8221; (<a href="http://endnotes.org.uk/"><em>Endnotes</em>, # 2</a>, 2010)</p>
<h2><strong> </strong></h2>
<h3><strong> Is it a programme ?</strong></h3>
<p>We are not talking about a plan to be fulfilled one day, a project  adequate to the needs of the proletarians (and ultimately of humankind),  but one that would be exterior to them, like blueprints on the  architect&#8217;s drawing-board before the house is built. Communisation  depends on what the proletarian <em>is</em> and <em>does</em>.</p>
<p>The major difference between Marx and utopian socialists is to be  found in Marx&#8217;s main concern : the labour-capital exploitation relation.  Because the proletarian is the heart and body of capital, he or she  carries communist potentials within himself or herself. When capital  stops buying labour power, labour is nothing. So every deep social  crisis opens the possibility for the proletarians to try and invent  &#8220;something else&#8221;. Most of the time, nearly all the time in fact, their  reaction is far from communism, but the possibility of a breakthrough  does exist, as has been proved by a succession of endeavours throughout  modern times, from the English Luddites in 1811 to the Greek insurgents  in 2008.</p>
<p>This is why it would be pointless to imagine an utterly different  society if we fail to understand the present society and how we could  move from one to the other. We must consider <strong>what</strong> communism is, <strong>how</strong> it could come about, and <strong>who</strong> would be in the best position to implement the historical change.</p>
<h3><strong> &#8220;The self-emancipation of the proletariat is the collapse of capitalism.&#8221; </strong></h3>
<p><strong> </strong>The SI once suggested we ought to &#8220;go back to a  disillusioned study of the classical worker movement&#8221; (# 7, 1962).  Indeed. To face up to our past, we must break with the legend of a  proletariat invariably ready for revolution&#8230; and unfortunately  sidetracked or betrayed. However, blowing myths does not mean bending  the stick the other way, as if the workers had up to now persistently  fought only for reforms, had glorified work, believed in industrial  progress even more than the bourgeois, and dreamt of some impossible  worker-run capitalism. This historical reconstruction replaces one myth  by its equally misleading symmetrical opposite. The past two hundred  years of proletarian experience cannot be divided into two totally  opposed periods, i.e. a first one, closed by the end of the 20<sup>th</sup> century, during which the proletariat would only have been able to  fight for a social programme which could be qualified as &#8220;capitalist&#8221;,  and a second phase (now), when the evolution of capitalism itself would  render null and void the &#8220;labour capitalist&#8221; option, and the only  alternative facing the proletariat would become a simple one: communist  revolution or descent into barbarism.</p>
<p>The historical evidence offered for this watershed theory is unsubstantial.</p>
<p>Moreover, and more decisively, the mistake lies in the question.</p>
<p>No communist revolution has taken place yet. That obvious fact  neither proves&#8230; nor disproves that such a revolution has been up to  now impossible.</p>
<p>In his analysis of <a href="http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1850/class-struggles-france/index.htm"><em>The Class Struggles in France</em></a> (1850), Marx first lays down what he believes to be a general historical principle :</p>
<blockquote><p>As soon as it has risen up, a class in which the revolutionary  interests of society are concentrated finds the content and the material  for its revolutionary activity directly in its own situation: foes to  be laid low, measures dictated by the needs of the struggle to be taken;  the consequences of its own deeds drive it on. It makes no theoretical  inquiries into its own task.</p></blockquote>
<p>Then Marx wonders why, in the democratic revolution of February 1848,</p>
<blockquote><p>The French working class had not attained this level; it was still  incapable of accomplishing its own revolution.</p>
<p>The development of the industrial proletariat is, in general,  conditioned by the development of the industrial bourgeoisie. (..) [But  in 1848] the industrial bourgeoisie did not rule France. (..) The  struggle against capital in its developed, modern form &#8211; in its decisive  aspect, the struggle of the industrial wage worker against the  industrial bourgeois &#8211; is in France a partial phenomenon (..) Nothing is  more understandable, then, than that the Paris proletariat sought to  secure the advancement of its own interests side by side with those of  the bourgeoisie (..)</p></blockquote>
<p>Quotation is no proof, and maybe Marx was wrong, but at least let us  get his view right. While he regarded full-grown industrial capitalism  as a necessary condition for a proletarian revolution, he did not think  that the proletarians could and would only fight for reforms for a  certain period, until some complete maturity or completeness of  capitalism left open one and only option: revolution.</p>
<p>Slicing up history into phases is very useful, except when it becomes a quest for the &#8220;last&#8221; phase.</p>
<p>In the past, &#8220;final&#8221; or &#8220;mortal crisis&#8221; theoreticians set out to  demonstrate (usually with the help of the reproduction schema of<em> Capital</em>&#8216;s  volume II) that a phase was bound to come when capitalism would be  structurally unable to reproduce itself. All they actually showed was  real fundamental contradictions but, as Marx wrote, contradiction does  not mean impossibility. Now the demonstration moves away from schema and  figures, and sees the impossible reproduction in the capital-labour  relation itself. In short, up to now, communist revolution (or a real  attempt to make it) has been out of the question, because the domination  of capital over society was not complete enough: there was some scope  for the worker movement to develop socialist and Stalinist parties,  unions, reformist policies; so the working class <em>had to</em> be  reformist, and the most it could do was to go for a worker-managed  capitalism. Now this would be over: capital&#8217;s completely real domination  destroys the possibility of anything but a communist endeavour.</p>
<p>We ought to be a bit wary of the lure of catastrophe theory. When  1914 broke out, and even more so after 1917, communists said that  mankind was entering the epoch of wars and revolutions. Since then, we  have seen a lot more wars than revolutions, and no communist revolution.  And we are well aware of the traps of the &#8220;decadence&#8221; theory. Only a  successful communist revolution one day will allow its participants to  say: &#8220;We&#8217;ve seen capitalism&#8217;s last days&#8221;. Until then, the only  historical obstacle to the reproduction of the present social system  will come from the proletarians themselves. There is no era when  revolution is structurally impossible, nor another when revolution  becomes structurally possible/necessary.  All variations of the  &#8220;ultimate crisis&#8221; disregard history: they look for a one-way street that  could block the avenues branching off to non-communist roads. Yet  history is made of crossroads,  revolution being one possibility among  non-revolutionary options. The schematisation of history loses its  relevance when it heralds the endpoint of evolution &#8211; in this case,  capitalist evolution &#8211; and claims to be the theory to end all theories.</p>
<p>In 1934, as a conclusion to his essay on <a href="http://www.marxists.org/archive/pannekoe/1934/collapse.htm"><em>The theory of the collapse of capitalism</em></a>, and after an in-depth study of the inevitability of major crises, Anton Pannekoek wrote :</p>
<p>&#8220;The workers&#8217; movement has not to expect a final catastrophe, but  many catastrophes, political &#8211; like wars, and economic &#8211; like the crises  which repeatedly break out, sometimes regularly, sometimes irregularly,  but which on the whole, with the growing size of capitalism, become  more and more devastating. (..) And should the present crisis abate, new  crises and new struggles will arise. In these struggles the working  class will develop its strength to struggle, will discover its aims,  will train itself, will make itself independent and learn to take into  its hands its own destiny, viz., social production itself. In this  process the destruction of capitalism is achieved. The self-emancipation  of the proletariat is the collapse of capitalism.&#8221;</p>
<p>The concept of communisation is important enough as it is, without  using it to fuel another variant of the &#8220;last phase of capitalism&#8221;  theory. Our problem is not to prove that we have entered an entirely new  epoch when the proletariat can <em>only</em> fight for communism. It is to try and define the concrete process of a communist revolution.</p>
<h3><strong> A novelty ?</strong></h3>
<p>The communist movement predates the modern proletariat that appeared in England at the end of the 18<sup>th</sup> century. It was active in the days of Spartacus, Thomas Münzer and  Gerrard Winstanley. Fifty years before Marx, Gracchus Babeuf&#8217;s plans had  little connection with the growth of industry.</p>
<p>Because of his separation from the means of production (which was not  the case of the serf or the tenant-farmer, however poor they were), the  proletarian is separated from the means of existence. Such radical  dispossession is the condition of his being put to profitable work by  capital. But it also entails that, from the early days, the proletariat  is capable of a revolution that would do away with property, classes and  work as an activity separate from the rest of life.</p>
<p>The theme of communisation is as old as the proletarians&#8217; struggles  when they tried to free themselves. Whenever they were on the social  offensive, they implicitly and sometimes explicitly aimed at a human  community which involved a lot more than better work conditions, or  merely replacing the exploitation of man by the exploitation of nature.  The logic or intention of the 1871 Paris <em>communards</em>, the 1936 Spanish insurgents or the 1969 Turin rebel workers was not to &#8220;develop the productive forces&#8221;, nor to manage the <em>same</em> factories without the boss. It is their failure that pushed aside  community and solidarity goals, discarded any plan of man-nature  reunion, and brought back to the fore what was compatible with the needs  and possibilities of capitalism. True, so far, past struggles have  tried to launch few communist changes in the real sense of the word,  i.e. changes that broke with the core capitalist structure. But this  limitation was as imposed from outside as self-imposed : the  proletarians rarely went beyond the insurrectionary phase, as most  uprisings were quickly crushed or stifled. When the insurgents carried  the day, they did attempt to live and create something very different  from a worker-led capitalism. The limits of those attempts (in Spain,  1936-39, particularly) were not just the result of a lack of <em>social</em> programme, but at least as much due to the fact of leaving <em>political</em> power in the hands of the State and anti-revolutionary forces.</p>
<p>What Rosa Luxemburg called in 1903 the &#8220;progress and stagnation of  Marxism&#8221; can help us understand why a deeply entrenched &#8220;communising&#8221;  prospect has waited so long before becoming explicit.  At the dawn of  capitalism, the 1830s and 1840s were a time of farseeing communist  insights. Marx&#8217;s <em>1844 Manuscripts</em> probably expressed the  sharpest edge of social critique, so sharp that the author himself did  not think it necessary to circulate it (the text was only published in  1932). Then, as the worker movement developed against a triumphant  bourgeoisie, the communist intuition turned into demonstration and lost  much of its visionary force: the 1848 <em>Communist Manifesto</em>&#8216;s concrete measures were compatible with radical bourgeois democracy, communism is only hinted at in <em>Capital</em>&#8216;s volume I (1967), and it hardly appears in the <em>Critique of the Gotha programme</em> (1875). Marx&#8217;s concern with the &#8220;real movement&#8221; led him into a search  for the &#8220;laws of history&#8221;, and his critique of political economy came  close to a critical political economy. (He never lost sight of  communism, though, as is clear from his interest in the Russian <em>mir</em>:  &#8220;If revolution comes at the opportune moment, if it concentrates all  its forces so as to allow the rural commune full scope, the latter will  soon develop as an element of regeneration in Russian society and an  element of superiority over the countries enslaved by the capitalist  system.&#8221; (<a href="http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1881/03/zasulich1.htm">1881</a>) )</p>
<p>However, as soon as the proletariat resumed its assault on bourgeois  society, revolutionary theory retrieved its radical momentum: the 1871  Commune showed that State power is not an adequate revolutionary  instrument.</p>
<p>Then again, the Paris Commune &#8220;lesson&#8221; was forgotten until, several  decades later, the birth of soviets and councils revived what Marx had  written in 1871.</p>
<p>In 1975-76, <a href="http://www.reocities.com/~johngray/mondtitl.htm"><em>A World Without Money</em></a> did not evade the issue of how Marx stood regarding communisation (a word and concept he never used):</p>
<blockquote><p>That Marx and Engels did not talk more about communist society was  due, without doubt paradoxically, to the fact that this society, being  less near than it is today, was more difficult to envisage, but also to  the fact that it was more present in the minds of the revolutionaries of  their day. When they spoke of the abolition of the wages system in the <em>Communist Manifesto </em>they  were understood by those they were echoing. Today it is more difficult  to envisage a world freed from the state and commodities because these  have become omnipresent. But having become omnipresent, they have lost  their historical necessity.</p>
<p>Marx and Engels perhaps grasped less well than a Fourier the nature  of communism as the liberation and harmonisation of the emotions.  Fourier, however, does not get away from the wages system, since among  other things he still wants doctors to be paid, even if according to the  health of the community rather than the illnesses of their patients. <img src="file:///C:/Users/Cantor/AppData/Local/Temp/msohtmlclip1/01/clip_image001.gif" alt="" vspace="6" width="1" height="1" /></p>
<p>Marx and Engels, however, were sufficiently precise to avoid  responsibility for the bureaucracy and financial system of the  &#8216;communist&#8217; countries being attributed to them. According to Marx, with  the coming of communism money straightaway disappears and the producers  cease to exchange their products. Engels speaks of the disappearance of  commodity production when socialism comes. <strong><em> </em></strong></p></blockquote>
<p>The communist movement owes much to its time. In this early 21<sup>st</sup> century, we would be naïve to believe that we are wiser than our predecessors because <em>we</em> realize how destructive productive forces can be. Just as the nature of  capitalism is invariant, so are the nature and programme of the  proletariat. This programme, however, cannot escape the concrete needs  and mind-set of each period.</p>
<p>At the end of the 18<sup>th</sup> century, in a country plagued with  misery, starvation and extreme inequality, and with still very few  factory workers, Babeuf advocated an egalitarian mainly agrarian  communism. His prime concern was to have everyone fed. It was  inevitable, and indeed natural for down-trodden men and women to think  of themselves as new Prometheus and to equate the end of exploitation  with a conquest over nature.</p>
<p>About a hundred years later, as industrial growth was creating a new  type of poverty, joblessness and non-property, revolutionaries saw the  solution in a worker-run &#8220;development of the productive forces&#8221; that  would benefit the masses by manufacturing the essentials of life and  free humankind from the constraints of necessity. The prime concern was  not only to have everyone fed, housed, nursed, but also in a position to  enjoy leisure as well as creative activities. As capitalism had  developed &#8220;the means of social disposable time, in order to reduce  labour-time for the whole society to a diminishing minimum&#8221;, revolution  would be able &#8220;to free everyone&#8217;s time for their own development.&#8221;  (Marx, <a href="http://grundrisse.blogspot.com/2007/01/key-passages-from-pp690-743.html"><em>Grundrisse</em></a>, 1857-58)</p>
<p>Another century later, <em>ecology</em> is the buzz word. Nobody  seriously believes in a factory-induced or a worker-managed paradise,  new public orthodoxy declares the industrial dream to be a nightmare, so  there is little merit in debunking the techno-cult or advocating  renewable energy or green building.</p>
<p>The idea of communisation as a revolution that creates <em>communism </em>- and not the <em>preconditions</em> of communism &#8211; appears more clearly when capitalism rules over  everything, extensively in terms of space (the much talked-about  globalisation), and intensively in terms of its penetration into  everyday life and behaviour. This helps us grasp revolution as a process  that from its very beginning would start to undo what it wants to get  rid of, and at the same time from its early days start to create new  ways of life (the completion of which would of course last a while).   That is the best possible answer to the inevitable question: &#8220;Why talk  of communisation <em>now</em> ?&#8221;</p>
