http://www.newsocialist.org/index.php?id=1386

THE EYE OF THE STORM

A 40TH ANNIVERSARY INTERVIEW WITH AIJAZ AHMAD

By Seemin Qayum

This interview was conducted for the 40th anniversary issue of NACLA Report on 
the Americas. It is available here.

Aijaz Ahmad is a leading Marxist intellectual and academic based in New Delhi, 
India. He has written widely on political and cultural theory, colonialism, and 
imperialism, and has taught in a number of universities in India and the West. 
Among his many books are In Theory: Classes, Nations, Literatures; Lineages of 
the Present: Ideology and Politics in Contemporary South Asia; and Afghanistan, 
Iraq and the Imperialism of Our Time. He is a frequent contributor to the 
Indian magazine Frontline, for which he has written several articles on 
political developments in Latin America. NACLA editorial committee member 
Seemin Qayum interviewed Ahmad on the occasion of NACLA’s 40th anniversary.

What is the significance of Latin American political, cultural, and theoretical 
developments for intellectuals and activists of your generation?

The Cuban revolution was one of the key events in the political formation of my 
generation, just as the overthrow of the Allende government in 1973 was in its 
negative impact a decisive moment in the history of the global Marxist left. 
The more recent Latin American developments have been seen in India as both a 
certain return to what one might call “the Cuban moment,” but also the rise of 
a very different kind of left. My own writings on Latin America have been 
designed strictly for an Indian readership and try to grapple with just what 
this new left, in all its variations, is.

I have also written time and again that with the decisive defeat of the Soviet 
experiment, whatever the causes of that defeat may have been, a certain 
historical period has come to a close and the global left, on the defensive and 
highly dispersed, has entered a more or less prolonged phase of experimentation 
with various forms of struggle, combining some older forms with newer ones. 
These innovations might eventually show us the way to historically 
unprecedented forms that are appropriate for revolutions of the 21st century. 
The great achievement of the revolutions of the 20th century—principally the 
socialist and anti-colonial revolutions—was that they threw up an enormous 
number of revolutionary agents. Classes and nations, yes, but not only those. 
The rise of women’s movements is of historic importance, and considering that 
the vast majority of women perform not only reproductive but also productive 
work, the whole issue of how class politics is to be conducted—how gender is 
constitutive in concrete formations of class itself—has been opened up in 
fundamentally new ways.

There is the question of caste in India, and the question of the indigenous 
peoples in Latin America. We are now thinking of the demands of culture in a 
new way, but also of the demands of nature; injuries done to human beings in 
both these spheres, and injuries to the very material conditions within which 
human beings live their lives. There was a time when we used to think that 
industrialization of agriculture, in a transition to capitalism, shall give us 
more advanced forces of production and would emancipate the peasantry. The 
actual historical experience, which is now being addressed, is that capitalist 
appropriation of land has ruined the peasantry everywhere and turned great 
numbers of them into surplus populations, landless masses, and slum dwellers.

Meanwhile, the industrial proletariat has been decimated in country after 
country, and there is not a single great city of the world (the vast majority 
of which are now in Latin America and Asia) that can be called “industrial.” 
These issues relate directly to the kind of struggles that have been central in 
recent Latin American developments. But the issues themselves are by no means 
specific to Latin America alone, and the kinds of struggles that have developed 
there have reverberated in a variety of Asian struggles as well, and they are 
forcing an older generation of Marxists to think their theory anew.

If Third Worldism was an important ideological formation, let us say from the 
1960s to the 1980s, what was Latin America’s place within it, and do you see a 
comparable phenomenon in relation to imperialism today?

Che’s famous invocation, “Two, three, many Vietnams,” had a global resonance—as 
did the Cuban example, as did what came to be called “the Chilean road to 
socialism,” as did the economic nationalism of leaders like Brazil’s João 
Goulart, as did the numerous guerrilla struggles in a variety of Latin American 
countries, like the Nicaraguan revolution toward the end of the period you 
indicate. In other words, Latin America, in all its various developments, was 
part of a global revolutionary and anti-imperialist process, and awareness of 
this fact was widespread among activists and intellectuals of my generation. 
That earlier awareness and sense of identification feeds into the interest that 
Latin American developments today generate around the world, notably in India. 
More generally, one could say that Latin America was the original laboratory 
for U.S. imperialist policies, the region that first suffered all those 
processes of U.S. imperialist exploitation, domination, and military invasion 
which got globalized after the Second World War, when the United States emerged 
as the uniquely hegemonic imperialist power in the whole world. Since 1945, 
Latin America has been one of the three strategic areas for the U.S. imperium, 
alongside West Asia (what is generally called the Middle East) and East and 
Southeast Asia. Our two continents are equally in the eye of the storm.

How do you see the relations between the left, social movements, and the state 
in Latin America, and what resonance do you find with the Indian situation?

