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WSWS
: History
: 2005
SEP/WSWS Summer School
Lecture one: The Russian Revolution and the unresolved historical
problems of the 20th century
By David North
29 August 2005
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This is lecture was delivered by World Socialist Web
Site chairman David North at the Socialist Equality Party (US)
and the WSWS summer school from August 14 to August 20, 2005,
in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Historical knowledge and class consciousness
Today we are beginning a week-long series of lectures on the
subject of Marxism, the October Revolution and the Historical
Foundations of the Fourth International. In the course of
these lectures we intend to examine the historical events, theoretical
controversies and political struggles out of which the Fourth
International emerged. The central focus of these lectures will
be on the first 40 years of the twentieth century. To some extent,
this limitation is determined by the amount of time we have at
our disposal. There is only so much that can be accomplished in
one week, and to work through even the first four decades of the
last century in just seven days is a rather ambitious undertaking.
And yet there is a certain historical logic in our concentration
on the period between 1900 and 1940.
By the time Leon Trotsky was assassinated in August 1940, all
the major events that determined the essential political characteristics
of the twentieth century had already occurred: The outbreak of
World War I in August 1914; the conquest of political power by
the Bolshevik Party in October 1917 and the subsequent establishment
of the Soviet Union as the first socialist workers state;
the emergence, in the aftermath of World War I, of the United
States as the most powerful imperialist state; the failure of
the German Revolution in 1923, the bureaucratic degeneration of
the Soviet Union; the defeat of the Left Opposition and the expulsion
of Trotsky from the Communist Party and the Third International
in 1927; the betrayal of the Chinese Revolution in 1926-27; the
Wall Street crash of October 1929 and the beginning of the world
capitalist depression; Hitlers rise to power and the victory
of fascism in Germany in January 1933; the Moscow Trials of 1936-38
and the campaign of political genocide against the socialist intelligentsia
and working class in the USSR; the betrayal and defeat of the
Spanish Revolution in 1937-39 under the aegis of the Stalinist-led
Popular Front; the outbreak of World War II in September 1939;
and the beginning of the extermination of European Jewry.
When we say that it was during these four decades that the
essential political characteristics of the twentieth century were
defined, we mean this in the following sense: all the major political
problems that were to confront the international working class
during the post-World War II period could be understood only when
examined through the prism of the strategic lessons of the major
revolutionary and counter-revolutionary experiences of the pre-World
War II era.
The analysis of the policies of social democratic parties after
World War II required an understanding of the historical implications
of the collapse of the Second International in August 1914; the
nature of the Soviet Union, of the regimes established in eastern
Europe in the aftermath of World War II, and of the Maoist regime
established in China in October 1949 could be comprehended only
on the basis of a study of the October Revolution and the protracted
degeneration of the first workers state; and answers to
the problems of the great wave of anti-colonial and anti-imperialist
revolutions that swept Asia, the Middle East, Africa and Latin
America after 1945 could be found only on the basis of a painstaking
study of the political and theoretical controversies surrounding
Trotskys theory of permanent revolution, which he had initially
formulated in 1905.
The relation between historical knowledge and political analysis
and orientation found its most profound expression in the last
decade of the Soviet Union. By the time Mikhail Gorbachev came
to power in March 1985, the Stalinist regime was in desperate
crisis. The deterioration of the Soviet economy could no longer
be concealed once oil prices, whose rapid rise during the 1970s
had provided a short-term windfall, began to fall sharply. What
measures were to be taken by the Kremlin to reverse the decline?
Issues of policy immediately became entangled with unanswered
questions of Soviet history.
For more than 60 years the Stalinist regime had been engaged
in an unrelenting campaign of historical falsification. The citizens
of the Soviet Union were largely ignorant of the facts of their
own revolutionary history. The works of Trotsky and his co-thinkers
had been censored and suppressed for decades. There existed not
a single credible work of Soviet history. Each new edition of
the official Soviet encyclopedia revised history in accordance
with the political interests and instructions of the Kremlin.
In the Soviet Union, as our late comrade Vadim Rogovin once noted,
the past was as unpredictable as the future!
For those factions within the bureaucracy and privileged nomenklatura
which favored the dismantling of the nationalized industry, the
revival of private property, and the restoration of capitalism,
the Soviet economic crisis was proof that socialism
had failed and that the October Revolution was a catastrophic
historical mistake from which all subsequent Soviet tragedies
flowed inexorably. The economic prescriptions advanced by these
pro-market forces were based on an interpretation of Soviet history
that claimed that Stalinism was the inevitable outcome of the
October Revolution.
The answer to the advocates of capitalist restoration could
not be given simply on the basis of economics. Rather, the refutation
of the pro-capitalist arguments demanded an examination of Soviet
history, the demonstration that Stalinism was neither the necessary
nor inevitable outcome of the October Revolution. It had to be
shown that an alternative to Stalinism was not only theoretically
conceivable, but also that such an alternative had actually existed
in the form of the Left Opposition led by Leon Trotsky.
What I am saying today is more or less what I told an audience
of students and teachers in the Soviet Union, at the Historical
Archival Institute of Moscow University, in November 1989. I began
my lecture on the subject of The Future of Socialism
by noting that in order to discuss the future, it is necessary
to dwell at considerable length on the past. Because how can one
discuss socialism today without dealing with the many controversies
that confront the socialist movement? And, of course, when we
discuss the future of socialism, we are discussing the fate of
the October Revolutionan event which is of world significance
and which has had a profound effect on the working class of every
country. Much of this past, particularly in the Soviet Union,
is still shrouded in mystery and falsification. [1]
There was at that time an immense interest in historical questions
in the USSR. My own lecture, which was organized with less than
24 hours preparation in response to an impromptu invitation by
the director of the Historical Archival Institute, attracted an
audience of several hundred people. The publicity for the meeting
was confined almost entirely to word of mouth. The news quickly
got around that an American Trotskyist would be speaking at the
Institute, and a large number of people turned up.
Though in the brief era of Glasnost it was not a complete
novelty for a Trotskyist to speak publicly, a lecture by an American
Trotskyist was still something of a sensation. The intellectual
climate for such a lecture was extremely favorable. There was
a hunger for historical truth. As Comrade Fred Williams recently
noted in his review of Robert Services miserable Stalin
biography, the Soviet journal Arguments and Facts, which
had been a minor publication in the pre-Glasnost era, saw
its circulation climb exponentially, to 33 million, on the basis
of its publication of essays and long-suppressed documents related
to Soviet history.