<p>One might wonder why the notion hardly surfaced in Italy 1969-77,  when that country came closer than any other to revolutionary breaking  point. Part of the answer is likely to be found in the reality of  Italian worker autonomy at the time, in theory as in practice. Operaism  emphasized more the revolutionary &#8220;subject&#8221; or agent than the content of  the revolution, so the content finally got reduced to autonomy itself.  That was linked to the limits of <em>operaismo</em>, whose goal was to  create or stimulate organisation (top-down, party-led, or bottom-up,  council-based). This may be the reason why a wealth of practical  communist critiques and endeavours resulted in so little synthetic  theorization of communisation. Apart from such hypotheses, it would be  risky to embark on sweeping generalizations purporting to explain the  (mis)adventures of theory in a particular country by the ups and downs  of class struggle in that country. Unless one enjoys being word-drunk,  there is little fun in playing the prophet of the past.</p>
<h3><strong> Transition ?</strong></h3>
<p>We would have nothing to object to the concept of transition if it  simply stated the obvious: communism will not be achieved in a flash.  Yet the concept implies a lot more, and something totally different: not  simply a transitory moment, but a full-fledged transitory <em>society</em>.</p>
<p>However debatable Marx&#8217;s <em>labour vouchers</em> are, at least his <em>Critique of the Gotha programme</em> (1875) was trying to describe a society without money, therefore  without wage-labour. His scheme of a time-based currency was supposed to  be a provisional way of rewarding everyone according to his or her  contribution to the creation of common wealth. Afterwards, when  social-democrats and Leninists came to embrace the notion of transition,  they forgot that objective, and their sole concern was the running of a  planned economy. (Although anarchists usually reject a transitory  period, they lay the emphasis on<em> management</em>, via worker unions  or via a confederation of communes: in the best of cases, when the  suppression of wage-labour remains on the agenda, it is only as an  effect of the socialisation of production, not as one of its causes.)</p>
<p>It is obvious that such a deep and all-encompassing transformation as  communism will span decades, perhaps several generations before it  takes over the world. Until then, it will be straddling two eras, and  remain vulnerable to internal decay and/or destruction from outside, all  the more so as various countries and continents will not be developing  new relationships at the same pace. Some areas may lag behind for a long  time. Others may go through temporary chaos. But the main point is that  the communising process has to start as soon as possible. The closer to  Day One the transformation begins and the deeper it goes from the  beginning, the greater the likelihood of its success.</p>
<p>So there will a &#8220;transition&#8221; in the sense that communism will not be achieved overnight. But there will <strong>not</strong> be a &#8220;transition period&#8221; in what has become the traditional Marxist  sense: a period that is no longer capitalist but not yet communist, a  period in which the working class would still work, but not for profit  or for the boss any more, only for themselves: they would go on  developing the &#8220;productive forces&#8221; (factories, consumer goods, etc.)  before being able to enjoy the then fully-matured fruit of  industrialization. This is not the programme of a communist revolution.  It was not in the past and it is not now. There is no need to go on  developing industry, especially industry as it is now. And we are not  stating this because of the ecology movement and the anti-industry trend  in the radical milieu. As someone said forty years ago, half of the  factories will have to be closed.</p>
<p>Some areas will lag behind and others may plunge into temporary  chaos. The abolition of money will result in fraternal, non-profit,  cooperative relations, but sometimes barter or the black market are  likely to surface. Nobody knows how we will evolve from false capitalist  abundance to new ways of life, but let us not expect the move to be  smooth and peaceful everywhere and all the time.</p>
<p>We will only modify our food habits, for example, as we modify our  tastes: changing circumstances go along with changing minds, as was  written in the third <em>Thesis on Feuerbach</em> in 1845. Our intention is not to create a <em>new man</em>,  virtuous, reasonable, always able and willing to master his desires,  always respectful of sound dietary rules. About a century ago, chestnuts  were the staple food of some rural areas of the French Central Massif.  Such a &#8220;poor&#8221; diet does not compare favourably with the variety we have  been accustomed to in &#8220;rich&#8221; countries. But the future is written  nowhere. We might well enjoy a more limited range of dishes than the  abundance currently sold in the supermarket.</p>
<h3><strong> Violence and the destruction of the State</strong></h3>
<p>As a quick reminder, let us go back in time.</p>
<p>For reasons we cannot analyse here, the 1871 <em>communards</em> did not change much the social fabric: that, plus the insurrection being isolated in one city, prevented the<em> communards</em> from  really appealing to the rest of the world, in spite of genuine  popular support in Paris. Versailles army&#8217;s superiority was not due to  more troops or better guns: its law and order, pro-property and  anti-worker programme was more consistently understood, put forward and  fought for by the bourgeois politicians than communalism and social  republicanism  were by the Commune leaders.</p>
<p>In Russia, 1917, contrary to the<em> communards</em>, the Bolsheviks  clearly knew what they wanted &#8211; the seizure of power &#8211; and the power  vacuum enabled them to seize it. The insurgents did away with a State  machinery which was already dissolving, did not attempt or manage to  change the social structure, won a civil war, and eventually created a  new State power.</p>
<p>In Spain, the July 1936 worker insurrection neutralised the State  machinery, but within a few weeks gave political power back to  reformist-conservative forces. Thereafter all social transformations  were limited by the pressure of a reconsolidated State apparatus, which  less than a year later openly turned its police against the workers.</p>
<p>In the 1960s, the radical wave opposed the instruments of coercion  but never dispensed with them. The French general strike made the  central political organs powerless, until the passive attitude of most  strikers enabled the State to recover its role. The power vacuum could  not last more than a few weeks, and had to be filled again.</p>
<p>This brief survey reminds us that if, in the abstract, it is necessary to separate <em>social</em> and <em>political</em> spheres, in real life, the separation does not exist. Our past failures were not social <strong>or</strong> political: they were both. Bolshevik rule would not have turned into  power over the proletarians if they had changed social relationships,  and in Spain after 1936 socialisations would not have ended in disaster  if the workers had kept the power they had conquered in the streets in  July 36.</p>
<p>Communisation means that revolution will not be a succession of  phases: first the dismantling and destruction of State power, then  social change afterwards.</p>
<p>While they are ready to admit this in principle, quite a few  comrades, &#8220;anarchists&#8221; or &#8220;Marxists&#8221;, are reluctant to consider the idea  of a communisation which they fear would try and change the social  fabric while <em>not</em> bothering to smash State power. These comrades  miss the point. Communisation is not purely or mainly social and  therefore non-political or only marginally political. It implies  fighting public &#8211; as well as private &#8211; organs of repression. Revolution  is violent. (By the way, which democratic revolution ever won merely by  peaceful means ?)</p>
<p>Fundamentally, communisation saps counter-revolutionary forces by  removing their support. Communisers&#8217; propulsive force will not come from  shooting capitalists, but by  depriving them of their function and  power. Communisers will not target enemies, but  undermine and change  social relations. The development of moneyless and profitless relations  will ripple through the whole of society, and act as power enhancers  that widen the fault lines between the State and growing sections of the  population. Our success will ultimately depend on the ability of our  human community to be socially expansive. Such is the bottom line.</p>
<p>Social relations, however, are incarnated in buildings, in objects,  and in beings of flesh and blood, and historical change is neither  instantaneous nor automatic. Some obstacles will have to be swept away:  not just exposed, but done away with<em>. </em>We will need more than  civil disobedience: passive resistance is not enough. People have to  take a stand, some will take sides against communisation, and a  revolutionary trial of strength does not just battle with words. States  (dictatorial or democratic) are enormous concentrations of armed power.  When this armed power is unleashed against us, the greater the  insurgents&#8217; fighting spirit, the more the balance of forces will shift  away from State power, and the less bloodshed there will be.</p>
<p>An insurrectionary process does not just consist in occupying  buildings, erecting barricades and firing guns one day, only to forget  all about them the next. It implies more than mere spontaneity and <em>ad hoc</em> ephemeral getting together. Unless there is some continuity, our  movement will skyrocket today and fizzle out tomorrow. A number of  insurgents will have to remain organized and available as armed  groupings. (Besides, nobody has talents or desires for everything.) But  if these groupings functioned as bodies specialized in armed struggle,  they would develop a monopoly of socially legitimate violence, soon we  would have a &#8220;proletarian&#8221; police force, together with a &#8220;proletarian  government&#8221;, a &#8220;people&#8217;s army&#8221;, etc. Revolution would be short-lived.</p>
<p>No doubt this will have to be dealt with in very concrete issues,  such as what to do with police files we happen to find. Though  revolution may exceptionally use existing police archives and security  agency data, basically it will do away with them, as with all kinds of  criminal records.</p>
<p>Revolution is not a-political. It is anti-political.</p>
<p>Communisation includes the destruction of the State, and the creation  of new administrative procedures, whatever forms they may take. Each  dimension contributes to the other. None can succeed without the other.  Either the two of them combine, or both fail. If the proletarians do not  get rid of political parties, parliament, police bodies, the army,  etc., all the socialisations they will achieve, however far-reaching,  will sooner or later be crushed, or will lose their impetus, as happened  in Spain after 1936. On the other hand, if the <em>necessary</em> armed  struggle against the police and army is only a military struggle, one  front against another, and if the insurgents do not also take on the  social bases of the State, they will only build up a counter-army,  before being defeated on the battlefield, as happened in Spain after  1936. Only a would-be State can out-gun the State.</p>
<p>Communist revolution does not separate its <em>means</em> from its <em>ends</em>. Consequently, it will not  <em>firstly</em> take over (or dispense with) political power, and then only <em>secondly</em> change society. Both will proceed at the same time and reinforce each other, or both will be doomed.</p>
<p>Communisation can only happen in a society torn by mass work  stoppages, huge street demos, widespread occupation of public buildings  and workplaces, riots, insurgency attempts, a loss of control by the  State over more and more groups of people and areas, in other words an  upheaval powerful enough for social transformation to go deeper than an  addition of piecemeal adjustments. Resisting anti-revolutionary armed  bodies involves our ability to demoralise and neutralise them, <strong>and</strong> to fight back when they attack. As the momentum of communisation grows,  it pushes its advantages, raises the stakes and resorts less and less  to violence, but only a rose-tinted view can believe in bloodless major  historical change.</p>
<p>At the Caracas World Social Forum in 2006, John Holloway declared:  &#8220;the problem is not to abolish capitalism, but to stop creating it&#8221;.  This is indeed an aspect of communisation, equally well summed up by one  of the characters in Ursula Le Guin&#8217;s fiction <em>The Dispossessed</em> (1974): our purpose is not so much <em>to make</em> as <em>to be</em> the revolution. Quite. But J. Holloway&#8217;s theory of &#8220;changing the world  without taking power&#8221; empties that process of any reality by denying its  antagonism to the State. Like Holloway, we don&#8217;t want to <em>take</em> power. But unlike him and his many followers, we know that State power  will not wither away under the mere pressure of a million local  collectives: it will never die a natural death. On the contrary, it is  in its nature to mobilize all available resources to defend the existing  order. Communisation will not leave State power aside : it will have to<em> </em>destroy it.</p>
<p>The Chartists&#8217; motto &#8220;Peacefully if we may, forcibly if we must&#8221; is  right only in so far as we understand that we will be forced to act  &#8220;forcibly&#8221;.</p>
<p>In revolutionary times, social violence and social inventiveness are  inseparable: the capacity of the proletarians to control their own  violence will depend on the ability of this violence to be as creative  as destructive. For the destruction of the State (we want to destroy  power, not to take it) to be more than an empty phrase, negative acts  must also be positive. But not creative of a new police, army,  Parliament, etc. Creative of new deliberative and administrative bodies,  directly dependent on social relationships.</p>
<h3><strong> Who ?</strong></h3>
<p>&#8220;The proletarian movement is the independent movement of the immense majority, in the interests of that vast majority (..)&#8221; (<em>Communist Manifesto</em>). Both phrases are crucial : <em>independent movement</em> and <em>immense majority</em>.  That being said, it does not follow that nearly everyone is a  proletarian, nor that every proletarian can play the same part in the  communising process. Some are more apt than others to initiate the  change, which does not mean that they would be the &#8220;leaders&#8221; of the  revolution. On the contrary, they would succeed only in so far as they  would gradually lose their specificity. Here we bump into the inevitable  contradiction the whole argument hinges around, but it is not an  insurmountable contradiction. .</p>
<p>We do not live in a society where just about everybody is exploited  and has the same basic interest in an overall change, therefore the same  desire and ability to implement what would be a rather peaceful  process, as nearly everyone would join in : only 3 to 5% would object,   Castoriadis assured us, but no doubt they would soon see the light.</p>
<p>We live neither in a post-industrial society, nor in a post <em>class</em> society, nor therefore in a post working class society. If work had  become inessential, one might wonder why companies would have bothered  in the last twenty years to turn hundreds of millions of earthlings into  assembly line workers, crane operators or computer clerks. Work is  still central to our societies, and those in the world of work &#8211;  currently employed or not &#8211; will have better social leverage power, at  least in the early days or weeks of communisation.</p>
<p>The contradiction can be solved because, unlike the bourgeoisie striving for  political power in 1688 (the <em>Glorious Revolution</em> that gave birth to what was to become English parliamentary democracy)  or in 1789, labour is no ruling class and has no possibility of becoming  one, now or then.</p>
<p>General strike, mass disorder and rioting break the normal flow of  social reproduction. This suspension of automatisms and beliefs forces  proletarians to invent something new that implies subjectivity and  freedom: options have to be decided on. Everyone has to find his or her  place, not as an isolated individual any more, but in interactions that  are productive of a collective reality. When only railway workers go on  strike, they are unlikely to look beyond their own condition: they  simply do not have to. In a communisation situation, the extension of  work stoppages opens the possibility for railway personnel to move on to  a different range of activities decided upon and organized by  themselves <strong>and</strong> by others: for instance, instead of  staying idle, running trains &#8211; free of course &#8211; to transport strikers or  demonstrators from one town to another. It also means starting to think  and act differently about the railway system, no longer believing in  feats of engineering for progress&#8217;s sake, and no longer sticking to the  view that &#8220;high-speed trains are super because they&#8217;re fast&#8221;.</p>
