This article has been sitting patiently on my desktop for several years. It caught my attention again today as being the perfect start to a new year's reading list.
From Howard Zinn in 1993, it should reinvigorate any weakening optimism of tired socialists. Let's raise a glass to Zinn, to Marx and to socialism. JS
Howard Zinn on Marx
For a long time I thought that there were important and useful ideas in
Marxist philosophy and political economy that should be protected from
the self-righteous cries on the right that "Marxism is dead,” as well
as from the arrogant assumptions of the commissars of various
dictatorships that their monstrous regimes represented “Marxism.” This
piece was written for Z Magazine, and reprinted in my book Failure To
Quit (Common Courage Press, 1993).
Not long ago, someone referred to me publicly as a "Marxist professor.”
In fact, two people did. One was a spokesman for “Accuracy in
Academia,” worried that there were “five thousand Marxist faculty
members” in the United States (which diminished my importance, but also
my loneliness). The other was a former student I encountered on a
shuttle to New York, a fellow traveller. I felt a bit honoured. A
“Marxist” means a tough guy (making up for the pillowy connotation of
the “professor”), a person of formidable politics, someone not to be
trifled with, someone who knows the difference between absolute and
relative surplus value, and what is commodity fetishism, and refuses to
buy it.
I was also a bit taken aback (a position which yoga practitioners
understand well, and which is good for you about once a day). Did
“Marxist” suggest that I kept a tiny stature of Lenin in my drawer and
rubbed his head to discover what policy to follow to intensify the
contradictions o the imperialist camp, or what songs to sing if we were
sent away to such a camp?
Also, I remembered that famous statement of Marx: “Je ne suis pas
Marxiste.” I always wondered why Marx, an English-speaking German who
had studied Greek for his doctoral dissertation, would make such an
important statement in French. But I am confident that he did make it,
and I think I know what brought it on. After Marx and his wife Jenny
had moved to London, where they lost three of their six children to
illness and lived in squalor for many years, they were often visited by
a young German refugee named Pieper. This guy was a total “noodnik”
(there are “noodniks” all along the political spectrum stationed ten
feet apart, but there is a special Left Noodnik, hired by the police,
to drive revolutionaries batty). Pieper (I swear, I did not make him
up) hovered around Marx gasping with admiration, once offered to
translate Das Kapital into English, which he could barely speak, and
kept organising Karl Marx Clubs, exasperating Marx more and more by
insisting that every word Marx uttered was holy. And one day Marx
caused Pieper to have a severe abdominal cramp when he said to him:
“Thanks for inviting me to speak at your Karl Marx Club. But I can’t.
I’m not a Marxist.”
That was a high point in Marx’s life, and also a good starting point
for considering Marx’s ideas seriously without becoming a Pieper (or a
Stalin, or Kim Il Sung, or any born-again Marxist who argues that every
word in Volume One, Two and Three, and especially in the Grundrisse, is
unquestionably true). Because it seems to me (risking that this may
lead to my inclusion in the second edition of Norman Podhoretz’s
Register of Marxists, Living or Dead), Marx had some very useful
thoughts.
For instance, we find in Marx’s short but powerful Theses on Feuerbach
the idea that philosophers, who always considered their job was to
interpret the world, should now set about changing it, in their
writings, and in their lives.
Marx set a good example himself. While history has treated him as a
secondary scholar, spending all his time in the library of the British
Museum, Marx was a tireless activist all his life. He was expelled from
Germany, from Belgium, from France, was arrested and put on trial in
Cologne.
Exiled to London, he kept his ties with revolutionary movements all
over the world. The poverty-ridden flats that he and Jenny Marx and
their children occupied became busy centres of political activity,
gathering places for political refugees from the continent.
True, many of his writings were impossibly abstract (especially those
on political economy; my poor head at the age of nineteen swam, or
rather drowned, with ground rent and differential rent, the falling
rate of profit and the organic composition of capital). But he departed
from that constantly to confront the events of 1848, the Paris Commune,
rebellion in India, the Civil War in the United States.
The manuscripts he wrote at the age of twenty-five while an exile in
Paris (where he hung out in cafes with Engels, Proudhon, Bakunin,
Heine, Stirner), often dismissed by hard-line fundamentalists as
“immature”, contain some of the most profound ideas. His critique of
capitalism in those Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts did not need
any mathematical proofs of “surplus value.” It simply stated (but did
not state it simply) that the capitalist system violates whatever it
means to be a human. The industrial system Marx saw developing in
Europe not only robbed them of the products of their work, it estranged
working people from their own creative responsibilities, from one
another as human beings, from the beauties of nature, from their own
true selves. They lived out their lives not according to their own
inner needs, but according to the necessities of survival.