Frightened by the widespread and expanding interest in Marxism
and Trotskyism, the bureaucracy sought to preempt this essential
intellectual process of historical clarification, which
would tend to encourage a resurgence of socialist political consciousness,
by accelerating its movement toward the breakup of the USSR. The
precise manner in which the bureaucracy orchestrated the dissolution
of the USSRthe culmination of the Stalinist betrayal of
the October Revolution foreseen by Trotsky more than a half-century
earlieris a subject that remains to be examined with the
necessary detail. But what must be stressed is that a critical
element in the dissolution of the USSRwhose catastrophic
consequences for the people of the former Soviet Union have become
all too clearwas ignorance of history. The burden
of decades of historical falsification could not be overcome in
time for the Soviet working class to orient itself politically,
uphold its independent social interests, and oppose the dissolution
of the Soviet Union and the restoration of capitalism.
There is a great lesson in this historical tragedy. Without
a thorough knowledge of the historical experiences through which
it has passed, the working class cannot defend even its most elementary
social interests, let alone conduct a politically conscious struggle
against the capitalist system.
Historical consciousness is an essential component of class
consciousness. The words of Rosa Luxemburg are as relevant
today as they were when written in early 1915, less than a year
after the outbreak of World War I and the capitulation of the
German Social Democratic Party to Prussian militarism and imperialism:
Historical experience is [the working class] only
teacher. His Via Dolorosa to freedom is covered not only with
unspeakable suffering, but with countless mistakes. The goal of
his journey, his final liberation, depends entirely upon the proletariat,
on whether it understands to learn from its own mistakes.
Self-criticism, cruel, unsparing criticism that goes to the very
root of the evil is life and breath for the proletarian movement.
The catastrophe into which the world has thrust the socialist
proletariat is an unexampled misfortune for humanity. But socialism
is lost only if the international proletariat is unable to measure
the depths of the catastrophe and refuses to understand the lessons
that it teaches.[2]
Historical consciousness versus postmodernism
The conception of history that we uphold, which assigns to
the knowledge and theoretical assimilation of historical experience
such a critical and decisive role in the struggle for human liberation,
is irreconcilably hostile to all prevailing trends of bourgeois
thought. The political, economic and social decay of bourgeois
society is mirrored, if not spearheaded, by its intellectual degradation.
In a period of political reaction, Trotsky once noted, ignorance
bares its teeth.
The specific and peculiar form of ignorance championed today
by the most skilled and cynical academic representatives of bourgeois
thought, the postmodernists, is ignorance of and contempt
for history. The postmodernists extreme rejection of
the validity of history and the central role assigned to it by
all genuine progressive trends of social thought is inextricably
linked with another essential element of their theoretical conceptionsthe
denial and explicit repudiation of objective truth as a significant,
let alone central, goal of philosophical inquiry.
What, then, is postmodernism? Permit me to quote, as an explanation,
a passage written by a prominent academic defender of this tendency,
Professor Keith Jenkins:
Today we live within the general condition of postmodernity.
We do not have a choice about this. For postmodernity is not an
ideology or a position we can choose to subscribe
to or not; postmodernity is precisely our condition: it is our
fate. And this condition has arguably been caused by the general
failurea general failure which can now be picked out very
clearly as the dust settles over the twentieth centuryof
that experiment in social living that we call modernity.
It is a general failure, as measured in its own terms, of the
attempt, from around the eighteenth century in Europe, to bring
about through the application of reason, science and technology,
a level of personal and social wellbeing within social formations,
which, legislating for an increasingly generous emancipation of
their citizens/subjects, we might characterize by saying that
they were trying, at best, to become human rights communities.
... [T]here are not nownor have there ever beenany
real foundations of the kind alleged to underpin the
experiment of the modern. [3]
Permit me, if I may use the language of the postmodernists,
to deconstruct this passage. For more than two hundred
years, stretching back into the eighteenth century, there were
people, inspired by the science and philosophy of the Enlightenment,
who believed in progress, in the possibility of human perfectibility,
and who sought the revolutionary transformation of society on
the basis of what they believed to be a scientific insight into
the objective laws of history.
Such people believed in History (with a capital H) as a law-governed
process, determined by socio-economic forces existing independently
of the subjective consciousness of individuals, but which men
could discover, understand and act upon in the interests of human
progress.
But all such conceptions, declare the postmodernists, have
been shown to be naïve illusions. We now know better: there
is no History (with a capital H). There is not even history (with
a small h), understood merely as an objective process. There are
merely subjective narratives, or discourses,
with shifting vocabularies employed to achieve one or another
subjectively-determined useful purpose, whatever that purpose
might be.
From this standpoint, the very idea of deriving lessons
from history is an illegitimate project. There is
really nothing to be studied and nothing to be learned. As Jenkins
insists, [W]e now just have to understand that we live amidst
social formations which have no legitimizing ontological or epistemological
or ethical grounds for our beliefs beyond the status of an ultimately
self-referencing (rhetorical) conversation... Consequently, we
recognize today that there never has been, and there never will
be, any such thing as a past which is expressive of some sort
of essence. [4]
Translated into comprehensible English, what Jenkins is saying
is that 1) the functioning of human societies, either past or
present, cannot be understood in terms of objective laws that
can be or are waiting to be discovered; and 2) there is no objective
foundation underlying what people may think, say, or do about
the society in which they live. People who call themselves historians
may advance one or another interpretation of the past, but replacement
of one interpretation with another does not express an advance
toward something objectively truer than what was previously writtenfor
there is no objective truth to get closer to. It is merely the
replacement of one way of talking about the past with another
way of talking about the pastfor reasons suited to the subjectively-perceived
uses of the historian.
The proponents of this outlook assert the demise of modernity,
but refuse to examine the whole complex of historical and political
judgments upon which their conclusions are premised. They do,
of course, hold political positions which both underlie and find
expression in their theoretical views. Professor Hayden White,
one of the leading exponents of postmodernism, has stated explicitly,
Now I am against revolutions, whether launched from above
or below in the social hierarchy and whether directed
by leaders who profess to possess a science of society and history
or be celebrators of political spontaneity[5]
The legitimacy of a given philosophical conception is not automatically
refuted by the politics of the individual by whom it is advanced.
But the anti-Marxist and anti-socialist trajectory of postmodernism
is so evident that it is virtually impossible to disentangle its
theoretical conceptions from its political perspective.