<p>What to do with high-speed trains and with buses cannot be the sole  decision of train engineers and bus drivers, yet for a while the  individual who used to be at the wheel will be more expert at handling  and repairing them. His or her role will be specific and provisional.  The success of communisation depends on the fading away of former  sociological distinctions and hierarchies: breaching professional  distances will go together with dismantling mental blocks regarding  personal competence and aspiration. The process will be more complex  than we expect, and more unpredictable: the experience of any large  social movement (Germany 1918, Spain 1936, France 1968, Argentina 2001,  to name a few) shows how volatile the unprecedented can be, when the  situation slips out of control and creates both deadlocks and  breakthroughs. One thing leads to another point of departure for further  development. That particular example prompts the question of the fading  of the difference between &#8220;public&#8221; and &#8220;private&#8221; transport, which in  turn brings back the vital issue of where and how we live, since today&#8217;s  means of locomotion are conditioned by the urban segmentation of  specific areas reserved for administration, habitation, work,  recreation, etc.</p>
<h3><strong> Revolution of daily life</strong></h3>
<p>The trouble with philosophers, Polish novelist Witold Gombrowicz once  suggested, is that they do not care about trousers and telephones. That  remark hardly applied to Nietzsche, who was no revolutionary but  refused &#8220;to treat as frivolous all the things about life that deserve to  be taken very seriously &#8211; nutrition, residence, spiritual diet,  treatment of the sick, cleanliness, weather !&#8221; (<em>Ecce Homo</em>,  1888). It is everyday life indeed we will change: cooking, eating,  travelling, meeting people, staying on our own, reading, doing nothing,  having and bringing up children, debating over our present and future&#8230;  providing we give daily life its <em>fullest</em> meaning. Sadly, since  the phrase became fashionable in 1968, &#8220;everyday life&#8221; has been usually  limited to the out-of-work time-space, as if people gave up hope of  altering the economy and wage-labour, and were contented with altering  acts and doings of a lesser kind: feelings, body, family, sex, couple,  food, leisure, culture, friendship, etc.</p>
<p>On the contrary, communisation will treat the minor facts of  existence for what they are: a reflection and a manifestation of &#8220;big&#8221;  facts. Money, wage-labour, companies as separate units and value  accumulation centres, work-time cut off from the rest of our time,  profit-oriented production, obsolescence-induced consumption, agencies  acting as mediators in social life and conflicts, speeded-up maximum  circulation of everything and everyone&#8230; each of these moments, acts  and places has to be transformed into cooperative, moneyless, profitless  and non-statist relationships, and not just managed by a collective or  converted into public ownership.</p>
<p>The capital-labour relation structures and reproduces society, and  the abolition of this relation is the prime condition of the rest. But  we would be foolish to wait for the <em>complete </em>disappearance of  the company system, of money and the profit motive, before starting to  change schooling and housing. Acting locally will contribute to the  whole change.</p>
<p>For instance, communising also implies transforming our personal  relation to technique, and our addiction to mediation and mediators. A  future society where people would feel a constant need for  psychologists, therapists and healers would merely prove its failure at  building a human community: we would still be incapable of addressing  tensions and conflicts by the flow and interplay of social relations,  since we would want these conflicts solved by professionals.</p>
<p>Communisation is the destruction of repressive (and self-repressive)  institutions and habits, as well as the creation of non-mercantile links  which tend to be more and more  irreversible: &#8220;Beyond a certain point,  one cannot come back. That tipping-point we must reach.&#8221; (Kafka)</p>
<p>Making, circulating and using goods without money includes breaking  down the wall of a private park for the children to play, or planting a  vegetable garden in the town centre. It also implies doing away with the  split between the asphalt jungle cityscape and a natural world which is  now turned into show and leisure places, where the (mild) hardships of a  ten-day desert trek makes up for the aggravating compulsory Saturday  drive to a crowded supermarket.  It means practising in a social  relation what has now to be private and paid for.</p>
<p>Communism is an <strong>anthropological revolution</strong> in the sense that it deals with what Marcel Mauss analysed in <em>The Gift</em> (1923): a renewed ability to give, receive and reciprocate. It means no  longer treating our next-door neighbour as a stranger, but also no  longer regarding the tree down the road as a piece of scenery taken care  of by council workers. Communisation is the production of a different  relation to others and with oneself, where solidarity is not born out of  a moral duty exterior to us, rather out of practical acts and  interrelations.</p>
<p>Among other things, communisation will be the withering away of systematic distinction between <em>learning</em> and <em>doing</em>.  We are not saying that ignorance is bliss, or that a few weeks of  thorough (self-)teaching are enough for anyone to be able to translate  Arabic into English or to play the harpsichord. Though learning can be  fun, it often involves long hard work. What communism will do away with  is the locking up of youth in classrooms for years (now 15 to 20 years  in so-called advanced societies). Actually, modern school is fully aware  of the shortcomings of such an absurdity, and tries to bridge the gap  by multiplying out-of-school activities and work experience schemes.  These remedies have little effect: the rift between school and the rest  of society depends on another separation, which goes deeper and is  structural to capitalism: the separation between work (i.e. paid and  productive labour), and what happens outside the work-place and is  treated as non-work (housework, bringing up children, leisure, etc.,  which are unpaid). Only <em>superseding work as a separate time-space</em> will transform the whole learning process.</p>
<p>Here again, and in contrast to most utopias as well as to modern  totalitarian regimes, communisation does not pretend to promote a &#8220;brave  new world&#8221; full of <em>new (wo)men</em>, each equal in talents and in  achievements to his or her fellow beings, able to master all fields of  knowledge from Renaissance paintings to astrophysics, and whose own  desires would always finally merge in harmonious concord with the  desires of other equally amiable fellow beings.</p>
<h3><strong> Distant futures &amp; &#8220;here and now&#8221; </strong></h3>
<p>Few people today would agree with what Victor Serge (then a Bolshevik  living in Moscow) wrote in 1921: &#8220;Every revolution sacrifices the  present to the future.&#8221; While it is essential to understand how  communisation will do <em>the opposite</em> of what Serge believed, this understanding does not give us the whole picture.</p>
<p>One of the strong points of the 1960s-70s, or at least one of the  best remembered, was the rejection of a revolution that would postpone  its completion to an always receding future.</p>
<p>In the following years, as the radical wave gradually ebbed, the emphasis on the <em>here and now</em> remained, albeit deprived of subversive content and purpose, and was  reduced to an array of piecemeal changes in our daily life. When they  are as all-powerful as they have become, money and wage-labour are  compatible with &#8211; and sometimes feed on &#8211; inoffensive doses of relative  freedom. Anyone can now claim that a certain degree of self-management  of his neighbourhood, his body, his parenthood, his sexuality, his food,  his habitat or his leisure time contributes to a genuine transformation  of society, more genuine in fact than the old- fashioned social  revolution of yesteryear. Indeed, daily life reformers claim to work for  overall change by a multiplication of local changes: they argue that  step by step, people&#8217;s empowerment is taking over more and more social  areas, until finally bourgeois rule is made redundant and the State  rendered powerless. The ex-situationist Raoul Vaneigem perfectly  encapsulated this vision in a few words (also the title of a book of his  in 2010): &#8220;The State is nothing any more, let&#8217;s be everything.&#8221;</p>
<p>In the aftermath of &#8220;68&#8243;, against Stalinism and Maoist or Trotskyst  party-building, radical thought had to combat the reduction of  revolution to a seizure of political power, and the postponement of  effective change to later days that never came.</p>
<p>Thirty years later, Stalinism is gone, party-building is <em>passé</em>,  and it is increasingly difficult to differentiate ex-Trots from current  far leftists. While it pushes dozens of millions in or out of work,  today&#8217;s all-encompassing capitalism wears more often a hedonistic than a  puritanical mask. It turns Victor Serge&#8217;s formula upside down: &#8220;<strong>Do not</strong> sacrifice the present&#8230; ! Live and communicate <em>here and now</em> !&#8221;</p>
<p>Communising will indeed experiment new ways of life, but it will be  much more and something other than an extension of the socially  innocuous temporary or permanent &#8220;autonomous zones&#8221; where we are  now  allowed to play, providing we do not trespass their limits, i.e. if we  respect the existence of wage-labour and recognize the benevolence of  the State.</p>
<h3><strong> Commons ? </strong></h3>
<p>The Marxist-progressivist approach has consistently thrown scorn on  pre-capitalist forms, as if they were incapable of contributing to  communism: only industrialization was supposed to pave the way for  proletarian revolution.</p>
<p>In the past and still in many aspects of<em> the present</em>, quite a  few things and activities were owned by no-one and enjoyed by many.  Community-defined rules imposed bounds on private property.  Plough-sharing, unfenced fields and common pasture land used to be  frequent in rural life. Village public meetings and collective decisions  were not unusual, mostly on minor topics, sometimes on important  matters.</p>
<p>While they provide us with valuable insights into what a possible  future world would look like, and indeed often contribute to its coming,  these habits and practices are unable to achieve this coming by  themselves. A century ago, the Russian <em>mir</em> had neither the  strength nor the intention of revolutionising society : rural  cooperation depended on a social system and a political order that was  beyond the grasp of the village autonomy. Nowadays, millions of co-ops  meet their match when they attempt to play multinationals &#8211; unless they  turn into big business themselves.</p>
<p>Our critique of progressivism does not mean supporting tradition  against modernity. Societal customs have many oppressive features  (particularly but not only regarding women) that are just as  anti-communist as the domination of money and wage-labour. Communisation  will succeed by being critical of both modernity and tradition. To  mention just two recent examples, the protracted rebellion in Kabylia  and the insurgency in Oaxaca have proved how collective links and  assemblies can be reborn and strengthen popular resistance.  Communisation will include the revitalization of old community forms,  when by resurrecting them people get <em>more</em> than what they used  to get from these forms in the past. Reviving former collective customs  will help the communisation process by <em>transforming</em> these customs.</p>
<h3><strong> Community</strong></h3>
<p>Countless and varied visions of a future communist world have been  suggested in modern times, by Sylvain Maréchal and G. Babeuf, Marx, even  Arthur Rimbaud in 1871, Kropotkin and many anarchists, the Dutch  council communists in the 1930s, etc. Their most common features may be  summed up in the following equation:</p>
<p>communism =</p>
<p>direct democracy =</p>
<p>fulfilment of needs =</p>
<p>community + abundance =</p>
<p>equality</p>
<p>Since the historical subject of the future is envisioned as a  self-organised human community, the big question is to know how it will  organise itself. Who will lead : everybody, a few, or nobody ? Who will  decide : the collectivity, or a wise minority ? Will the human species  delegate responsibilities to a few persons, and if  so, how ?</p>
<p>We will not go back here to the critique of democracy, which we have  dealt with in other essays, and we will focus on one point: because the  vast majority of revolutionaries (Marxists and anarchists) regard  communism above all as a new way of organising society, they are first  of all concerned by how to find the best possible organisational forms,  institutions in other words, be they fixed or adaptable, complex or  extremely simple. (Individual anarchism is but another type of  organisation : a coexistence of egos who are free and equal because each  is independent of the others.)</p>
<p>We start from another standpoint: communism concerns as much the <em>activity</em> of human beings as their <em>inter-relations</em>. The way they relate to each other depends on what they <strong>do</strong> together. Communism organises production and has no fear of  institutions, yet it is first of all neither institution nor production :  it is activity.</p>
<p>The following sections only give a few elements on how <em>work</em> could be transformed into <em>activity</em>.</p>
<h3><strong> No money</strong></h3>
<p>Communising is not just making everything available to everyone  without anyone paying, as if we merely freed instruments of production  and modes of consumption from their commodity form: shopping made  easy&#8230; without a purse or a Visa card.</p>
<p>The existence of money is often explained by the (sad, alas  inevitable) need of having a means of distributing items that are too  scarce to be handed out free: a bottle of Champagne  has to have a price  tag because there is little Champagne produced. Well, although millions  of junk food items are manufactured every day, unless I give $ 1 in  exchange for a bag of crisps, I am likely to get into trouble with the  security guard.</p>
<p>Money is more than an unpleasant yet indispensable instrument : it  materializes the way activities relate to one another, and human beings  to one another. We keep measuring objects, comparing and exchanging them  according to the average labour time (really or supposedly) necessary  to make them, which logically leads to assessing acts and people in the  same way.</p>
<p>The duality of <em>use value</em> and <em>exchange value</em> was  born out of a situation where each activity (and the object resulting  from it) ceased to be experienced and appreciated for what it  specifically is, be it bread or a jar. From then on, that loaf of bread  and that jar existed above all through their ability to be exchanged for  each other, and were treated on the basis of what they had in common:  in spite of their different concrete natures and uses, both they were  comparable results of the same practice, labour in general, or abstract  labour, liable to be reduced to a universal and quantifiable element,  the average human effort necessary to produce that bread and that jar.  Activity was turned into work. Money is crystallised labour: it gives a  material form to that common substance.</p>
<p>Up to our time included, nearly all societies have found only work as  a means to organise their life in common, and money connects what is  separated by the division of labour.</p>
<p>A few millennia after &#8220;abstract labour&#8221; was born, capitalism has  extended worldwide the condition of the proletarian, i.e. of the utterly  dispossessed who can only live by selling his or her labour power on a  free market. As the proletarian is the commodity upon which the whole  commodity system depends, he or she has in himself or herself the  possibility of subverting this system. A proletarian revolution can  create a new type of social interaction where beings and things will not  need to be compared and quantified in order to be produced and  circulated. Money and commodity will no longer be the highway to  universality.</p>
<p>Therefore, communisation will not abolish <em>exchange value</em> while keeping <em>use value</em>, because one  complements the other.</p>
<p><strong> </strong>In quite a few past uprisings, in the Paris Commune or in October 1917, permanent armed fighters were <em>paid</em> as soldiers of the revolution, which is what they were.</p>
<p>From the early hours and days of a future communist revolution, the  participants will neither need, use nor receive money to fight or to  feed themselves, because goods will not be reduced to a quantum of  something comparable to another quantum. Circulation will be based on  the fact that each action and person is specific and does not need to be  measured to another in order to exist.</p>