This estrangement from self and others, this alienation from all that
was human, could not be overcome by an intellectual effort, by
something in the mind. What was needed was a fundamental, revolutionary
change in society, to create the conditions – a short workday, a
rational use of the earth’s natural wealth and people’s natural
talents, a just distribution of the fruits of human labour, a new
social consciousness – for the flowering of human potential, for a leap
into freedom as it had never been experienced in history.
Marx understood how difficult it was to achieve this, because, no
matter how “revolutionary” we are, the weight of tradition, habit, the
accumulated mis-education of generations, “weighs like a nightmare on
the brain of the living.”
Marx understood politics. He saw that behind political conflicts were
questions of class: who gets what. Behind benign bubbles of
togetherness (We the people…our country…national security), the
powerful and the wealthy would legislate on their own behalf. He noted
(in The Eighteenth Brumaire, a biting, brilliant, analysis of the
Napoleonic seizure of power after the 1848 Revolution in France) how a
modern constitution could proclaim absolute rights, which were then
limited by marginal notes (he might have been predicting the tortured
constructions of the First Amendment in our own Constitution),
reflecting the reality of domination by one class over another
regardless of the written word.
He saw religion, not just negatively as “the opium of the people,” but
positively as the “sigh of the oppressed creature, the heart of a
heartless world, the soul of soulless conditions.” This helps us
understand the mass appeal of the religious charlatans of the
television screen, as well as the work of Liberation Theology in
joining the soulfulness of religion to the energy of revolutionary
movements in miserably poor countries.
Marx was often wrong, often dogmatic, often a “Marxist.” He was
sometimes too accepting of imperial domination as “progressive,” a way
of bringing capitalism faster to the third world, and therefore
hastening, he thought, the road to socialism. (But he staunchly
supported the rebellions of the Irish, the Poles, the Indians, the
Chinese, against colonial control.)
He was too insistent that the industrial working class must be the
agent of revolution, and that this must happen first in the advanced
capitalist countries. He was unnecessarily dense in his economic
analysis (too much education in German universities, maybe) when his
clear, simple insight into exploitation was enough: that no matter how
valuable were the things workers produced, those who controlled the
economy could pay them as little as they liked, and enrich themselves
with the difference.
Personally, Marx was sometimes charming, generous, self-sacrificing; at
other times arrogant, obnoxious, abusive. He loved his wife and
children, and they clearly adored him, but he also may have fathered
the son of their German housekeeper, Lenchen.
The anarchist, Bakunin, his rival in the International Workingmen’s
Association, said of Marx: “I very much admired him for his knowledge
and for his passionate and earnest devotion to the cause of the
proletariat. But…our temperaments did not harmonize. He called me a
sentimental idealist, and he was right. I called him vain, treacherous,
and morose, and I was right.” Marx’s daughter Eleanor, on the other
hand, called her father “…the cheeriest, gayest soul that ever
breathed, a man brimming over with humour".
He epitomised his own warning, that people, however advanced in their
thinking, were weighted down by the limitations of their time. Still,
Marx gave us acute insights, inspiring visions. I can’t imagine Marx
being pleased with the “socialism” of the Soviet Union. He would have
been a dissident in Moscow, I like to think. His idea of the
“dictatorship of the proletariat” was the Paris Commune of 1871, where
endless arguments in the streets and halls of the city gave it the
vitality of a grass roots democracy, where overbearing officials could
be immediately booted out of office by popular vote, where the wages of
government leaders could not exceed that of ordinary workers, where the
guillotine was destroyed as a symbol of capital punishment. Marx once
wrote in the New York Times that he did not see how capital punishment
could be justified “in a society glorifying in its civilisation.”
Perhaps the most precious heritage of Marx’s thought is his
internationalism, his hostility to the nation state, his insistence
that ordinary people have no nation they must obey and give their lives
for in war, that we are all linked to one another across the globe as
human beings. This is not only a direct challenge to modern capitalist
nationalism, with its ugly evocations of hatred for “the enemy” abroad,
and its false creation of a common interest for all within certain
artificial borders. It is also a rejection of the narrow nationalism of
contemporary “Marxist” states, whether the Soviet Union, or China, or
any of the others.
Marx had something important to say not only as a critic of capitalism,
but as a warning to revolutionaries, who, he wrote in The German
Ideology, had better revolutionise themselves if they intend to do that
to society. He offered an antidote to the dogmatists, the hard-liners,
the Piepers, the Stalins, the commissars, the “Marxists.” He said:
“Nothing human is alien to me.”
That seems a good beginning for changing the world.
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