This connection finds its most explicit expression in the writings
of the French philosopher Jean-Francois Lyotard and the American
philosopher Richard Rorty. I will begin with the former. Lyotard
was directly involved in socialist politics. In 1954, he joined
the group Socialisme ou Barbarie, an organization that
had emerged in 1949 out of a split with the PCI (Parti Communiste
Internationaliste), the French section of the Fourth International.
The basis of that split was the groups rejection of Trotskys
definition of the USSR as a degenerated workers state. The
Socialisme ou Barbarie group, whose leading theoreticians
were Cornelius Castoriadis and Claude Lefort, developed the position
that the bureaucracy was not a parasitic social stratum but a
new exploiting social class.
Lyotard remained in this group until the mid-1960s, by which
time he broke completely with Marxism.
Lyotard is most identified with the repudiation of the grand
narratives of human emancipation, whose legitimacy, he claims,
had been refuted by the events of the twentieth century. He argues
that
the very basis of each of the great narratives of emancipation
has, so to speak, been invalidated over the last fifty years.
All that is real is rational, all that is rational is real: Auschwitz
refutes speculative doctrine. At least that crime, which was real,
was not rational. All that is proletarian is communist, all that
is communist is proletarian: Berlin 1953, Budapest 1956,
Czechoslovakia 1968, Poland 1980 (to mention the most obvious
examples) refute the doctrine of historical materialism: the workers
rise up against the Party. All that is democratic exists through
and for the people, and not vice versa: May 1968 refutes
the doctrine of parliamentary liberalism. If left to themselves,
the laws of supply and demand will result in universal prosperity,
and vice versa: The crises of 1911 and 1929 refute
the doctrine of economic liberalism. [6]
The combination of disorientation, demoralization, pessimism
and confusion that underlies the entire theoretical project of
Lyotards postmodernism is summed up in this passage. One
could devote an entire lecture, if not a book, to its refutation.
Here, I must confine myself to just a few points.
The argument that Auschwitz refutes all attempts at a scientific
understanding of history was by no means original to Lyotard.
A similar idea forms the basis of the post-World War II writings
of Adorno and Horkheimer, the fathers of the Frankfurt School.
Lyotards declaration that Auschwitz was both real and irrational
is a simplistic distortion of Hegels dialectical revolutionary
conception. Lyotards supposed refutation is based on a vulgar
identification of the real, as a philosophical concept,
with that which exists. But as Engels explained, reality, as understood
by Hegel, is in no way an attribute predicable of any given
state of affairs, social or political, in all circumstances and
at all times. [7] That which exists can be so utterly in
conflict with the objective development of human society as to
be socially and historically irrational, and therefore unreal,
unviable and doomed. In this profound sense, German imperialismout
of which Nazism and Auschwitz arosedemonstrated the truth
of Hegels philosophical dictum.
The working class uprisings against Stalinism did not refute
historical materialism. Rather, they refuted the politics of Socialisme
ou Barbarie which Lyotard had espoused. Trotsky, on the basis
of the historical materialist method of analysis, had predicted
such uprisings. The Socialisme ou Barbarie group had attributed
to the Stalinist bureaucracies a degree of power and stability
that they, as a parasitic caste, lacked. Moreover, Lyotard implies
an identity between communism as a revolutionary movement and
the Communist parties, which were, in fact, the political organizations
of the Stalinist bureaucracies.
As for the refutation of economic and parliamentary liberalism,
this was accomplished by Marxists long before the events cited
by Lyotard. His reference to May 1968 as the downfall of parliamentary
liberalism is particularly grotesque. What about the Spanish Civil
War? The collapse of the Weimar Republic? The betrayal of the
French Popular Front? All these events occurred more than 30 years
before May-June 1968. What Lyotard presents as great philosophical
innovations are little more than the expression of the pessimism
and cynicism of the disappointed ex-left (or rightward-moving)
academic petty bourgeoisie.
Richard Rorty is unabashed in connecting his rejection of the
concept of objective truth with the repudiation of revolutionary
socialist politics. For Rorty, the collapse of the Stalinist regimes
in eastern Europe and the dissolution of the Soviet Union provided
leftish intellectuals with the long-awaited opportunity to renounce,
for once and for all, any sort of intellectual (or even emotional)
commitment to a revolutionary socialist perspective. In his essay
The End of Leninism, Havel and Social Hope, Rorty
declared:
... I hope that intellectuals will use the death of Leninism
as an occasion to rid themselves of the idea that they know, or
ought to know, something about deep, underlying forcesforces
that determine the fate of human communities.
We intellectuals have been making claims to such knowledge
ever since we set up shop. Once we claimed to know that justice
could not reign until kings became philosophers or philosophers
kings; we claimed to know this on the basis of a grasp of the
shape and movement of History. I would hope that we have reached
a time at which we can finally get rid of the conviction common
to Plato and Marx that there must be large theoretical
ways of finding out how to end injustice, as opposed to small
experimental ways.[8]
What would follow from such a theoretical renunciation? Rorty
offers his proposals for the reorientation of left
politics:
... I think the time has come to drop the terms capitalism
and socialism from the political vocabulary of the
Left. It would be a good idea to stop talking about the
anticapitalist struggle and to substitute something banal
and untheoreticalsomething like the struggle against
avoidable human misery. More generally, I hope we can banalize
the entire vocabulary of leftist political deliberation. I suggest
we start talking about greed and selfishness rather than about
bourgeois ideology, about starvation wages and layoffs rather
than about commodification of labor, and about differential per-pupil
expenditure on schools and differential access to health care
rather than about the division of society into classes.[9]
And this is called philosophy? What Rorty calls
banalization would be better described as intellectual
and political castration. He proposes to banish from discussion
the product of more than 200 years of social thought. Underlying
this proposal is the conception that the development of thought
itself is a purely arbitrary and largely subjective process. Words,
theoretical concepts, logical categories and philosophical systems
are merely verbal constructs, pragmatically conjured up in the
interest of various subjective ends. The claim that the development
of theoretical thought is an objective process, expressing mans
evolving, deepening, and ever-more complex and precise understanding
of nature and society is, as far as Rorty is concerned, nothing
more than a Hegelian-Marxian shibboleth. As he asserts in another
passage, There is no activity called knowing
which has a nature to be discovered, and at which natural scientists
are particularly skilled. There is simply the process of justifying
beliefs to audiences. [10]
And so, terms such as capitalism, working
class, socialist, surplus value,
wage-labor, exploitation, and imperialism
are not concepts which express and denote an objective reality.