<p>Superficial critics of capitalism denounce finance and praise what is  known as the &#8220;real&#8221; economy, but today a car or a bag of flour only  have some use because they are treated (and acted upon) according to  their cost in money terms, i.e. ultimately to the labour time  incorporated in them. Nothing now seriously exists apart from its cost.  It is unthinkable for parents who have a son and daughter to buy a car  as birthday present for her and a T-shirt for him. If they do, everyone  will measure their love for their two children according to the  respective amount of money spent on each of them. In today&#8217;s world, for  objects, acts, talents and persons to exist socially, they have to be  compared, reduced to a substance that is both common and quantifiable.</p>
<blockquote><p>When building a house, there is a difference between making sure the  builders will not be short of bricks and mortar (which we can safely  assume communist builders will care about) and budgeting a house plan  (which in this present society is a prior condition). Communisation will  be our getting used to counting <em>physical realities</em> without  resorting to accountancy. The pen and pencil (or possibly the computer)  of the bricklayer are not the same as the double-entry book of the  accounts department.</p>
<p>In the communist revolution, the productive act will never be <em>only</em> productive. One sign of this among others will be the fact that the  product considered will be particular: it will correspond to needs  expressed <em>personally</em> (by the direct producers at the time or by  others) and that the satisfaction of the need won&#8217;t be separated from  the productive act itself. Let&#8217;s think, for example, about how the  construction of housing will change as soon as standardization  disappears. Production without productivity will mean that any  individual engaged in the project will be in a position to give his  opinion concerning the product and the methods. Things will go much  slower than in today&#8217;s industrialized building industry. The  participants in the project may even wish to live there after the  building is finished. Will it be a total mess? Let&#8217;s just say that time  will not count and that cases in which the project isn&#8217;t completed, in  which everything is abandoned in midstream &#8211; maybe because production of  the inputs is without productivity too &#8211; won&#8217;t be a problem. Again,  this is because the activity will have found its justification in  itself, independently of its productive result.</p>
<p>In a general way, one can say that communisation replaces the  circulation of goods between &#8220;associated producers&#8221; with the circulation  of people from one activity to another. (<a href="http://www.khukuritheory.net/could-the-present-crisis-be-an-opening-to-communism/">Bruno Astarian</a>)</p></blockquote>
<h3><strong> Critic af</strong><strong>t</strong><strong>er dinner</strong></h3>
<p>&#8220;In communist society, where nobody has one exclusive sphere of  activity but each can become accomplished in any branch he wishes,  society regulates the general production and thus makes it possible for  me to do one thing today and another tomorrow, to hunt in the morning,  fish in the afternoon, rear cattle in the evening, criticise after  dinner, just as I have a mind, without ever becoming hunter, fisherman,  herdsman or critic.&#8221; (Marx, <em><a href="http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1845/german-ideology/ch01a.htm#a4">German Ideology</a></em>, 1845)</p>
<p>This statement has been ridiculed by bourgeois for its naivety, and  attacked by radicals for its acceptance of objectionable activities,  hunting of course, more generally its endorsement of man&#8217;s domination  over animals. An even more critical view might ask why Marx reserves  philosophy or art for the evening, as an afterthought, as if there was  no time for it while producing food, which seems to take up most of the  day in Marx&#8217;s vision&#8230;</p>
<p>In 1845, Marx was providing no blueprint for the future, and he inserted his prejudices and preconceptions of his time. But <em>so do we today</em>, and we would be pretentious to think ourselves devoid of prejudices.</p>
<p>The most valid aspect of that statement remains the idea that people  living in a communist world would not be tied to a trade or function for  life, which still remains the fate of most of us. When this is not the  case, mobility is often forced upon us: the least skilled usually get  the worst jobs, the poorest pay and lowest social image, and they are  the first to be laid off and pressured into a re-training scheme.  Besides, &#8220;multi-tasking&#8221; is a way of making workers more productive.</p>
<p>As long as <em>work</em> exists <em>as such</em>, that is as a  time-space reserved for production (and earning money), a hierarchy of  skills will remain. Only the opening-up of productive acts to the rest  of life will change the situation. Among other things, this implies the  end of the present work-place as a specific distinct place, where only  those involved in it are allowed in.</p>
<h3><strong> Scarcity vs. abundance : Prometheus unbound ? </strong></h3>
<p>For many a communist (once again, most Marxists and quite a few  anarchists), the original cause of the exploitation of man by man was  the emergence of a<em> surplus</em> of production in societies still plagued by <em>scarcity</em>.  The tenets of the argument could be summarized as follows. For  thousands of years, a minority was able to make the majority work for  the benefit of a privileged few who kept most of the surplus for  themselves. Fortunately, despite its past and present horrors,  capitalism is now bringing about an unheard-of and ever-growing wealth:  thereby the age-old need (and desire) to exploit and dominate loses its  former objective cause. The poverty of the masses is no longer the  condition for education, leisure and art to be enjoyed only by economic,  political and cultural elites.</p>
<p>It is therefore logical that the goal (shared by most variants of the  worker movement) should be to create a society of abundance. Against  capitalism which forces us to work without fulfilling our needs, and  distributes its products in most unequal fashion, revolution must  organise the mass production of useful goods beneficial to all.  And it <em>can</em>, thanks to the celebrated &#8220;development of the productive forces&#8221;.</p>
<p>Besides, industrialization organises and unifies the working class in  such numbers that they will have the means to topple the ruling class  and make a revolution which Roman slaves or late medieval peasants  attempted but were incapable of achieving.</p>
<p>Moreover, and this is no minor point, if money is the root of all  evil, and if scarcity is the ultimate cause of money, such a vision  believes that reaching a stage of abundance will transform humankind.  When men and women are properly fed, housed, schooled, educated, cared  for, &#8220;struggle for life&#8221; antagonisms and attitudes will gradually  disappear, individualism will give way to altruism, people will behave  well to each other and have no motive, therefore no desire, for greed,  domination or violence. So the only real question that remains is how to  adequately manage this society of abundance : in a democratic way, or  via leaders ? with Kropotkin&#8217;s moneyless system of helping oneself to  goods that are plentiful, and democratic rationed sharing-out of goods  that are not plentiful ? or with some labour-time accounting as  suggested by the Dutch councilists in the 1930s ? The answer usually  given by anarchists and non-Leninist communists is a society of  &#8220;associated producers&#8221; run by worker collectives. Whatever the details,  all these schemes describe a different <em>economy</em>, but an economy  all the same: they start from the assumption that social life is based  on the necessity to allocate resources in the best possible way to  produce goods (in the genuine and democratically-decided interests of  all, there lies the difference with bourgeois economy).</p>
<p>This is precisely where we beg to differ.</p>
<p>Women and men must eat (among other necessities)&#8230; or die, there is  no denying it. Basic needs do exist. So, of course we are aiming at  society which fairly, soundly and ecologically matches resources with  needs. What we dispute is that human life consists primarily in  fulfilling needs, and that, logically, revolution should primarily  consist in creating a society where physical needs are fulfilled. Human  beings only satisfy &#8211; or fail to satisfy &#8211; all their needs within social  interrelations. Only in extreme circumstances do we eat just in order  not to starve. In most cases, we eat in the company of others (or we  decide or are led or forced to eat on our own, which also is a social  situation). We follow a diet. We may overeat or voluntarily skip a meal.  This is true of nearly all other social acts. Contrary to widespread  popular misbelief, the &#8220;materialistic conception of history&#8221; (as exposed  in <em>The German Ideology</em> for example) does not say that the  economy rules the world. It states something quite different: social  relations depend on the way we produce our material conditions of life,  and not, say, on our ideas or ideals. And we produce these material  conditions in relation to other beings (in most societies, these are  class relations). A plough, a lathe or a computer does not determine  history by itself. In fact, the &#8220;materialistic conception&#8221; explains the  present rule of the economy as a historical phenomenon, which did not  exist in Athens 500 B.C., and will no longer exist after a communist  revolution.</p>
<p>The human Number One question, or the revolution question, is not to  find how to bridge the gap between resources and needs (as economists  would have it), nor to turn artificial and extravagant needs into  natural and reasonable ones (as ecologists would like us to). It is to  understand basic needs for what they are. Communism obviously takes  basic needs into account, especially in a world where about one billion  people are underfed. But how will this vital food issue be addressed ?  As <em>Hic Salta</em> explained in 1998, the natural urge to grow food,  potatoes for instance, will be met through the birth of social links  which will also result in vegetable gardening. Communisers will not say:  &#8220;Let&#8217;s grow potatoes because we need to feed ourselves.&#8221; Rather, they  will imagine and invent a way to meet, to get and be together, that will  include vegetable gardening and be productive of potatoes. Maybe potato  growing will require more time than under capitalism, but that  possibility will not be evaluated in terms of labour-time cost and  saving.</p>
<p>&#8220;When communist <em>artisans </em>associate with one another, theory,  propaganda, etc., is their first end. But at the same time, as a result  of this association, they acquire a new need &#8211; the need for society &#8211;  and what appears as a means becomes an end.&#8221; (<em>1844 Manuscripts</em>)</p>
<p>A typical feature of what we have been used to calling &#8220;the economy&#8221;  is to produce goods separately from needs (which may be &#8220;natural&#8221; or  &#8220;artificial&#8221;, authentic or manipulated, that matters but is not  essential at this point), before offering them on a market where they  will be bought to be consumed.</p>
<p>&#8220;Socialism&#8221; or &#8220;communism&#8221; has usually been thought of as the symmetrical opposite of <em>that</em> economy: it would start from people&#8217;s needs (real ones, this time, and  collectively decided upon) to produce accordingly and distribute fairly.</p>
<p>Communism is not a new &#8220;economy&#8221;, even a regulated, bottom-up, decentralized and self-managed one.</p>
<p>To use K. Polanyi&#8217;s word in <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Great-Transformation-Political-Economic-Origins/dp/080705643X/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1308793409&amp;sr=1-1"><em>The Great Transformation</em></a> (1944), capitalism has <em>disembedded</em> the production of the means of existence from both social life and  nature. No Marxist and certainly not a communist, Polanyi was not  opposed to the existence of a market, but he analysed the institution of  the economic process as a distinct system with its own laws of motion. <em>The Great Transformation</em>,  written in the aftermath of the Great Depression, coincided with a  capitalist effort to regulate market forces. In the last decades, there  has been a renewed interest in Polanyi&#8217;s emphasis on &#8220;embeddedness&#8221;:  many reformers would like the economy to be brought under social  control, in order to create a sustainable relationship with nature.  Unfortunately, as the liberals are right to point out, we cannot have  the advantages of capitalism without its defects: its regulation is a  momentary step before going into overdrive. To do away with capitalist  illimitation, we must go beyond the market itself and the economy as  such, i.e. beyond capital and wage-labour.</p>
<p>As we wrote in the section on &#8220;the revolution of daily life&#8221;, communisation will be tantamount to an<em> anthropological</em> change, with a re-embedding of organic links that were severed when the economy came to dominate both society and nature.</p>
<h3><strong> Equality</strong></h3>
<p>There would be no communist movement without our spontaneous  indignation when we witness a Rolls-Royce driving by slums. Sylvain  Maréchal, Babeuf&#8217;s comrade, wrote in the <a href="http://www.marxists.org/history/france/revolution/conspiracy-equals/1796/manifesto.htm"><em>Manifesto of the Equals</em></a> (1796):</p>
<p>&#8220;No more individual property in land:<em> the land belongs to no one.</em> We demand, we want, the common enjoyment of the fruits of the land: <em>the fruits belong to all.</em></p>
<p>We declare that we can no longer put up with the fact that the great majority work and sweat for the smallest of minorities.</p>
<p>Long enough, and for too long, less than a million individuals have  disposed of that which belongs to 20 million of their like, their  equals.&#8221;</p>
<p>S. Maréchal&#8217;s statement was asserting the existence of a human  species whose members are similar and should have a fair share of  available resources.</p>
<p>Communisation demands a fraternity that involves, among other things, <em>mutual aid</em> as theorized by Kropotkin, and equality as expressed in <em>The Internationale</em> lines: <a href="http://www.marxists.org/history/ussr/sounds/lyrics/international.htm">&#8220;There are no supreme saviours/Neither God, nor Caesar, nor tribune&#8221;.</a></p>
<p>But <em>equality is not to be achieved by book-keeping</em>. As long  as we measure in order to share out and &#8220;equalize&#8221;, inequality is sure  to be present. Communism is not a &#8220;fair&#8221; distribution of riches. Even  if, particularly at the beginning and under the pressure of  circumstances, our priority may sometimes be to share goods and  resources in the most equitable way (which, whether we like it or not,  amounts to some form of rationing), our prime motive and mover will not  be the best and fairest way to circulate goods, but our human links and  the activities that result from them.</p>
<h3><strong> Universality</strong></h3>
<p><strong><em> </em></strong>Where do capitalism&#8217;s powerful drive and  resilience come from ? Undoubtedly from its amazing and always renewed  capacity to invent advanced ways of exploiting labour, to raise  productivity, to accumulate and circulate wealth. But also from its  fluidity, its ability to supersede rigid forms, to remodel hierarchy and  discard vested interests when it needs to, not forgetting its  adaptability to the most varied doctrines and regimes. This plasticity  has no precedent in history. It derives from the fact that capitalism  has no other motive than to create abstract value, to maximize its flow,  and eventually to set in motion and accumulate more figures than goods.</p>
<p>That aspect is documented enough for us not to go into details. What  matters here is that capitalist civilization develops extreme  individualism, while creating a <em>universality</em> of sorts, which is also a form of <em>freedom</em> (of which democracy is the political realization): it breeds and  favours a new type of human being potentially disconnected from the ties  of tradition, land, birth, family, religion and established creeds. In  the 21<sup>st</sup> century, the modern Londoner eats a banana grown in  the West Indies (where she was holidaying last week), watches an  Argentinean film, chats up an Australian woman on the Internet, rents a  Korean car, and from her living-room accesses any classical or  outrageously avant-garde work of art as well as all schools of thought.  Capitalism is selling her no less than an infinity of possibilities.  Fool&#8217;s gold, we might object, because it is made of passivity and  spectacle in the situationist sense, instead of truly lived-in  experience. Indeed&#8230; Yet, however specious this feeling of empowerment,  it socially &#8220;functions&#8221; as it is able to arouse emotion and even  passion.</p>
