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December 17, 2001
 
 
Embarrassing early books
Authors change course: Hook embraced communism, then
anti-Stalinism
 
 
Jeet Heer
National Post
During the Reagan presidency, the philosopher Sidney
Hook was often celebrated as the venerable sage of
anti-communism. Government officials such as Jeane
Kirkpatrick, the UN ambassador, and George Shultz, the
secretary of state, regularly wrote Hook fan letters,
while Reagan conferred the Presidential Medal of
Freedom on him in 1985.
 
Hook never hid the fact that his thinking on communism
had undergone a dramatic change, and that as a young
man he had befriended Leon Trotsky. But he was
uncomfortable enough with his communist past that he
did not want people to read one of his best books,
Towards the Understanding of Karl Marx, which will
soon be available for the first time in more than 60
years.
 
Just as writers of fiction are sometimes embarrassed
by their early work, academics often wish the public
would forget about their juvenalia. This is especially
true if they change their minds about important
issues.
 
In 1933, Hook published his second book, Towards the
Understanding of Karl Marx: A Revolutionary
Interpretation to mark the fiftieth anniversary of
Marx's death. As the subtitle indicates, Hook wrote
the book as a committed supporter of revolutionary
socialism, although he had already engaged in a series
of disputes with the Communist Party that would
ultimately lead him to become one of the leading U.S.
anti-Stalinist thinkers. While Hook's book was
attacked in the communist press, his original attempt
to draw parallels between Marx and the American
intellectual tradition of pragmatism earned praise
from a wide variety of thinkers ranging from Harold
Laski to Trotsky.
 
Indeed, Trotsky, who was already in exile from the
Soviet Union, read Hook's book with interest, filling
his copy with scribbled notes and engaging in a public
debate with Hook on the meaning of dialectics. Hook
found Trotsky more congenial than the purblind and
dogmatic American Communist Party, and spent the next
three years supporting a variety of Trotskyist
parties.
 
By the late 1930s, largely as a result of the horrors
of Stalin's purges, Hook became completely
disillusioned with revolutionary politics and
abandoned Trotsky as well. He became an anti-communist
socialist, exactly the position he had frequently
mocked in Towards the Understanding of Karl Marx. As
Hook's status as an American anti-communist grew, he
understandably wanted to distance himself from his
youthful writings. During his lifetime, Hook resisted
frequent requests to bring out a new edition.
 
According to biographer Christopher Phelps, author of
Young Sidney Hook (Cornell University Press, 1997),
despite this act of self-suppression, Hook's book
continued to have an underground existence. In the
late 1960s, the International Socialist published a
mimeograph, bootlegged reprint of the book. According
to Phelps, in the early 1990s, another "guerrilla
edition" was released "by some radical with a
scanner."
 
Hooks' book continued to be admired by leftists
thinkers as diverse as Noam Chomsky and Russell
Jacoby. As Jacoby notes, unlike Hook's later and more
polemical work, Towards the Understanding of Karl Marx
was a genuine original contribution to philosophy.
Phelps agrees. "As a full-length work of philosophy,
Hook never did anything comparable again," he says.
 
Now, nearly seven decades after its first publication,
Toward the Understanding of Karl Marx will again be
available in an over-the-counter edition. Prometheus
Books, founded by long-time Hook disciple Paul Kurtz,
plans to reissue the book, with a historical
introduction by Phelps. Phelps believes the book will
help revive Hook's reputation, not only as a Marxist
activist but also as a philosopher who made an
important contribution to pragmatism. Partially
because Hook allowed Towards the Understanding of Karl
Marx to fall out of print, his original work in trying
to link pragmatism with continental philosophy has
been forgotten. Thus in Louis Menand's recent book The
Metaphysical Club, a voluminous history of pragmatism,
Sidney Hook goes entirely unmentioned, even though he
was one John Dewey's favorite students.
 
Sidney Hook is not the only intellectual who has had
to grapple with the issue of an embarrassing early
work. In 1986, Michael Allen Fox, a philosopher at
Queen's University, published The Case for Animal
Experimentation, a book that drew on a variety of
moral traditions to argue for maintaining the ethical
distinction between humans and animals. Not
surprisingly, the book was savaged by animal-rights
activists. What was unexpected was the fact that Fox
was won over by his hostile reviewers. "The more I
read of my critics, the more I came to the conclusion
that the difference between humans and animals is of
degrees, not kind," Fox now says. "Speciesism is
indefensible."
 
Fox's more recent position is outlined in his book
Deep Vegetarianism. Although he disagrees with the
arguments in The Case for Animal Experimentation, Fox
is still takes pride in his early work. He notes that
the book was praised by some reviewers for making an
argument that brought together different moral
traditions as well as empirically based research.
 
Would Fox allow The Case for Animal Experimentation to
be republished? "I would probably say OK, but with the
proviso that I be allowed to write an introduction
explaining how my thinking has changed," he says. "If
the publisher said 'no new introduction,' I would have
a serious quandary. Even then, I would probably say,
'publish it'. I don't support the suppression of
research, even in the case of my own work."
 
David Horowitz, an intellectual who journeyed from the
New Left of the 1960s to the neo-conservatism of the
1980s, also has grappled with the problem of an
embarrassing early work. In 1965, Horowitz published
The Free World Colossus: A Critique of American
Foreign Policy in the Cold War, one of the first
revisionists histories of post-World War II diplomacy.
Like other revisionists historians such as William
Appleman Williams, Horowitz argued that the primary
responsibility for the Cold War rested with the United
States, not the Soviet Union. The thesis sparked
strong opposition from more orthodox historians.
 
In 1973, the young historian Robert J. Maddox, now at
the University of Pennsylvania, published The New Left
and the Cold War, which sought to refute revisionists
by making a close empirical scrutiny of the claims
made by leading members of the group.
 
Some of the most stinging words in Maddox's book came
in the chapter analyzing Free World Colossus. Horowitz
"left scarcely a canon of historical scholarship
intact," Maddox complained. "He never used a primary
document when a secondary or tertiary source was
available, he repeatedly cited the unsupported
assertions of others as though they constituted proof
for his own assertions, and oftentimes he appeared to
have confused his role as author with that of editor."
Illustrating the last point, Maddox juxtaposed two
lengthy passages of Free World Colossus with virtually
identical quotes from Howard K. Smith's The State of
Europe (1949).
 
Looking back at Free World Colossus, Horowitz accepts
the "conceptual" critique made by Maddox and other
Cold War liberals that the book suffered from a moral
double standard by constantly judging the United
States more harshly than the Soviet Union. However,
Horowitz continues to resist Maddox's accusation of
"plagiarism" and "shoddy scholarship." In defending
his younger self, Horowitz notes that "I wrote the
book when I was 22 or 23. I was not a history major. I
gave credit to everyone I cited. I did some
paraphrases."
 
Given his changed politics, how would Horowitz feel
about a re-issue of Free World Colossus? Like Fox, he
would go along with it, but would try to make sure the
publisher allowed him to write a fresh introduction.
 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 
 
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