They should be replaced with other, presumably less emotive, languagewhat
most of us, though not Rorty, would call euphemisms.
Rorty, as I have already quoted, suggests that we talk about
the struggle against avoidable human misery. Let us,
for a moment, accept this brilliant suggestion. But we are almost
immediately confronted with a problem. How should we determine
what form and degree of human misery are avoidable? On what basis
are we to claim that misery is avoidable, or even that it should
be avoided? What response should be given to those who argue that
misery is mans lot, the consequence of the fall from grace?
And even if we somehow evade the arguments of theologians, and
conceive of misery in secular terms, as a social problem, we would
still confront the problem of analyzing the causes of misery.
A program for abolishing avoidable human misery
would be compelled to analyze the economic structure of society.
To the extent that such an investigation was carried out with
any notable degree of honesty, the crusaders against avoidable
human misery would encounter the problems of ownership,
property, profit and class.
They could invent new words to describe these social phenomena,
butwith or without Rortys permissionthey would
exist none the less.
Rortys theoretical conceptions abound with the most blatant
inconsistencies and contradictions. He categorically insists that
there is no truth to be discovered and known. Presumably,
he holds his discovery of the non-existence of truth to be true,
as it forms the foundation of his philosophy. But if he is asked
to explain this gross inconsistency, Rorty evades the problem
by proclaiming that he will not submit to the terms of the question,
which is rooted in traditional philosophical discourse, dating
all the way back to Plato. Truth, Rorty insists, is one of those
old issues which are now out of date and about which one simply
cannot have an interesting philosophical discussion. When the
issue arises, Rorty, as he has noted rather cynically, would
simply like to change the subject.[11]
The key to an understanding of the philosophical conceptions
of Rorty is to be found in his political positions. While Rorty
has sought on various occasions to downplay the link between philosophy
and politics, it would be hard to find another contemporary philosopher
whose theoretical conceptions are so directly embedded in a political
positionthat is, in his rejection of and opposition to Marxist
revolutionary politics. Rorty does not attempt a systematic analysis
and refutation of Marxism. Whether or not Marxism is correct is,
for Rorty, beside the point. The socialist project (which Rorty
largely identifies with the fate of the Soviet Union) failed,
and there is, as far as Rorty is concerned, little hope for it
to be successful in the future. From the wreckage of the Old Marxian
Left, there is nothing to be salvaged. Rather than engaging in
new doctrinal struggles over history, principles, programs, and,
worst of all, objective truth, it is better to retreat to a much
more modest politics of the lowest common denominator. This is
what Rortys philosophyand, indeed, much of American
academic postmodernist discourseis really all about.
For Rorty (and, as we shall see, so many others) the events
of 1989 have convinced those who were trying to hold on to Marxism
that we need a way of holding our time in thought, and a plan
for making the future better than the present, which drops reference
to capitalism, bourgeois ways of life, bourgeois ideology, and
the working class.[12] The time has come, he argues, to
stop using History as the name of an object
around which to weave our fantasies of diminished misery. We should
concede Francis Fukuyamas point (in his celebrated essay,
The End of History) that if you still long for total revolution,
for the Radical Other on a world-historical scale, the events
of 1989 show that you are out of luck.[13]
This sort of cynical and heavy-handed irony is expressive of
the prostration and demoralization that swept over the milieu
of left academics and radicals in the face of the political reaction
that followed the collapse of the Stalinist regimes. Rather than
attempting a serious analysis of the historical, political, economic
and social roots of the break-up of the Stalinist regimes, these
tendencies quickly adapted themselves to the prevailing climate
of reaction, confusion and pessimism.
The ideological consequences of 1989
Explaining the political capitulation to the wave of Stalinist
and fascist reaction during the 1930s, Trotsky observed that force
not only conquers, it also convinces. The sudden collapse of the
Stalinist regimes, which came as a complete surprise to so many
radicals and left-inclined intellectuals, left them theoretically,
politically and even morally disarmed before the onslaught of
bourgeois and imperialist triumphalism that followed the dismantling
of the Berlin Wall. The myriad shades of petty-bourgeois left
politics were utterly bewildered and demoralized by the sudden
disappearance of the bureaucratic regimes in Eastern Europe. The
politically shell-shocked petty-bourgeois academics proclaimed
that the demise of the bureaucratic regimes represented the failure
of Marxism.
There was, aside from cowardice, a substantial degree of intellectual
dishonesty involved in their claims that Marxism had been discredited
by the dissolution of the USSR. Professor Bryan Turner wrote,
for example, that the authority of Marxist theory has been
severely challenged, not least for the failure of Marxism to anticipate
the total collapse of east European communism and the Soviet Union.[14]
Such statements cannot be explained by mere ignorance. The left
academics who wrote this and similar statements are not completely
unaware of the Trotskyist analysis of the nature of the Stalinist
regime, which warned that the policies of the bureaucracy would
lead ultimately to the collapse of the Soviet Union.
The International Committee can produce innumerable statements
in which it foresaw the catastrophic trajectory of Stalinism.
Prior to the demise of the USSR, the petty-bourgeois radicals
considered such warnings nothing less than sectarian lunacy. After
the collapse of the Soviet Union, they found it easier to blame
Marxism for the failure of real existing socialism
than to undertake a critical examination of their own political
outlook. Angry and disappointed, they now looked upon their political,
intellectual and emotional commitment to socialism as a bad investment
that they deeply regretted. Their outlook has been summed up by
the historian Eric Hobsbawm, long-time member of the British Communist
Party who served for decades as an apologist for Stalinism. He
has written in his autobiography:
Communism is now dead: The USSR and most of the states
and societies built on its model, children of the October Revolution
which inspired us, have collapsed so completely, leaving behind
a landscape of material and moral ruin, that it must be obvious
that failure was built into the enterprise from the start.[15]
Hobsbawms claim that the October Revolution was a doomed
enterprise is a capitulation to the arguments of the unabashed
right-wing opponents of socialism. The ideologists of bourgeois
reaction assert that the collapse of the USSR is irrefutable proof
that socialism is an insane utopian vision.