<p>We would be wrong to assume that a period when communisation is  possible and attempted would automatically and quickly eliminate the  appeal of false riches &#8211; material or spiritual. Two centuries of modern  capitalist evolution have taught us how resourceful that system can  prove. In troubled times, social creativity will not only be on our  side: in order to ride out the storm, capitalism also will put forward  authenticity and collectiveness. It will provide the individual with  opportunities to go beyond his atomized self. It will suggest critiques  of &#8220;formal&#8221; democracy, defend planet Earth as a shared heritage, oppose  cooperation to competition and use to appropriation. In short, it will  pretend to change everything&#8230; except capital and wage-labour.</p>
<p>The communist perspective has always put forward an unlimited  development of human potentials. Materially speaking: everyone should be  able to enjoy all the fruits of the world. But also in the  &#8220;behavioural&#8221; field, in order to promote, harmonize and fulfil talents  and desires. The surrealists (&#8220;absolute freedom&#8221;) and the situationists  (&#8220;to live without restraints&#8221;) went even further and extolled the  subversive merits of transgression.</p>
<p>Today, the most advanced forms of capitalism turn this critique back  on us. Current Political Correctness and its Empire of Good leave ample  room for provocation, for verbal and often factual transgression. Let us  take a look at the many screens that surround us: compared to 1950, the  boundary is increasingly blurred between what is sacred and profane,  forbidden and allowed, private and public. English readers had to wait  until 1960 to buy the  unexpurgated version of <em>Lady Chatterley&#8217;s Lover</em> : fifty years later, on-line pornography, whatever that word covers, is  widespread (according to some figures, 12% of all sites and 25% of  Internet searches deal with pornography). Contemporary  counter-revolution will appeal much less to moral order than it did in  the 1920s and 30s, and often have a &#8220;liberal-libertarian&#8221; and  permissive-transgressive flavour. Communisation, on the other hand, will  prevail by giving birth to ways of life that will tend to be universal,  but not dominated by addiction, virtuality and public imagery.</p>
<h3><strong> The inescapable contradiction</strong></h3>
<p>Communisation will be possible because those who make the world can  also unmake it, because the class of labour (whether its members are  currently employed or out of a job) is also the class of the critique of  work. Unlike the exploited in pre-capitalist times, wage-earners can  put an end to exploitation, because commodified (wo)men have the means  to abolish the realm of commodity. It is the <em>working class </em>/<em> proletariat</em> duality we are talking about: a class, as Marx put it in 1844, which is  not a class while it has the capacity to terminate class societies.</p>
<p>Marxists often turn this definition into formulaic dialectics.  Non-Marxists make fun of it: the French liberal Raymond Aron used to say  that the &#8220;working class&#8221; is worthy of the fine name &#8220;proletariat&#8221; when  it acts in a (revolutionary) way that suits Marxists. Anyone who takes  this definition seriously cannot evade the obvious: this duality is <em>contradictory</em>. Those who handle the modern means of production and have thereby the ability to subvert the world, are <strong>also</strong> those with a vested interest in the &#8220;development of the productive  forces&#8221;, including utterly destructive ones, and are often caught up,  willy-nilly, not just in the defence of their own wages, shop-floor  conditions and jobs, but also of industry, of the ideology of work and  the myth of progress.</p>
<p>We have no other terrain apart from this contradiction. It  dramatically exploded in January 1919, when a few thousand Spartakist  insurgents went to battle amidst the quasi indifference of several  hundred thousand Berlin workers. Communisation will be the  positive  resolution of the contradiction, when the proletarians are able and  willing to solve the social crisis by superseding capitalism. Therefore  communisation will also be a settling of scores of the proletarian with  him/herself.</p>
<p>Until then, and as a contribution to this resolution, communist  theory will have to acknowledge the contradiction, and proletarians to  address it.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3><strong> For further reading</strong></h3>
<p>(We have also published <a href="http://www.troploin.fr/textes/61-communisation">an essay in French on Communisation,  available on our site</a>. This English version is much shorter, but also  different : a few passages have been expanded.)</p>
<p><strong>Essential reading :</strong></p>
<p>To the best of our knowledge, <em>Un monde sans argent</em> has not been translated in English, except for short extracts published in the SPGB magazine <em>Socialist Standard </em>(July 1979) : John Gray &#8220;For communism&#8221; site : reocities.com</p>
<p>Bruno Astarian, <em>Crisis Activity &amp; Communisation</em>, 2010: hicsalta-communisation.net (with other texts by B. Astarian on communism)</p>
<p><strong>Background information on how the &#8220;communisation&#8221; idea became explicit in the 1970s :</strong></p>
<p><em>The Story of Our Origins</em> (part of an article from <em>La Banquise</em>, # 2, 1983): John Gray &#8220;For communism&#8221; site: reocities.com</p>
<p>For the complete article:  <em>Re-collecting Our Past</em> : libcom.org</p>
<p>(Also: <em>Are the Revolutionaries One Counter-revolution Behind ?</em>, from <em>La Banquise</em>, # 3, 1984: libcom.org)</p>
<p><strong>And :</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://endnotes.org.uk/issues"><em>Endnotes</em></a>, # 1 and 2: 56a Infoshop, 56   Crampton St., London SE 17 3 AE, UK; and: endnotes.org</p>
<p>Théorie Communiste (R. Simon, 84300 Les Vignères, France). Among other texts, <em>Communisation vs. socialization</em> : meeting.communisation.net</p>
<p>TPTG (Ta Paidia Tis Galarias, or : &#8220;The Children in the Gallery&#8221;, a group in Greece),<em> <a href="http://libcom.org/library/ivory-tower-theory-critique-theorie-communiste-glass-floor">The Ivory Tower of Theory </a>: a Critique of Théorie Communiste &amp; « The Glass Floor » </em>: libcom.org</p>
<p>A. Pannekoek, <em>The Theory of the collapse of capitalism</em> (1934): marxists.org</p>
<p>On the Russian and Spanish revolutions : <a href="http://www.troploin.fr/textes/31-when-insurrections-die"><em>When Insurrections Die</em></a> (1999),on the troploin site</p>
<p>V. Serge&#8217;s <em>The Anarchists &amp; the Experience of the Russian Revolution</em> (1921), is included in the V. Serge compendium <em>Revolution in Danger</em>, Redwords, London, 1997.</p>
<p>On the <em>mir</em> and Russian populism: F. Venturi, <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Roots-Revolution-Socialist-Movements-Nineteenth/dp/0226852709/ref=sr_1_2_title_0_main?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1308794412&amp;sr=1-2"><em>The Roots of Revolution: A History of the Populist &amp; Socialist Movement in 19<sup>th</sup> Century Russia</em></a>, first published in 1952.</p>
<p>On democracy:<em> <a href="http://libcom.org/library/implosion-point-democratist-ideology">The Implosion of Democratist Ideology</a></em>, 1989: &#8220;For Communism&#8221; website; and <em>A Contribution to the Critique of Political Autonomy</em>, 2008, available on our site.</p>
<p>Marx, letter to Vera Zasulich, March 1881; and : &#8220;If the Russian  Revolution becomes the signal for a proletarian revolution in the West,  so that both complement each other, the present Russian common ownership  of land may serve as the starting point for a communist development.&#8221;  (preface to the 1882 edition of the <em>Communist Manifesto</em>);  also another letter to V. Zasulich, by Engels, April 23, 1985.</p>
<p>Group of International Communists of Holland (GIK), <a href="http://reality.gn.apc.org/econ/gik1.htm"><em>Fundamental Principles of Communist Production &amp; Distribution</em></a> (1930): reocities.com</p>
<p>S. Maréchal, <em>Manifesto of the Equals</em> (1796) : marxists.org</p>
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		<title>What is the function of &#8216;fetishism&#8217; in Marx?</title>
		<link>http://www.khukuritheory.net/what-is-the-function-of-fetishism-in-marx/</link>
		<comments>http://www.khukuritheory.net/what-is-the-function-of-fetishism-in-marx/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 31 May 2011 01:29:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>John Steele</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Marxism]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Marx&#8217; final section, in the first chapter of Capital I, on the fetishism of commodities, is of obvious importance, but its difficulties have often defeated the first-time reader of this central text. Even among those who believe they have a comprehension of these 20-odd paragraphs, however, the understanding is often a relatively crude one, lacking [...]
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>Marx&#8217; final section, in the first chapter of Capital I, <a href="http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1867-c1/ch01.htm#S4">on the fetishism of commodities</a>, is of obvious importance, but its difficulties have often defeated the first-time reader of this central text. Even among those who believe they have a comprehension of these 20-odd paragraphs, however, the understanding is often a relatively crude one, lacking insight into the somewhat subtle distinctions at work in Marx thinking, and resulting in the rough-hewn approximations of Marx which have always abounded (even &#8212; or perhaps especially &#8212; among Marxists).</em></p>
<p><em>Hence the reprinting of this 30-year-old piece by Geras (originally </em><em>appearing in <a href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502">New Left Review</a> in 1971</em><em>), which I think shows a good appreciation of Marx&#8217; thinking here, and its relation to the overall project of Capital. Geras also critiques some of the major interpreters of Marx, such as Althusser, Lukacs, and Karl Korsch.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>Thus Marx  writes: ‘. . . the labour of the individual asserts itself  as a part of  the labour of society, only by means of the relations  which the act of  exchange establishes directly between the products,  and indirectly,  through them, between the producers. To the latter,  therefore, the  relations connecting the labour of one individual with  that of the next  appear, not as direct social relations between  individuals at work, but  as <em>what they realty are</em>, material relations between persons and social relations between things’ (I, 73. My emphasis).</p>
<p>This means, not that a relation  between persons  takes on the illusory appearance of a relation between  things, but  that where commodity production prevails, relations between  persons  really do take the form of relations between things. This is the   specific form of capitalist social relations; other societies, both   pre- and post-capitalist, are characterized by social relations of a   different form.</p></blockquote>
<h2>Essence and Appearance: Aspects of Fetishism in Marx’s ‘Capital’</h2>
<p><strong>Norman Geras</strong></p>
<p>&#8216;Vulgar economy . . . everywhere sticks to  appearances in opposition to the law which regulates and explains them.  In opposition to Spinoza, it believes that “ignorance is a sufficient  reason” ’ (I, 307).<a name="_ednref1" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_edn1"> [1]</a> ‘ . . . Vulgar economy feels particularly at home in the estranged  outward appearances of economic relations . . . these relations seem the  more self-evident the more their internal relationships are concealed  from it’ (III, 797). ‘ . . . The philistine’s and vulgar economist’s <em>way of looking at things</em> stems . . . from the fact that it is only the direct <em>form of manifestation</em> of relations that is reflected in their brains and not their <em>inner connection</em>’  (Marx to Engels, 27/6/1867). ‘Once for all I may here state, that by  classical Political Economy, I understand that economy which, since the  time of W. Petty, has investigated the real relations of production in  bourgeois society, in contradistinction to vulgar economy, which deals  with appearances only’ (I, 81). ‘It is the great merit of classical  economy to have destroyed this false appearance and illusion . . . this  personification of things and conversion of production relations into  entities, this religion of everyday life . . . nevertheless even the  best spokesmen of classical economy remain more or less in the grip of  the world of illusion which their criticism had dissolved, as cannot be  otherwise from a bourgeois standpoint, and thus they all fall more or  less into inconsistencies, half-truths and unsolved contradictions’  (III, 809).</p>
<p>In this manner does Marx, on many  occasions, specify the distance separating vulgar economy from classical  political economy, and <em>a fortiori</em> from his own critique of the latter, providing us at the same time with a conception of the minimum <em>necessary</em> condition to be satisfied by any work aspiring to scientific status:  namely, that it uncovers the reality behind the appearance which  conceals it. The intention of this article is to deal with a group of  problems (in particular, the problem of fetishism) related to Marx’s  formulations of this requirement and to the systematic recurrence of its  appropriate terminology—appearance/essence, form/content,  illusion/reality, phenomena/hidden substratum, form of  manifestation/inner connection, etc.</p>
<p><span id="more-1315"></span>It should, however, be made clear  at the outset that scarcely anything is said about the development of  Marx’s views on these questions, hence about the relation between the <em>Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts</em> of 1844 and <em>Capital</em>;  and, about the relationship between Hegel and Marx, nothing at all.  Thus the process of Marx’s intellectual formation and development is set  to one side, and these problems are considered only as they emerge in <em>Capital</em> itself, at the interior of what is a more or less finished, more or less coherent structure of thought.</p>
<h4>The theoretical foundation of Capital</h4>
<p>If  we begin, then, with what I have called the minimum necessary condition  of Marx’s science, this methodological requirement to which he assigns  an exceptional importance, the first question which arises is as  follows: what is its theoretical foundation? What establishes its  necessity? At all events, it is hardly an arbitrary construction on  Marx’s part. The text of <em>Capital</em> provides us with two kinds of answer. In one, it is revealed as the common requirement of <em>any</em> science.</p>
<p>‘.  . . a scientific analysis of competition is not possible before we have  a conception of the inner nature of capital, just as the apparent  motions of the heavenly bodies are not intelligible to any but him, who  is acquainted with their real motions, motions which are not directly  perceptible by the senses’ (I, 316).</p>
<p>‘That in  their appearance things often represent themselves in inverted form is  pretty well known in every science except Political Economy’ (1, 537).</p>
<p>‘. . . all science would be superfluous if the outward appearance and the essence of things directly coincided’ (III, 797).</p>
<p>In such passages Marx presents the conceptual distinction between appearance and reality as a form of <em>scientificity as such</em>,  by notifying us that the method he is applying in political economy is  simply a general requirement for arriving at valid knowledge, one which  he has taken over from the other sciences where it has long been  established. Taken on its own, this answer is not entirely satisfactory.  It makes of Marx’s primary methodological injunction—to shatter the  obviousness of immediate appearances—an abstract procedural rule which  must form part of the equipment of every science, regardless of the  content of that science, of the nature of its object of study. Taken on  its own, this answer does not yet specify why it is appropriate to  extend the methods of astronomy to the subject matter of political  economy. For this reason we put it in parenthesis for the moment, though  it should be borne in mind since it will be reconsidered at a later  stage of the argument.</p>
<p>We proceed to Marx’s second  answer which is of a different order altogether from the first. This  answer is, of course, contained in the doctrine of fetishism. For the.  latter specifies those properties of Marx’s object of study itself which  imperiously <em>demand</em> that appearances be demolished if reality is  to be correctly grasped. It analyses the mechanisms by which capitalist  society necessarily appears to its agents as something other than it  really is. The notion of fetishism raises quite complex problems, which  will be developed presently, but even now it should be clear that we  have in this second answer a theoretical foundation for the distinction,  essence/appearance, and its variations, which was lacking in the first.  The relation between methodological injunction and object of study is  no longer one of externality, as is the case with an abstract rule  applicable to any content whatsoever. It is, rather, what may be termed a  <em>relation of adequacy</em> between object and method, the character of  the latter being determined by the structure of the former. It is  because there exists, at the interior of capitalist society, a kind of  internal rupture between the social relations which obtain and the  manner in which they are experienced, that the scientist of that society  is confronted with the necessity of constructing reality against  appearances. Thus, this necessity can no longer be regarded as an  arbitrary importation into Marx’s own theoretical equipment or something  he merely extracted from other pre-existing sciences. And the passages  quoted at the beginning of this paper are seen to lead, by a short  route, to the heart of the notion of fetishism.</p>
<p>It  is enough to consult any standard commentary on Marx to see that this  notion is not free from ambiguity or confusion, and, to some extent,  this is also true of Marx’s own exposition in the first chapter of <em>Capital</em>.  It seems necessary, therefore, to adopt an analytic procedure, in an  attempt to isolate different aspects of the concept and to examine them  separately, even if such a procedure runs the risk of fragmenting what  Marx conceived to be a unified phenomenon. For, if it enables us to  clarify the aspects, taken separately, the chances of understanding  their relations to one another, that is to say, of reconstituting them  as a whole, are thereby enhanced. An initial distinction, one which is  clear enough, between two aspects of fetishism is provided by the text  of <em>Capital</em> itself: ‘. . . a definite social relation between men .  . . assumes, in their eyes, the fantastic form of a relation between  things’ (I, 72). ‘. . . their own social action takes the form of the  action of objects, which rule the producers instead of being ruled by  them’ (I, 75).</p>
<p>In capitalist society the  phenomenon of fetishism imposes itself on men (a) as mystification and  (b) as domination. Clearly the two aspects are intimately related,  inasmuch as men are in no position to control, rather than submit to,  social relations which they do not correctly understand. And that they  are so related is reflected in subsequent literature on the subject  where they are normally run together. Thus Garaudy writes: ‘The  relations between men take on the appearance of relations between  objects . . . Things rule the men who have created them.’ And Sweezy: ‘.  . . the real character of the relations among the producers themselves  is both distorted and obscured from view . . . the world of commodities  has, so to speak, achieved its independence and subjected the producers  to its sway.’<a name="_ednref2" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_edn2"> [2]</a> However, for the reasons stated, I intend as far as possible to  maintain the distinction, and to treat mystification and domination  separately, taking the latter first although the former is more directly  pertinent to the problem of appearance and reality and also more  problematic. No discussion of fetishism can ignore this feature of  domination altogether, and it may perhaps be appropriate to clear it out  of the way.</p>
<h4>The role of Alienation in Capital</h4>
<p>What  we have to deal with here is not domination in general but an  historically specific form of domination. It differs, for example, from  the relations of ‘personal dependence’ which Marx identifies as  characteristic of the European middle ages (I, 77), and this for two  reasons: whereas there the domination is undisguised, under capitalism  it is concealed; secondly, and more to the point here, it is precisely  an <em>impersonal</em> kind of domination exercised by the totality of economic relations over <em>all</em> the agents of capitalist society, embracing also the capitalist whose  overriding interest is the extraction of as much surplus labour as  possible from the worker. He too cannot be held ‘responsible for  relations whose creature he socially remains’ (I, 10; Preface to the  First German Edition). It is unnecessary to rehearse all the aspects of  this impersonal domination—the independence of the production process  vis-`-vis the producers, the past labour of the worker confronting him  as a hostile power in the shape of capital, the instruments of labour  employing the worker rather than vice versa, the drudgery and  stupefaction of work, and so on. All these are comprised by the concept  of alienation. However, in <em>Capital</em> this is a historical concept  of alienation. Its social and historical premises are precisely economic  relations based on the production and exchange of commodities.</p>
<p>This  is brought out clearly in the following passages: ‘The owners of  commodities . . . find out, that the same division of labour that turns  them into independent private producers, also frees the social process  of production and the relations of the individual producers to each  other within that process, from all dependence on the will of those  producers, and that the seeming mutual independence of the individuals  is supplemented by a system of general and mutual dependence through or  by means of the products’ (I, 107-8).</p>
<p>Political  Economy ‘has never once asked the question why labour is represented by  the value of its product and labour-time by the magnitude of that value.  These formulae, which bear it stamped upon them in unmistakeable  letters that they belong to a state of society, in which the process of  production has the mastery over man, instead of being controlled by him,  such formulae appear to the bourgeois intellect to be as much a  self-evident necessity imposed by Nature as productive labour itself’  (I, 80-1).</p>
<p>Here, the roots of the phenomena  grouped under the term alienation, are located in specific social  relations, and not in the fact that there is an ideal essence of man,  his ‘species-being’, which has been negated or denied. And this is the  difference that separates <em>Capital</em> from certain passages in the <em>Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts</em>,<a name="_ednref3" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_edn3"> [3]</a> even though there, too, Marx deals with such features of capitalist  society as the domination of the worker by his product and the  stultifying character of his work.<a name="_ednref4" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_edn4"> [4]</a> In place of a concept of alienation founded on an essentialist  anthropology, we have one tied to the historical specificity of forms of  domination.</p>
<p>To this extent, those discussions of fetishism which simply take for granted the complete unity between the <em>Manuscripts</em> and <em>Capital</em>,<a name="_ednref5" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_edn5"> [5]</a> are of dubious value, conflating as they do two concepts of different  theoretical status. And when Lukács, in his discussion of fetishism,  speaks of one-sided specialization ‘violating the human essence of man’ (<em>op</em>. <em>cit</em>.,  p. 128), he is guilty of the same conflation. On the other hand,  Althusser has proposed a reading of fetishism in which, of the two  aspects that have been distinguished, namely, mystification and  domination, only the former is treated. The notion of men being  dominated by their own products has vanished (almost) without trace.  Such an interpretation demands, of course, that the concept of fetishism  be regarded as entirely unrelated to, and independent of, that of  alienation,<a name="_ednref6" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_edn6"> [6]</a> and the latter is accordingly dismissed as ‘ideological’ and ‘pre-Marxist’.<a name="_ednref7" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_edn7"> [7]</a></p>
<p>In this reading Althusser is guilty, in the first place, of violating the text of <em>Capital</em>, as the following passages make clear: ‘. . . the character (<em>Gestalt</em>) of independence and estrangement (<em>entfremdet</em>)  which the capitalist mode of production as a whole gives to the  instuments of labour and to the product, as against the workman, is  developed by means of machinery into a thorough antagonism’ (I, 432).</p>
<p>‘Since, before entering on the process, his own labour has already been alienated (<em>entfremdet</em>)  from himself by the sale of his labour-power, has been appropriated by  the capitalist and incorporated with capital, it must, during the  process, be realised in a product that does not belong to him (<em>in fremdem Produkt</em>)’ (I, 570–71).</p>
<p>‘Capital  comes more and more to the fore as a social power, whose agent is the  capitalist. This social power no longer stands in any possible relation  to that which the labour of a single individual can create. It becomes  an alienated (<em>entfremdete</em>), independent social power, which  stands opposed to society as an object, and as an object that is the  capitalist’s source of power’ (III, 259).</p>
<p>And even were the term ‘alienation’ altogether absent, there are enough passages where the <em>concept</em>, and all the phenomena it embraces, are presented, to invalidate Althusser’s reading of <em>Capital</em> on this point.<a name="_ednref8" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_edn8"> [8]</a></p>
<p>However,  it is not only a question of the validity of the interpretation of  Marx. There are serious theoretical consequences as well. For in  Althusser the concept of alienation, as that form of domination  engendered by capitalist relations of production, is replaced—and here  is its surviving trace—by the notion of men as the mere functionaries,  or bearers (Träger), of the relations of production which determine  their places and their functions.<a name="_ednref9" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_edn9"> [9]</a> What Marx regards as a feature specific to <em>capitalist</em> relations of production, Althusser articulates as a <em>general</em> proposition of historical materialism. Thus de-historicizing the  concept of alienation in a manner quite strange for a Marxist author  (for how is this different from the fault of the classical political  economists who regard commodity production as eternal?) he makes it  impossible to comprehend, from his perspective, those passages in which  Marx anticipates a future social formation where, precisely, men will  control their relations of production, rather than be controlled by  them, where they will, therefore, cease to be mere functionaries and  bearers. We shall see later on that Althusser commits an exactly  parallel error in relation to the other aspect of fetishism,  mystification. For the moment it is sufficient to observe that, in his  legitimate anxiety to be done with the anthropological concept of  alienation, he throws out the historical concept as well,  de-historicizing it in a ‘new’ way.</p>
<h4>The reality of Value Relations</h4>
<p>Returning  now to the problem of essence/appearance and the mystificatory aspect  of fetishism, it will be well to make a secondary distinction: between  (a) those appearances, or forms of manifestation, in which social  relations present themselves and which are not mystificatory or false <em>as such</em>,  inasmuch as they do correspond to an objective reality; they become  mystified only when regarded as products of nature or of the subjective  intentions of men; and (b) those appearances, or forms of manifestation,  which are quite simply false, illusions in the full sense,  corresponding to no objective reality. This distinction governs what  follows. (Unless, therefore, it is made explicit, the term ‘appearance’  should not be taken to mean ‘mere, i.e. false, appearance’. The same  goes for the word ‘form’.) And it is a helpful one to the extent that it  enables one to avoid the kind of confusion into which many accounts of  fetishism fall, and of which the following passage by Karl Korsch is an  example: ‘The value relations appearing in the exchange of the products  of labour as “commodities” are essentially not relations between things,  but merely an imaginary expression of an underlying social relation  between the human beings who co-operate in their production. Bourgeois  society is just that particular form of the social life of man in which  the most basic relations established between human beings in the social  production of their lives become known to them only after the event, and  even then only in the reversed form of relations between things. By  depending in their conscious actions upon such imaginary concepts, the  members of modern “civilized” society are really, like the savage by his  fetish, controlled by the work of their hands.’<a name="_ednref10" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_edn10"> [10]</a></p>
<p>While  there is much here that is unobjectionable (e.g. value relations as the  product of social relations, men dominated by their own creations), it  is incorrect to describe value relations as imaginary. As I shall try to  show, Marx does not do so. Such a description is dangerously close,  though Korsch manages to keep his distance, to a purely subjectivist  explanation of fetishism, of the kind given by Berger and Pullberg when,  in an article on the sociology of knowledge, they formulate the  following stupefying definition: ‘ . . . alienation is the process by  which man forgets that the world he lives in has been produced by  himself.’<a name="_ednref11" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_edn11"> [11]</a> What they themselves ‘forget’ is that, if forgetfulness were all that  was involved, a reminder should be sufficient to deal with the  constituent problems of alienation.</p>
<p>How is it then  with Marx? What is in question at the moment are the following forms of  manifestation: that labour is represented by the value of its product,  labour-time by the magnitude of that value, and social relations by the  value relations between commodities. For Marx, neither values nor value  relations are imaginary. They are not illusory appearances, but <em>realities</em>.  This point cannot be emphasized too strongly. It represents a first  step towards understanding what is involved in fetishism. Thus he  writes: ‘. . . the labour of the individual asserts itself as a part of  the labour of society, only by means of the relations which the act of  exchange establishes directly between the products, and indirectly,  through them, between the producers. To the latter, therefore, the  relations connecting the labour of one individual with that of the next  appear, not as direct social relations between individuals at work, but  as <em>what they realty are</em>, material relations between persons and social relations between things’ (I, 73. My emphasis).</p>
<p>It  is in the light of this statement that the ambiguous footnote which  occurs shortly afterwards should be interpreted: ‘When, therefore,  Galiani says: Value is a relation between persons . . . he ought to have  added: a relation between persons expressed as a relation between  things’ (I, 74).</p>
<p>This means, not that a relation  between persons takes on the illusory appearance of a relation between  things, but that where commodity production prevails, relations between  persons really do take the form of relations between things. This is the  specific form of capitalist social relations; other societies, both  pre- and post-capitalist, are characterized by social relations of a  different form. A moment’s consideration of the defining relations of  capitalist society—capitalist/worker,  producer-of-/consumer-of-commodities—is enough to verify this. For the  capitalist, the worker exists only as labour-power, for the worker, the  capitalist only as capital. For the consumer, the producer is  commodities, and for the producer the consumer is money. Althusser is  therefore correct to insist that the social relations of production are  not, and are not reducible to, simple relations between men.<a name="_ednref12" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_edn12"> [12]</a> And the reply of one of his critics—that they are, but mediated by things<a name="_ednref13" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_edn13"> [13]</a> is not so much a counter-statement as a restatement of the same thing.  It should, however, be borne in mind that the objects, namely  commodities, the value relations between which are the form taken by  capitalist social relations, are social and not natural objects.</p>
<p>It  is just because these value relations are neither imaginary nor  illusory but real, that Marx is able to make the following judgement:  ‘The categories of bourgeois economy . . . are forms of thought  expressing <em>with social validity</em> the conditions and relations of a  definite, historically determined mode of production, viz., the  production of commodities’ (I, 76. My emphasis).</p>
<p>At  the same time Marx describes these forms of thought as absurd. But what  kind of absurdity is it? ‘When I state that coats or boots stand in a  relation to linen, because it is the universal incarnation of abstract  human labour, the absurdity of the statement is self-evident.  Nevertheless, when the producers of coats and boots compare those  articles with linen, or, what is the same thing, with gold or silver, as  the universal equivalent, they express the relation between their own  private labour and the collective labour of society in the same absurd  form’ (I, 76).</p>
<p>It is the absurdity not of an illusion, but of reality itself, and to this extent it is an absurdity which is true.</p>
<h4>The Social Reality behind Fetishized Relationships</h4>