Robert Conquest, in his inquisitorial Reflections on a Ravaged
Century, condemns the archaic idea that utopia can be
constructed on earth and the offer of a millenarian
solution to all human problems.[16] The Polish-American
historian Andrzej Walicki has proclaimed that The fate of
communism worldwide indicates... that the vision itself was inherently
unrealizable. Hence, the enormous energy put into its implementation
was doomed to be wasted.[17] The recently deceased American
historian, Martin Malia, elaborated upon this theme in his 1994
book, The Soviet Tragedy, in which he declared that ...
the failure of integral socialism stems not from its having been
tried out first in the wrong place, Russia, but from the socialist
idea per se. And the reason for this failure is that socialism
as full noncapitalism is intrinsically impossible.[18]
An explanation of why socialism is intrinsically impossible
is to be found in a book by the dean of American anti-Marxist
Cold War historians, Richard Pipes of Harvard University. In a
book entitled Property and Freedom, Pipes establishes a
profound zoological foundation for his theory of property:
One of the constants of human nature, impervious to legislative
and pedagogic manipulation, is acquisitiveness... Acquisitiveness
is common to all living things, being universal among animals
and children as well as adults at every level of civilization,
for which reason it is not a proper subject for moralizing. On
the most elementary level, it is an expression of the instinct
for survival. But beyond this, it constitutes a basic trait of
human personality, for which achievements and acquisitions are
means of self-fulfillment. And inasmuch as fulfillment of the
self is the essence of liberty, liberty cannot flourish when property
and the inequality to which it gives rise are forcibly eliminated.[19]
This is not the place to examine Pipes theory of property
with the care that it deserves. Permit me to point out that the
forms of property as well as their social and legal conceptualization
have evolved historically. The exclusive identification of property
with personal ownership dates back only to the seventeenth century.
In earlier historical periods, property was generally defined
in a far broader and even communal sense. Pipes employs a definition
of property that came into usage only when market relations became
predominant in economic life. At that point, property came to
be understood principally as the right of an individual to
exclude others from some use or enjoyment of a thing.[20]
This form of property, whose prominent role is of relatively
recent vintage among human beings, isI think its safe
to saymore or less unknown in the rest of the animal kingdom!
At any rate, for those of you who worry about what will become
of your I-pods, homes, cars and other treasured pieces of personal
property under socialism, allow me to assure you that the form
of property that socialism seeks to abolish is private ownership
of the means of production.
The one positive feature of Professor Pipes most recent
worksthose written in the aftermath of the dissolution of
the Soviet Unionis that the connection between his earlier
tendentious volumes on Soviet history and his right-wing political
agenda is made absolutely explicit. For Pipes, the October Revolution
and the creation of the Soviet Union represented an assault on
the prerogatives of ownership and property. It was the apex of
a worldwide and mass crusade for social equality, the terrible
fruit of the ideals of the Enlightenment. But that chapter of
history has now come to an end.
The rights of ownership, Pipes proclaims, need
to be restored to their proper place in the scale of values instead
of being sacrificed to the unattainable ideal of social equality
and all-embracing economic security. What would the restoration
of property rights demanded by Pipes entail? The entire
concept of the welfare state as it has evolved in the second half
of the twentieth century is incompatible with individual liberty...
Abolishing welfare with its sundry entitlements and
spurious rights and returning the responsibilities
for social assistance to the family or private charity, which
shouldered them prior to the twentieth century, would go a long
way toward resolving this predicament.[21]
For the ruling elites, the end of the Soviet Union is seen
as the beginning of a global restoration of the capitalist ancien
regime, the reestablishment of a social order in which all
restraints on the rights of property, the exploitation of labor,
and the accumulation of personal wealth are removed. It is by
no means a coincidence that during the nearly 15 years that have
followed the dissolution of the Soviet Union, there has been a
staggering growth in social inequality and in the scale of wealth
concentration in the richest one percent (and especially the top
.10 percent) of the worlds population. The world-wide assault
on Marxism and socialism is, in essence, the ideological reflection
of this reactionary and historically retrograde social process.
But this process finds expression not only in the anti-Marxist
diatribes of the extreme right. The general intellectual decomposition
of bourgeois society is also manifested in the demoralized capitulation
of the remnants of the petty-bourgeois left to the ideological
offensive of the extreme right. The bookstores of the world are
well stocked with volumes produced by mournful ex-radicals, proclaiming
to one and all the shipwreck of their hopes and dreams. They seem
to derive some sort of perverse satisfaction from proclaiming
their despair, discouragement and impotence to all who will listen.
Of course, they do not hold themselves responsible for their failures.
No, they were the victims of Marxism, which promised them a socialist
revolution and then failed to deliver.
Their memoirs of confession are not only pathetic, but also
somewhat funny. Attempting to invest their personal catastrophes
with a sort of world-historical significance, they wind up making
themselves look ridiculous. For example, Professor Ronald Aronson
begins his volume After Marxism with the following unforgettable
words:
Marxism is over, and we are on our own. Until recently,
for so many on the Left, being on our own has been an unthinkable
afflictionan utter loss of bearings, an orphans state...
As Marxisms last generation, we have been assigned by history
the unenviable task of burying it.[22]
A theme common to so many of these would-be undertakers is
that the dissolution of the Soviet Union shattered not only their
political but also their emotional equilibrium. Whatever their
political criticisms of the Kremlin bureaucracy, they never imagined
that its policies would lead to the destruction of the USSRthat
is, they never accepted Trotskys analysis of Stalinism as
counter-revolutionary. Thus, Aronson confesses:
The very immobility and ponderousness of the Soviet Union
counted for something positive in our collective psychic space,
allowing us to keep hope alive that a successful socialism might
still emerge. It provided a backdrop against which alternatives
could be thought about and discussed, including, for some, the
hope that other versions of Marxism remained viable. But now,
no longer. Try as we may to rescue its theoretical possibility
from Communisms demise, the great world-historical project
of struggle and transformation identified with the name of Karl
Marx seems to have ended. And, as the postmodernists know, an
entire world view has crashed along with Marxism. Not only Marxists
and socialists, but other radicals, as well as those regarding
themselves as progressives and liberals, have lost their sense
of direction.[23]
Unintentionally, Aronson reveals the dirty little secret of
so much of post-war radical politicsthat is, the depth of
its dependence upon the Stalinist and, it should be added, other
reformist labor bureaucracies. This dependence had a concrete
social basis in the class and political relationships of the post-World
War II era. In seeking to redress the political and social grievances
of their own class milieu, significant sections of the petty bourgeoisie
relied upon the resources commanded by the powerful labor bureaucracies.
As part of or in alliance with these bureaucracies, the disgruntled
middle class radicals could shake their fists at the ruling class
and extract concessions. The collapse of the Soviet regime, followed
almost immediately by the disintegration of reformist labor organizations
all over the world, deprived the radicals of the bureaucratic
patronage upon which they relied. Suddenly, these unhappy Willy
Lomans of radical politics were on their own.
It is more or less taken for granted among these tendencies
that the historical role assigned by classical Marxism to the
working class was a fatal error. At most, they may be prepared
to accept that there was once, at some point safely in the past,
a time when it might have been justified. But certainly not now.
Aronson declares that There is in fact much evidence in
support of the argument that the Marxian project is over, because
of structural transformations in capitalism and even in the working
class itself. The centrality of Marxisms cardinal category,
labor, has been placed in question by capitalisms own evolution,
as has the primacy of class.[24]
This is written at a time when the exploitation of the working
class proceeds on a world scale at a level that neither Marx nor
Engels could have imagined. The process of extracting surplus
value from human labor power has been vastly intensified by the
revolution in information and communication technology. Though
not a central category in the ontology of petty-bourgeois radicalism,
labor continues to occupy the decisive role in the capitalist
mode of production. There, the relentless and increasingly brutal
drive to lower wages, slash and eliminate social benefits, and
rationalize production proceeds with a ferocity without precedent
in history.
There are none so blind as those who would not see.
If there exists no real social force capable of waging a revolutionary
struggle against capitalism, how can one even conceptualize an
alternative to the existing order? This dilemma underlies another
form of contemporary political pessimism, neo-Utopianism. Seeking
to revive the pre-Marxian and utopian stages of socialist thought,
the neo-Utopians lament and denounce the efforts of Marx and Engels
to place socialism on a scientific basis.
For the neo-Utopians, classical Marxism absorbed too much of
the nineteenth centurys preoccupation with the discovery
of objective forces. This outlook underlay the socialist movements
preoccupation with the working class and its political education.
The Marxists, claim the neo-Utopians, placed exaggerated and unwarranted
confidence in the objective force of capitalist contradictions,
not to mention the revolutionary potential of the working class.
Moreover, they failed to appreciate the power and persuasive force
of the irrational.
The way out of this dilemma, claim the neo-Utopians, is by
embracing and propagating myths that can inspire and
excite. Whether or not such myths correspond to any objective
reality is of no real importance. A leading exponent of neo-Utopian
mythologizing, Vincent Geoghegan, criticizes Marx and Engels for
having failed to develop a psychology. They left a very
poor legacy on the complexities of human motivation and most of
their immediate successors felt little need to overcome this deficiency.[25]
Unlike the socialists, complains Geoghegan, it was the extreme
right, especially the Nazis, who understood the power of myths
and their imagery. It was the National Socialists who managed
to create a vision of a thousand-year reich out of romantic
conceptions of Teutonic Knights, Saxon kings, and the mysterious
promptings of the Blood. The left all too often abandoned
the field, muttering about reaction appealing to reaction.[26]
This flagrant appeal to irrationalism, with its deeply reactionary
political implications, flows with a sort of perverse logic from
the demoralized view that there exists no objective basis for
socialist revolution.
What cannot be found in any of the demoralized jeremiads about
the failure of Marxism, of socialism and, of course, the working
class is any concrete historical examination of the history of
the twentieth century, any attempt to uncover, based on a precise
study of events, of parties, and of programs the causes for the
victories and defeats of the revolutionary movement in the twentieth
century. In its edition for the year 2000, which was devoted to
the theme of utopianism, the Socialist Register informed
us that it was necessary to add a new conceptual layer to
Marxism, a dimension formerly missing or undeveloped.[27]
That is the last thing that is needed. What is required, rather,
is the use of the dialectical and historical materialist method
in the study and analysis of the twentieth century.
Has Marxism failed?
The International Committee of the Fourth International has
never sought to deny that the dissolution of the Soviet Union
signified a major defeat for the working class. But that event,
the product of decades of Stalinist betrayals, did not invalidate
either the Marxist method or the perspective of socialism. Neither
the latter nor the former were in any way implicated in the collapse
of the USSR. The Marxist opposition to the Stalinist bureaucracy
emerged in 1923 with the formation of the Left Opposition. Trotskys
decision to found the Fourth International, together with his
call for a political revolution within the Soviet Union, was based
on his conclusion that the defense of the social gains of the
October Revolution and the very survival of the USSR as a workers
state depended upon the violent overthrow of the bureaucracy.
The International Committee emerged in 1953 out of the struggle
within the Fourth International against the tendency led by Ernest
Mandel and Michel Pablo which argued that the Soviet bureaucracy,
in the aftermath of Stalins death, was undergoing a process
of political self-reform, a gradual return to the principles of
Marxism and Bolshevism, which invalidated Trotskys call
for a political revolution.
The entire history of the Fourth International and the International
Committee testifies to the political perspicacity of the analysis
of Stalinism developed on the basis of the Marxist method. No
one has demonstrated to us how, in what way, Marxism has been
refuted by the betrayals and crimes of the Stalinist bureaucracy.
We are told by one representative of the leftish academic fraternity
that To argue that the collapse of organized communism as
a political force and the destruction of state socialism as a
form of society have no bearing on the intellectual credibility
of Marxism would be rather like arguing that the discovery of
the bones of Christ in an Israeli grave-yard, the abdication of
the Pope, and the closure of Christendom would have no relevance
to the intellectual coherence of Christian theology.[28]
This metaphor is poorly chosen, for the Marxist opponents of
Stalinism, i.e., the Trotskyists, did not view the Kremlin as
the Vatican of the socialist movement. The doctrine of Stalins
infallibility, if my memory serves me correctly, was never adhered
to by the Fourth Internationalthough the same cannot be
said of the many left petty-bourgeois and radical opponents of
the Trotskyist movement.
It is difficult to satisfy the skeptics. Even if Marxism cannot
be held responsible for the crimes of Stalinism, they ask, does
not the dissolution of the Soviet Union testify to the failure
of the revolutionary socialist project? What this question betrays
is the absence of 1) a broad historical perspective, 2) knowledge
of the contradictions and achievements of Soviet society, and
3) a theoretically-informed understanding of the international
political context within which the Russian Revolution unfolded.
The Russian Revolution itself was but one episode in the transition
from capitalism to socialism. What precedents do we have that
might indicate the appropriate time frame for the study of such
a vast historical process? The social and political upheavals
that accompanied the transition from an agricultural-feudal form
of social organization to an industrial-capitalist society spanned
several centuries. Though the dynamic of the modern worldwith
its extraordinary level of economic, technological and social
interconnectednessexcludes such a prolonged time frame in
the transition from capitalism to socialism, the analysis of historical
processes that involve the most fundamental, complex and far-reaching
social and economic transformations demands a time frame substantially
longer than that which can be used for the study of more conventional
events.