<p>Having insisted on the <em>reality</em> of value, and of the objective form taken on by capitalist social  relations, the form, that is to say, of a relation between objects, we  further specify them by emphasizing that they are <em>social</em> realities. This determination Marx himself makes quite clear: ‘If . . .  we bear in mind that the value of commodities has a purely social  reality, and that they acquire this reality only in so far as they are  expressions or embodiments of one identical social substance, viz.,  human labour, it follows as a matter of course, that value can only  manifest itself in the social relation of commodity to commodity’ (I,  47).</p>
<p>‘. . . the coat, in the expression of value  of the linen, represents a non-natural property of both, something  purely social, namely, their value’ (I, 57).</p>
<p>Further, by a third specification, it is necessary to recognize value and the objective form of social relations as <em>historically specific</em> social realities, and not just social realities in general. From this, three important conclusions are to be derived.</p>
<p>1.  The distinctions, form/content, appearance/essence, retain their  significance for the analysis and explanation of these realities, but on  condition that the first term of each opposition is not taken to be  synonymous with illusion. Because the forms taken by capitalist social  relations, their modes of appearance, are historically specific ones,  they are puzzling forms, they contain a secret. The reasons why social  relations should take such forms, rather than others, are not  self-evident. It requires a work of analysis to discover them, to  disclose the secret, and, in doing this, it reveals the contents of  these forms and the essence of these appearances. At the same time, the  content explains the form, and the essence the appearances, which cease  thereafter to be puzzling. But this must not be regarded as a journey  from illusion to reality. It is rather a process of elucidating one  reality by disclosing its foundation in and determination by another.  Thus the form of value (viz., exchange-value) and the object character  of social relations is not dissolved or dissipated by Marx as an  illusion, but its content is laid bare: the individuals working  independently and producing use-values not for direct consumption but  for exchange. It is the commodity form itself which is responsible for  the enigma (I, 71), and its solution therefore requires an analysis of  that form. Similarly, Marx uncovers the content of surplus-value by  indicating its source in the surplus labour-time of the worker. He thus  discovers <em>its</em> secret. Bourgeois political economy, itself unable  to hit upon this secret, except in the New World (I, 774) and, even  there, without drawing the necessary conclusions, takes the only other  road open to it. It de-historicizes value and surplus-value, makes of  them products of nature, and, in parallel fashion, regards the  impersonal and objective form of capitalist social relations as an  entirely natural state of affairs. It thus transforms the properties  possessed by commodities, capital, etc., qua <em>social</em> objects, into qualities belonging <em>naturally</em> to them as things. <em>This</em> is the root and beginning of the mystification of fetishism.</p>
<p>2.  It is not that something imaginary has been endowed with the quality of  reality. The mechanism of mystification consists in the collapsing of  social facts into natural ones. In this way, the value form is  fetishized. This is expressed most clearly by Marx in a passage in the  second volume, where he refers to: ‘. . . the fetishism peculiar to  bourgeois Political Economy, the fetishism which metamorphoses the  social, economic character impressed on things in the process of social  production into a natural character stemming from the material nature of  those things’ (II, 225).</p>
<p>There is, however, no  shortage of examples of Marx observing this metamorphosis in relation to  particular features of capitalist society. Thus he writes of the  productive power of social labour: ‘. . . cooperation begins only with  the labour-process, but they [i.e. the workers] have then ceased to  belong to themselves . . . Hence, the productive power developed by the  labourer when working in co-operation, is the productive power of  capital . . . Because this power costs capital nothing, and because, on  the other hand, the labourer himself does not develop it before his  labour belongs to capital, it appears as a power with which capital is  endowed by Nature’ (I, 333).</p>
<p>And of money: ‘What  appears to happen is, not that gold becomes money, in consequence of all  other commodities expressing their values in it, but, on the contrary,  that all other commodities universally express their values in gold,  because it is money . . . These objects, gold and silver, just as they  come out of the bowels of the earth, are forthwith the direct  incarnation of all human labour. Hence the magic of money’ (I, 92).<a name="_ednref14" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_edn14"> [14]</a></p>
<p>And  of interest-bearing capital: ‘It becomes a property of money to  generate value and yield interest, much as it is an attribute of  peartrees to bear pears’ (III, 384).</p>
<p>Now, it is in  order to undo the mystifying effects of this metamorphosis that Marx  insists: ‘. . . capital is not a thing, but rather a definite social  production relation, belonging to a definite historical formation of  society, which is manifested in a thing and lends this thing a specific  social character’ (III, 794).<a name="_ednref15" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_edn15"> [15]</a></p>
<p>The  demystification is achieved by means of a denaturation. But this is not  the same thing as a de-objectification. Pending the destruction of  bourgeois society, capital remains an objective form, a social object,  whose content and essence are accumulated labour, which dominates the  agents of that society, and it must be comprehended as such.</p>
<p>It should further be noted that the <em>false</em> appearances to which the fetishization of forms gives rise are yet ‘something more and else than mere illusions.’<a name="_ednref16" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_edn16"> [16]</a>.  By this I mean that they are not attributable simply to a failure of  perspicacity on the part of the social agents, to some act of  ‘forgetfulness’, with its source in purely subjective deficiencies. In  every case where Marx presents us with an example of fetishization, he  goes to great pains to indicate the roots and <em>raison d’être</em> of  the resulting illusions in the reality itself. Briefly, most, though not  all, of his indications can be subsumed under the following general  kind of explanation: in capitalist society, the social relations between  the producers take the form of objective qualities belonging to their  products, namely, commodities; there is nothing, however, in the  commodity which indicates that these qualities which it actually  possesses as a commodity (say, money) do not belong to it as a thing  (gold); the collapse into nature is therefore itself perfectly  ‘natural’, i.e., comprehensible. If then the social agents experience  capitalist society as something other than it really is, this is  fundamentally because capitalist society <em>presents itself</em> as something other than it really is. As Maurice Godelier has put it: ‘It is not the subject who deceives himself, but <em>reality</em> which deceives <em>him</em>.’<a name="_ednref17" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_edn17"> [17]</a></p>
<p>3.  We have seen that one type of mystification consists of reducing the  social objectivity of the forms of capitalist relations to a natural  objectivity. This mystification is fetishism. However, Marx also exposes  a second type of mystification, one which involves a reduction of these  forms, in the opposite direction, from social objectivity to social <em>subjectivity</em>.  This occurs when they are declared to be imaginary, fictional forms.  While this is not fetishism, indeed, may be regarded as an over-reaction  against it, it is nevertheless a mystification: ‘The act of exchange  gives to the commodity converted into money, not its value, but its  specific value-form. By confounding these two distinct things some  writers have been led to hold that the value of gold and silver is  imaginary . . . But if it be declared that the social characters assumed  by objects, or the material forms assumed by the social qualities of  labour under the regime of a definite mode of production, are mere  symbols, it is in the same breath also declared that these  characteristics are arbitrary fictions sanctioned by the so-called  universal consent of mankind. This suited the mode of explanation in  favour during the 18th century. Unable to account for the origin of the  puzzling forms assumed by social relations between man and man, people  sought to denude them of their strange appearance by ascribing to them a  conventional origin’ (I, 90–<strong>1</strong>).</p>
<p>Thus, the  fact that the material forms of capitalist social relations are not  natural ones, does not deprive them of their objectivity, that is to  say, of their character of being objects, which become independent  vis-`-vis the social agents, dominate them according to their own laws,  and cannot be ascribed to human subjectivity, either as their source or  as their explanation. Such an ascription, whether it be seen as an  agreement—convention, consent, social contract—or as a failure of  consciousness—act of forgetting, lack of insight, trick of the  imagination—has this theoretical consequence: it spirits away the  uncontrolled and fundamentally uncontrollable, character of these  objects, these forms of capitalist social relations. For, in the first  case, it is sufficient to undo the agreement, make new agreements, work  out new conventions, in order to handle the contradictions of  capitalism. Marx is plunged into liberal political theory or its poorly  disguised variant, social-democratic reformism. In the second case, a  new act of consciousness, a reappropriation of the world in thought,  serves the same purpose. Marx is plunged into Hegel.</p>
<h4>Pure Appearance: the Wage Form</h4>
<p>I  have dealt, so far, with those forms of capitalist social relations,  those modes of appearance in which they present themselves, which are  not illusory as such, but are subject to two kinds of transformation  which render them mystificatory: they are fetishized, i.e. grounded in  nature, or given an idealistic explanation. I come now to the forms  which are illusory in the full sense, appearances which are <em>mere</em> appearances. First and foremost here, because it is an illusory form  which is itself the source of a number of other illusions, is the wage  form. In this, the value of labour-power is transformed in such a way  that it takes on the (false) appearance of the value of labour. It ‘thus  extinguishes every trace of the division of the working-day into  necessary labour and surplus-labour, into paid and unpaid labour’ (I,  539). Which is to say, it conceals the <em>essential</em> feature of  capitalist relations, namely, exploitation. The latter is based on the  difference between the value of labour-power, for which the capitalist  pays in order to use it for a given time, and the greater value which  the same labour-power in operation creates during that time. But since,  in the wage form, what appears to happen is that the capitalist pays,  not for the labour-power, but for the labour, the inequality of the  exchange is falsely disguised as an equal exchange.</p>
<p>Those  passages where Marx refers to the difference between the value of  labour-power and the value it creates as ‘a piece of good luck for the  buyer, but by no means an injury to the seller’ (I, 194), and where he  denies that ‘the seller has been defrauded’ (I, 585), must therefore be  regarded as having a provisional and double-edged character. On the one  hand, it is indeed the case that capitalist exploitation is not  fundamentally based on the individual capitalist cheating his workers;  according to all the laws of commodity production, the worker does get  paid for the full value of the commodity he sells. On the other hand,  these laws themselves entail an injury and a fraud much greater than  individual cheating, the unconscious injury and defrauding of one class  by another. The provisional character of the original statements is,  therefore, made plain: ‘The exchange of equivalents, the original  operation with which we started, has now become turned round in such a  way that there is only an apparent exchange . . . The relation of  exchange subsisting between capitalist and labourer becomes a mere  semblance appertaining to the process of circulation, a mere form,  foreign to the real nature of the transaction, and only mystifying it’  (I, 583).</p>
<p>Here, the analysis of the form which reveals the content, the penetration of the appearance which discloses the essence, <em>is</em> a journey from illusion to reality. The same goes for another of the  appearances to which the wage form gives rise: namely, the appearance  that the worker disposes of his labour-power according to his own free  will. This is a mere appearance, an illusion, whose reality is that the  worker is forced to sell his labour-power. Thus, the transition from the  sphere of circulation, that ‘very Eden of the innate rights of man  [where] alone rule Freedom, Equality, Property and Bentham’ (I, 176), to  that of production which reveals ‘that the time for which he is free to  sell his labour-power is the time for which he is forced to sell it’  (I, 302). This transition is one from illusion to reality: ‘. . . in  essence it always remains forced labour—no matter how much it may seem  to result from free contractual agreement’ (III, 798).</p>
<p>However, two precisions are required at this point.</p>
<p>1.  I have said that these analyses which refer us from the appearance  (equal exchange, free labour) to the essence (unequal exchange, forced  labour), are at the same time journeys from illusion to reality. They  are also, it is clear from the above, transitions from the process of  circulation to the process of production. But the circulation process is  no illusion. What we are dealing with here are illusions arising <em>in</em> and <em>during</em> the circulation process by contrast with the realities uncovered by an  analysis of the production process. This precision is important, because  it is at all costs necessary to avoid dissolving the various ‘levels’  of the social totality, by regarding them all as mere forms of  manifestation of one essential level, and thus depriving them of their  specific efficacy. It is the attempt to theorize this necessity in the  concept of ‘over-determination’ that is Althusser’s real contribution to  contemporary Marxist discussion.<a name="_ednref18" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_edn18"> [18]</a> Nor is it simply a question here of the relation between the  circulation and production processes. As Marx makes clear, from these  semblances of the sphere of circulation there arises a whole ideological  superstructure: ‘This phenomenal form [i.e. the wage form], which makes  the actual relation invisible, and, indeed, shows the direct opposite  of that relation, forms the basis of all the juridical notions of both  labourer and capitalist, of all the mystifications of the capitalist  mode of production, of all its illusions as to liberty, of all the  apologetic shifts of the vulgar economists’ (I, 540).</p>
<p>The Marxist critique of the illusions pertaining to this superstructure equally does not deprive it of its positive reality.</p>
<p>2.  The decisive factor, which makes possible the discovery in the  production process of the essence of the false appearances of  circulation, consists in this: that, in moving from circulation to  production, the analysis moves from the consideration of relationships  between individuals to that of the relations between classes, of which  the former are a function. Only this change of terrain can demystify the  appearances. Its importance will be dealt with at a later stage of the  argument.</p>
<p>The wage form, then, unlike the value  form, corresponds to no objective reality. Marx is quite unequivocal on  this point and attempts to give it special emphasis: ‘. . . “value of  labour”. . . is an expression as imaginary as the value of the earth’  (I, 537).</p>
<p>‘. . . “price of labour” is just as irrational as a yellow logarithm’ (III, 798).</p>
<p>And  yet this illusory form is not one that is easily seen through or  dissipated. Marx gave notice of this when he described as one of the  three new elements of <em>Capital</em> his discovery of the irrationality of the wage form (Marx to Engels, 8/1/1868). But he also says it explicitly in <em>Capital</em>: ‘These imaginary expressions arise, however, from the relations of production themselves’ (I, 537).</p>
<p>‘.  . . the price of labour-power . . . inevitably appears as the price of  labour under the capitalist mode of production’ (III, 801).</p>
<p>‘If  history took a long time to get at the bottom of the mystery of wages,  nothing, on the other hand, is more easy to understand than the  necessity, the <em>raison d’être</em>, of this phenomenon’ (I, 540).</p>