Still, the lifespan of the USSR was not insignificant. When
the Bolsheviks seized power in 1917, few observers outside Russia
expected the new regime to survive even one month. The state that
emerged from the October Revolution lasted 74 years, nearly three
quarters of a century. In the course of that time, the regime
underwent a terrible political degeneration. But that degeneration,
which culminated in the dissolution of the Soviet Union by Gorbachev
and Yeltsin in December 1991, does not mean that the conquest
of power by Lenin and Trotsky in October 1917 was a doomed and
futile project.
To deduce the final chapter of Soviet history directly, and
without the necessary mediating processes, from the Bolshevik
seizure of power is an extreme example of the logical fallacy,
Post hoc ergo propter hoc (After this, therefore because of
this). An objective and honest study of the history
of the USSR does not permit such a facile conflation of events.
The outcome of Soviet history was not preordained. As we will
explain in the course of this week, the development of the Soviet
Union could have taken another and far less tragic direction.
Though objective pressuresarising from the historic legacy
of Russias backwardness and the fact of imperialist encirclement
of the isolated workers stateplayed an immense role
in the degeneration of the Soviet regime, factors of a subjective
characterthat is, the mistakes and crimes of its political
leadershipcontributed mightily to the ultimate destruction
of the USSR.
However, the Soviet Unions demise in 1991 does not dissolve
into historical insignificance the mighty drama of the Russian
Revolution and its aftermath. It was certainly the greatest event
of the twentieth century, and among the very greatest of world
history. Our opposition to Stalinism is not lessened by acknowledging
the colossal social achievements of the Soviet Union. Notwithstanding
the mismanagement and crimes of the bureaucratic regime, the October
Revolution released extraordinary creative and profoundly progressive
tendencies in the economic and social life of the Soviet people.
Vast and backward Russia underwent, as a consequence of the
Revolution, an economic, social and cultural transformation unprecedented
in human history. The Soviet Union was not, we emphasize, a socialist
society. The level of planning remained of a rudimentary character.
The program of building socialism in one country initiated by
Stalin and Bukharin in 1924a project which had no foundation
in Marxist theoryrepresented a complete repudiation of the
international perspective which inspired the October Revolution.
Still, the Soviet Union represented the birth of a new social
formation, established on the basis of a working class revolution.
The potential of nationalized industry was clearly demonstrated.
The Soviet Union could not escape the legacy of Russian backwardnessnot
to mention that of its Central Asian republicsbut its advances
in the sphere of science, education, social welfare and the arts
were real and substantial. If the Marxist-Trotskyist warnings
of the catastrophic implications of Stalinism seemed so implausible
even to those on the left who were critical of the Stalinist regime,
it was because the achievements of Soviet society were so substantial.
Finally, and most importantly, the nature and significance
of the October Revolution can be understood only if it is placed
within the global political context within which it emerged. If
the October Revolution was some sort of historical aberration,
then the same must of be said of the twentieth century as a whole.
The legitimacy of the October Revolution could be denied only
if it could be plausibly claimed that the Bolshevik seizure of
power was of an essentially opportunistic character, lacking a
substantial foundation in the deeper currents and contradictions
of early twentieth century European and international capitalism.
But this claim is undermined by the fact that the historical
setting of the Russian Revolution and the Bolshevik seizure of
power was World War I. The two events are inextricably linked,
not merely in the sense that the war weakened the tsarist regime
and created the conditions for revolution. At a more profound
level, the October Revolution was a different manifestation of
the deep crisis of the international capitalist order out of which
the war itself had emerged. The smoldering contradictions of world
imperialism brought the conflict between international economy
and the capitalist nation-state system to the point of explosion
in August 1914. Those same contradictions, which more than two
years of bloody carnage on the war front could not resolve, underlay
the social eruption of the Russian Revolution. The leaders of
bourgeois Europe had sought to resolve the chaos of world capitalism
in one way. The leaders of the revolutionary working class, the
Bolsheviks, attempted to find a way out of that same chaos in
another.
Understanding the profound historical and political implications
of this deeper link between the World War and the Russian Revolution,
there have been many attempts by bourgeois academicians to emphasize
the accidental and contingent aspects of the First World War,
to demonstrate that the war need not have broken out in August
1914, that there were other means by which the crisis unleashed
by the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo could
have been settled. Two points must be made in response to those
arguments.
The first is that while other solutions were conceivable, war
was the resolution that was quite consciously and deliberately
chosen by the governments of Austro-Hungary, Russia, Germany,
France, and, finally, Great Britain. It is not necessarily the
case that all these powers desired war, but in the end they all
decided that war was preferable to a negotiated settlement that
might require the surrender of one or another strategic interest.
And the leaders of bourgeois Europe continued the war even as
the cost in human lives mounted into the millions. No serious
negotiations to restore peace were conducted among the belligerent
powers until the outbreak of social revolution, first in Russia
and then in Germany, created a change in class relations that
forced an end to the war.
The second point is that the outbreak of a disastrous world
war had long been foreseen by the socialist leaders of the working
class. As early as the 1880s, Engels had warned of a war in which
the clash of industrialized capitalist powers would lay waste
to much of Europe. A war, wrote Engels to Adolph Sorge in January
1888, would mean devastation like that of the Thirty Years
War. And it wouldnt be over quickly, despite the colossal
military forces engaged... If the war were fought to a finish
without internal disorder, the state of prostration would be unlike
anything Europe has experienced in the past 200 years. [29]
A year later, in March 1889, Engels wrote to Lafargue that
war is the most terrible of eventualities... there will
be 10 to 15 million combatants, unparalleled devastation simply
to keep them fed, universal and forcible suppression of our movement,
a recrudescence of chauvinism in all countries and, ultimately,
enfeeblement ten times worse than after 1815, a period of reaction
based on the inanition of all the peoples by then bled whiteand,
withal, only a slender hope that the bitter war may result in
revolutionit fills me with horror.[30]
For the next 25 years, the European socialist movement placed
at the center of its political agitation the struggle against
capitalist and imperialist militarism. The analysis of the essential
link between capitalism, imperialism and militarism by the finest
theoreticians of the socialist movement and the innumerable warnings
that an imperialist war was all but inevitable refute the claim
that the events of August 1914 were accidental, unrelated to the
inescapable contradictions of the world capitalist order.