<p>Like  the illusions of fetishism discussed above, the illusion of the wage  form is opaque and tenacious, because here as there it is a case of  reality deceiving the subject rather than the subject deceiving himself.  This is the way the value of labour-power <em>presents itself</em>. And  Marx analyses some of the mechanisms of the process—e.g. changes of  wages corresponding with the changing length of the working day; ‘price  of labour’ does not seem more irrational than ‘price of cotton’,  exchange-value and use-value being intrinsically incommensurable  magnitudes anyway (I, 540–1). In this, as in the earlier case, what Marx  tells us is that capitalist society itself is characterized by a  quality of opacity, so that <em>it</em> creates the necessity of a  methodology which will penetrate the appearance to uncover the reality,  and then, by a reverse course, so to speak, demonstrate why this reality  should take on such an appearance.</p>
<h4>Science and Ideology: the Althusserian Disjuncture</h4>
<p>But,  at all events, this opacity is a historically specific one. For Marx,  different types of social relations are characterized by different  degrees of opacity and transparency, and capitalism itself creates the  historical possibility of a society where ‘the practical relations of  everyday life offer to man none but perfectly intelligible and  reasonable relations with regard to his fellowmen and to Nature’ (I,  79). A socialist society would then be one where the social relations  are not concealed or distorted by mystificatory ideologies. But here the  notion that the distinction, essence/appearance, is a form of  scientificity as such recurs in the shape of a problem. For, if the  relations of a socialist society will be transparent, then surely this  distinction will be unnecessary to the science of that society, and  should be understood, like value and surplus-value, as part of that  conceptual apparatus necessary to the analysis of capitalism; and not,  like, say, forces and relations of production, as one of the concepts  which Marxism brings to the analysis of any social formation. Marx’s  first specification of the theoretical status of the distinction is then  further called into question.</p>
<p>In this connexion  it is not irrelevant to observe that, in much the same way as he  de-historicizes the concept of alienation, Althusser obliterates the  historical specificity of capitalist opacity in his thesis that, for  Marx, even a communist society would not be without its ideology (and  ideology in the Marxist sense, i.e., involving false consciousness).<a name="_ednref19" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_edn19"> [19]</a> Moreover it is not the interpretation of Marx that is in question.  There are serious theoretical consequences. What becomes, for example,  of the notion of the proletariat taking cognizance of its real situation  in capitalist society in the act (process, praxis) of abolishing it; of  its comprehending the real mechanisms of capitalist exploitation, and  revolting against them to create a society in which, among other things,  it will be neither exploited nor mystified? What, in short, becomes of  the notion of class consciousness? It has vanished literally without  trace. In its place appears the radical disjunction (a new ‘coupure’,  this) between the theory, the scientific knowledge, of socialist  intellectuals and the ideology of the masses. Thus, Althusser speaks of  categories appropriate for the ideological struggle but deficient for  the purposes of theory,<a name="_ednref20" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_edn20"> [20]</a> and of Marxism as a science which produces new forms of ideology in the masses.<a name="_ednref21" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_edn21"> [21]</a> The unity between the theory of the theoreticians and the practice of  the class is broken and one is left with nothing other than a variant of  hostile bourgeois caricatures of Leninism: the political leaders use  their knowledge to manipulate the consciousness of the masses. Once  again, there is a legitimate concern at the bottom of this false  position: the concern to preserve the specificity of theoretical  practice. There is, after all, some distance between the consciousness  of even the most revolutionary worker and the science of Marx or Lenin.  But it is a distance and not a rupture. Further, it is the distance of a  dialectical relationship, because traversed in both directions. The  scientific theory is brought to bear on the consciousness of the class,  but the consciousness of the class also directs and provides orientation  for the theory. If this unity is sundered, it becomes difficult to  distinguish the Marxist theory of political struggle from a theory of  manipulation.<a name="_ednref22" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_edn22"> [22]</a> Perhaps for this reason, Althusser has more recently permitted himself  some more adequate formulations of the relation between theory and  class, ones precisely which lay emphasis on the ability of the  proletariat to comprehend its objective position, and thus liberate it  from the postulated eternal subjection to ideology.<a name="_ednref23" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_edn23"> [23]</a> What is questionable is whether such formulations can be rendered  coherent with the theoretical structure he had previously elaborated, or  whether, on the other hand, to defend them and give them foundation, he  will be forced to abandon his positions one after another.</p>
<p>The source of Althusser’s error is that he read in <em>Capital</em> only a theory of the <em>raison d’être</em> of mystification, a theory which, to be sure, is there. But in this  reading he failed to perceive what is also there, a theory of the  conditions and possibility of demystification. The latter is, perhaps,  less developed than the first, and this primarily because <em>Capital</em> terminates abruptly as Marx takes up the consideration of classes—‘Vingt lignes, puis le silence’.<a name="_ednref24" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_edn24"> [24]</a> Yet it is plain enough. Speaking of the way in which exploitation is  concealed by the circulation process, Marx goes on: ‘To be sure, the  matter looks quite different if we consider capitalist production in the  uninterrupted flow of its renewal, and if, in place of the individual  capitalist and the individual worker, we view them in their totality,  the capitalist class and the working class confronting each other. But  in so doing we should be applying standards entirely foreign to  commodity production’ (I, 586).</p>
<p>The matter looks  quite different: the appearance of a relation of equality between  individuals gives way to the reality of collective exploitation. And  this is achieved by an analysis of the <em>essential</em> relations of capitalist society, i.e. the class relations. But it is not only theoretical analysis which has this effect. The <em>political struggle of the working class</em> is an exact duplication. Here, not the analyst, but the organized  working class applies ‘standards entirely foreign to commodity  production’. <em>It</em> ceases to consider the relation of individual  capitalist to individual worker and views them ‘in their totality’ by  actually confronting the capitalist class as a whole. By doing so it  penetrates the false appearances of bourgeois ideology. This in no sense  invalidates Marx’s proposition that the workers are inevitably  mystified so long as, and to the extent that, they remain trapped within  bourgeois relations of production. For, this is so. But the proletariat  does not escape these relations of production only on the day of the  socialist revolution. It begins to move outside them from the moment it  engages in organized political struggle, since the latter involves the  adoption of a class position, this criterion entirely foreign to  commodity production, and the refusal any longer to think exclusively in  terms of relations between individuals. For this reason, the  ‘structuralist’ notions of the revolution as rupture (Althusser) or  limit (Godelier) are less precise than the notion of revolution as  praxis (with, to be sure, its ruptural point). And the full force of  Rosa Luxemburg’s insistence on the demystifying effects of mass  political struggle becomes evident. At the same time, the Althusserian  disjunction between the consciousness of the masses and that of the  theoretician is shown to lack foundation. The integral relation between  the two is based on the fact that the theoretician takes up, in  analysis, the same positions as the masses adopt in political struggle;  though, of course, this should not be understood as a reduction of the  sort ‘theory is practice’.</p>
<p>The above passage from  Marx also introduces another dimension of the distinction,  essence/appearance, one which has been emphasized, above all, by Herbert  Marcuse.<a name="_ednref25" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_edn25"> [25]</a> As we have seen, all the concepts with which Marx specifies the  essential relations of capitalist society have a basically cognitive  function. They make possible a knowledge of reality in opposition to the  false evidences of immediate appearances. But, if, in order to do this,  and in the process of doing it, they refer us to ‘standards entirely  foreign to commodity production’, then they are at the same time  critical concepts. Thus, the concept of surplus-value not only permits a  comprehension of the mechanisms of capitalist exploitation. By laying  bare the division of the working-day into necessary and surplus  labour-time, it envisages a state of affairs in which there is no  exploitation. It contains ‘an accusation and an imperative’.<a name="_ednref26" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_edn26"> [26]</a> However, this critical function of the concepts must not be understood  as a mere taking up of positions, or moralizing. If they fail in their  cognitive function, then they are useless in their critical one. When  Marx clearly takes his distance from ‘that kind of criticism which knows  how to judge and condemn the present, but not how to comprehend it’ (I,  505), he informs us that the essential concepts derive what validity  they have not from their particular moral stance (relativism), but from  the fact that they permit a coherent organization of appearances and an  explanation of their source such as no other concepts can provide. This  is, indeed, the criterion which validates these concepts. As Marcuse has  expressed it: ‘If the historical structure . . . postulated as  ‘essential’ for the explanation . . . makes it possible to comprehend  causally the situation both in its individual phases as well as in terms  of the tendencies effective within it, then it is really the essential  in that manifold of appearances. This determination of essence is true;  it has held good within the theory.’</p>
<p>It remains to make explicit that in <em>Capital</em> the distinction between essence and appearance is, as well as  everything else, a distinction also between the totality and its parts.  Each single relationship or fact is an appearance whose full meaning or  reality is only articulated by integrating it theoretically within its  total structure. This has already been seen with regard to the light  thrown on individual relationships by a consideration of the relations  between classes.</p>
<p>But it applies more generally. I  confine myself to certain ‘pairs’ of facts, treated by Marx in his  chapter on machinery and modern industry. Machinery is the most powerful  instrument for lightening labour; its capitalist employment leads to  greater exploitation and domination. Science and technology make huge  and unprecedented strides under capitalism; but at the expense of the  workers’ physical and intellectual powers. Modern machinery shatters the  petrified forms of the division of labour creating the need for  variability of functions and, thus, for a less one-sided, more rounded,  development of the worker; under the anarchic conditions of capitalism,  however, the worker lives and experiences this tendency as insecurity of  employment and suffering. These pairs of facts are actually  contradictions. As such, they represent tendencies which are neither  simply progressive, nor simply regressive, because <em>contradictory</em>.  The essence which explains them, and deprives them of all appearance of  contingency, is the central contradiction between forces of production,  the increasing productive power of social labour, on the one hand, and  relations of production, the continued private appropriation of  surplus-value, on the other. They partake of this central contradiction  and, as partial facts, ate only properly comprehended in relation to the  social totality which they and it inhabit.</p>
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<p><a name="_edn1" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_ednref1"> [1]</a> References of <em>Capital</em> give the volume number  (Roman) and the page number (Arabic of the edition published by  Lawrence and Wishart, London 1961–2. The letters of Marx and Engels can  be found in the <em>Selected Correspondence</em> (Moscow n.d.).</p>
<p><a name="_edn2" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_ednref2"> [2]</a> Roger Garaudy, <em>Karl Marx: the Evolution of his Thought</em>, London 1967, p. 125; Paul Sweezy, <em>The Theory of Capitalist Development</em>, London 1946, p. 36. Cf. also Georg Lukács, <em>Histoire et Conscience de Classe</em>, Paris 1960, pp. 110–13 and Sidney Hook, <em>Towards the Understanding of Karl Marx</em>, London 1933, p. 162.</p>
<p><a name="_edn3" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_ednref3"> [3]</a> T. B. Bottomore (ed.), <em>Karl Marx: Early Writings</em>, London 1963, pp. 126–28.</p>
<p><a name="_edn4" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_ednref4"> [4]</a> Ibid., pp. 122–25.</p>
<p><a name="_edn5" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_ednref5"> [5]</a> Eg. Garaudy <em>op. cit</em>., pp. 52–63 and 124–27.</p>
<p><a name="_edn6" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_ednref6"> [6]</a> J-C Forquin, ‘Lecture d’Althusser’ in <em>Dialectique Marxiste et Pensée Structurale</em>, special number of <em>Les Cahiers du Centre d’Etudes Socialistes</em>, 76–81, February-May 1968, p. 27.</p>
<p><a name="_edn7" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_ednref7"> [7]</a> Louis Althusser, <em>For Marx</em>, London 1969, p. 239.</p>
<p><a name="_edn8" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_ednref8"> [8]</a> For example 1: 112, 310, 360–61, 422–23, 645. There is an excellent discussion of the relation between the <em>Manuscripts</em> and <em>Capital</em> in Ernest Mandel, <em>La Formation de la Pensée Economique de Karl Marx</em>, Paris 1967, pp. 151–79.</p>
<p><a name="_edn9" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_ednref9"> [9]</a> ‘The Object of Capital’, in <em>Reading Capital</em> (London 1970), p. 180.</p>
<p><a name="_edn10" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_ednref10"> [10]</a> Karl Korsch: <em>Karl Marx</em> (New York 1963), p. 131.</p>
<p><a name="_edn11" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_ednref11"> [11]</a> P. Berger and S. Pullberg: ‘Reification and the Sociological Critique of Consciousness’, <em>New Left Review</em> 35, January–February 1966, p. 61.</p>
<p><a name="_edn12" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_ednref12"> [12]</a> ‘The Object of Capital’, op. cit., p. 174.</p>
<p><a name="_edn13" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_ednref13"> [13]</a> S. Pullberg: ‘Notes pour une lecture anthropologique de Marx’ in <em>Dialectique Marxiste et Pensée Structurale</em>, op. cit., p. 145.</p>
<p><a name="_edn14" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_ednref14"> [14]</a> Cf. I, 57–58</p>
<p><a name="_edn15" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_ednref15"> [15]</a> Cf. I, 766.</p>
<p><a name="_edn16" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_ednref16"> [16]</a> Henri Lefebvre: <em>The Sociology of Marx</em> (London 1968), p. 62.</p>
<p><a name="_edn17" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_ednref17"> [17]</a> M. Godelier, ‘System, Structure and Contradiction in <em>Capital</em>’, <em>Socialist Register</em> 1967, p. 93.</p>
<p><a name="_edn18" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_ednref18"> [18]</a> ‘Contradiction and Overdetermination’ in <em>For Marx</em>, op.cit.</p>
<p><a name="_edn19" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_ednref19"> [19]</a> <em> For Marx</em>, p. 232; <em>Reading Capital</em>, p. 177.</p>
<p><a name="_edn20" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_ednref20"> [20]</a> <em>For Marx</em>, p. 199.</p>
<p><a name="_edn21" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_ednref21"> [21]</a> <em>Reading Capital</em>, p. 131.</p>
<p><a name="_edn22" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_ednref22"> [22]</a> J-C. Forquin, op.cit., p. 31.</p>
<p><a name="_edn23" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_ednref23"> [23]</a> Louis Althusser: ‘Avertissement aux lecteurs du livre I du <em>Capital</em>’, in <em>Le Capital</em>, Livre I (Garnier-Flammarion, Paris 1969), p. 25.</p>
<p><a name="_edn24" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_ednref24"> [24]</a> <em>Reading Capital</em>, p. 193.</p>
<p><a name="_edn25" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_ednref25"> [25]</a> Herbert Marcuse, <em>Reason and Revolution</em>, New York 1963, pp.258, 295–6 and 321.</p>
<p><a name="_edn26" href="http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=502#_ednref26"> [26]</a> Herbert Marcuse: ‘The Concept of Essence’ in <em>Negations</em> (London 1968), p. 86.</p>
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