In March 1913, less than 18 months before the outbreak of the
World War, the following analysis was made of the implications
of the crisis in the Balkans:
... [T]he Balkan War has not only destroyed the old frontiers
in the Balkans, and not only fanned to white heat the mutual hatred
and envy between the Balkan states, it has also lastingly disturbed
the equilibrium between the capitalist states of Europe...
European equilibrium, which was highly unstable already,
has now been completely upset. It is hard to foresee whether those
in charge of Europes fate will decide this time to carry
matters to the limit and start an all-European war. [31]
The author of these lines was Leon Trotsky.
From the supposedly accidental and contingent character of
World War I, the academic apologists of capitalism deduce the
coincidental nature of every other unpleasant episode in the history
of twentieth century capitalism: the Great Depression, the rise
of fascism, and the outbreak of World War II. It was all a matter
of misjudgments, unforeseeable accidents and, of course, various
bad guys. As we have been told by the French historian, the late
Francois Furet, A true understanding of our time is possible
only when we free ourselves from the illusion of necessity: the
only way to explain the twentieth century, to an extent an explanation
is possible, is to reassert its unpredictable character...
He declares that the history of the twentieth century, like
that of the eighteenth and nineteenth, could have taken a different
course: we need only imagine it without Lenin, Hitler, or Stalin.[32]
In a similar vein, Professor Henry Ashby Turner, Jr. of Yale
University devoted an entire book to demonstrating that the coming
to power of Hitler was largely the outcome of accidents. Yes,
there were certain longstanding problems in German history, not
to mention a few unfortunate events like the World War, the Versailles
Peace and the world depression. But, far more importantly, Luckthat
most capricious of contingencieswas clearly on Hitlers
side.[33] There were also personal affinities and
aversions, injured feelings, soured friendships, and desire for
revengeall combining to influence German politics
in unforeseeable ways. And yes, there was also the chance
encounter between Papen and Baron von Schröder at the Gentlemens
Club that ultimately worked to Hitlers advantage.
[34]
One wonders: if only von Papen had caught a cold and stayed
in bed, rather than go to the Gentlemens Club, the whole
course of the twentieth century might have been changed! It is
equally possible that we owe the entire development of modern
physics to the glorious apple that just happened to fall on Newtons
head.
If history is merely a tale told by an idiot, full of
sound and fury, signifying nothing, what is the point of
studying it? The premise of this weeks lectures is that
the solution to the problems of the world in which we liveproblems
that threaten mankind with catastropherequire not only an
exhaustive factual knowledge of the history of the twentieth century,
but also a profound assimilation of the lessons of the many tragic
events through which the working class has passed during the past
100 years.
As the year 2000 approached, a large number of volumes devoted
to a study of the departing century were released onto the book
market. One of the characterizations of the period that obtained
a notable degree of popularity was that of the short twentieth
century. It was promoted particularly by Eric Hobsbawm,
who argued that the characteristics that defined the century began
with the outbreak of the World War in 1914 and ended with the
demise of the USSR in 1991. Whatever Hobsbawms intentions
may have been, this approach tended to support the argument that
the decisive events of the twentieth century were a sort of surrealistic
departure from reality, rather than the expression of historical
law.
Rejecting this definition, I think that the epoch would be
far better characterized as the uncompleted century.
To be sure, from the standpoint of historical chronology, the
twentieth century has run its course. It is over. But from the
standpoint of the great and fundamental problems that underlay
the massive social struggles and upheavals of the period between
1901 and 2000, very little was resolved.
The twentieth century has left the twenty-first with a vast
unpaid historical bill. All the horrors that confronted the working
class during the last centurywar, fascism, even the possibility
of the extinction of all human civilizationare with us today.
We are not speaking, as the existentialists would have it, of
dangers and dilemmas that are immanent in the very nature of the
human condition. No, we are dealing with the essential contradictions
of the capitalist mode of production, with which the greatest
revolutionary Marxists of the twentieth centuryLenin, Luxemburg
and Trotskygrappled at a far earlier stage of their development.
What could not be solved in the last century must be solved in
this one. Otherwise, there is a very great and real danger that
this century will be mankinds last.
That is why the study of the history of the twentieth century
and the assimilation of its lessons are a matter of life and death.
Notes:
[1] The USSR.and Socialism: The Trotskyist
Perspective (Detroit, 1990), pp. 1-2.
[2] The Junius Pamphlet (London, 1970), p. 7.
[3] On What Is History? (London and New York,
1995), pp. 6-7.
[4] Ibid, p. 7.
[5] The Content of the Form: Narrative Discourse and Historical
Representation (Baltimore, 1990), p. 63.
[6] Quoted in Jean-François Lyotard, by Simon Malpas
(London and New York, Routledge, 2003), pp. 75-76.
[7] Marx Engels Collected Works, Volume 26 (Moscow, Progress
Publishers, 1990), p. 358.
[8] Truth and Progress (Cambridge, 1998) p. 228.
[9] Ibid, p. 229.
10] Philosophy and Social Hope (London and New York, 1999),
p. 36.
[11] Cited in Jenkins, p. 103.
[12] Truth and Progress, p. 233.
[13] Ibid.
[14] Preface to Max Weber and Karl Marx by Karl Löwith
(New York and London, 1993), p. 5.
[15] Interesting Times (New York, 2002), p. 127.
[16] New York, 2000, p. 3.
[17] Marxism and the Leap to the Kingdom of FreedomThe
Rise and Fall of the Communist Utopia (Stamford, 1995)
[18] P. 225.
[19] New York, 2000, p. 286.
[20] C. B. Macpherson, The Rise and Fall of Economic Justice
(Oxford, 1987), p. 77.
[21] Ibid, pp. 284-88.
[22] New York, 1995. p. 1.
[23] Ibid, pp. vii-viii.
[24] Ibid, p. 56.
[25] Utopianism and Marxism (New York, 1987), p. 68.
[26] Ibid, p. 72.
[27] Necessary and Unnecessary Utopias (Suffolk, 1999),
p. 22.
[28] Turner, preface to Karl Marx and Max Weber, p. 5.
[29] Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, Collected Works, Volume
48 (London, 2001), p. 139.
[30] Ibid, p. 283.
[31] Leon Trotsky, The Balkan Wars 1912-13 (New York, 1980),
p. 314.
[32] The Passing of an Illusion: The Idea of Communism in the
Twentieth Century (Chicago, 1999), p. 2.
[33] Hitlers Thirty Days to Power, (Addison Wesley,
1996), p. 168.
[34] Ibid.
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