It is difficult to compare a national situation within one country with very 
different national situations in a continent. Venezuela and Bolivia have 
undergone very dramatic changes in the very nature of state power. Nothing 
remotely comparable has happened in India. The Communist left has certainly 
formed governments at provincial levels, but that has only exposed how little 
they can achieve within a republic of the bourgeoisie, especially in a country 
like India, where the constitutional arrangements allot much more power to the 
central government than to the regional ones. Life in the countryside has 
surely improved under left rule in those particular states, and there has been 
appreciable improvement in health and education, but little could be achieved 
for the urban working classes facing offensives from national and transnational 
corporate capital. Communists control about 12% of the national parliament, but 
that is not enough to substantially influence national policies or to break the 
ruling neoliberal consensus. By supporting this or that coalition government at 
one time or another, the main achievement of the left is that is has been able 
to stem the onslaught from the far right at various points, but from a very 
defensive position.

This situation is much more comparable to the experience of the Communist 
Refoundation Party in Italy than to anything in Latin America. Meanwhile, the 
social movements tend to be far less militant, far more in the category of 
decent local reformism, than those of Bolivia, for example, and far too many of 
them depend on foreign and corporate funds. Again, the kind of militancy one 
witnessed in Chiapas, even a sort of visionary idea of wholesale transformation 
from below, is largely lacking in Indian social movements, even in the very 
sizable movements of the oppressed castes (dalits and adivasis). At the other 
end of the spectrum, India has perhaps the most powerfully entrenched bourgeois 
state anywhere in the Tricontinent (a term I sometimes prefer to Third World). 
In Latin America, only Brazil comes even anywhere close to that secure solidity 
of the Indian state.

How does the emergence of a powerful critique of neoliberalism in Latin America 
look from India, where the political establishment continues to promote and 
celebrate liberalization as a dynamic motor for socioeconomic development?

All the main Indian political parties, outside the left, are wedded to 
neoliberalism, and support for it is strong in the corporate media and among 
the richest 10% or so (100 million strong, concentrated in the largest six 
cities). However, Indian Marxists have produced extensive, highly influential 
critiques of neoliberalism, dazzling in their theoretical sweep. This is not a 
minor matter in a country where tens of millions vote for Communists. India’s 
social movements are largely guided by those critiques, and resentment of 
neoliberalism runs deep, right into the villages. Opposition to it is part of 
what Gramsci might have called the “common sense” in India today. In this 
sense, Latin America is no different. Masses in country after country have 
risen in revolt, and left intellectuals have produced excellent work in this 
regard. But it is also a fact that ruling circles in Latin America are still 
rife with apologists of neoliberalism, from Chile (even under Michelle 
Bachelet) through Colombia and Mexico and right into Brazil, Lula’s balancing 
acts notwithstanding.

Contrasts and convergences are of a different order. Neoliberalism came to 
Latin America before its advent anywhere else, and that too through the barrel 
of a gun after the 1973 coup in Chile. Thereafter it devastated country after 
country (Argentina, Bolivia, and so on) well before it even arrived in India, 
where it is barely a decade old and has never commanded the sort of ferocity to 
which the Latin American peoples were subjected. This is where the role of the 
Communist left and allied popular movements has been crucial: not preventing 
neoliberalism altogether but softening and slowing it down, through a variety 
of forms of struggle. Even the fact of a stable bourgeois democracy has helped, 
since far too many interests—of very many local and regional capitals, of 
various rural strata—have to be reconciled in obtaining an electoral majority. 
Protectionist concessions, contrary to neoliberal dogma, have to be granted in 
the process. The Indian government dare not take away all the subsidies, all 
the price controls, all the rationing systems for providing essential 
commodities to the poor, or most of the provisions of what in the United States 
is quaintly called “affirmative action.”

It has been unable so far even to lift currency controls and to make the Indian 
currency fully convertible. This softening of neoliberalism has also meant that 
the state has been able to contain the revolt against it within electoral 
channels. A certain gradualism in building widespread consent, so to speak, 
while preserving bourgeois hegemony!

Because neoliberalism came to Latin America much earlier, devastated its 
economies much more radically, shifted wealth from there to the imperialist 
centers much more dramatically, and was almost always backed by regimes that 
had no popular legitimacy, revolts there have been incomparably sharper than 
anything we have witnessed in India. This is combined with the fact—and this is 
a crucial contrast—that politics in Latin America has always had a much larger 
component of state violence and popular militancy. Agitations on the question 
of water produce in Bolivia a first-rate crisis of the state, and governments 
get overthrown in the streets even in Argentina, a country historically much 
more bourgeois than India, which has no such political culture.

What do you think of Hugo Chávez’s attempts to forge a transnational bloc 
within the Americas as a means of countering the hemispheric power of the 
United States? And what is your opinion of the impact of chavismo for the 
Global South?

Simón Bolívar knew it at an extraordinarily early stage, José Martí reiterated 
it many decades later, and every revolutionary in Latin America has known it: 
Unless Latin America unites, it cannot be truly independent of U.S. 
imperialism. The question is how you get it. I support Chávez’s project 
profoundly, but I sometimes feel that he may believe too much in his own 
revolutionary fervor, his command of petrodollars in a sphere that is 
cash-strapped, his belief that the masses in other countries would push their 
governments hard enough in that direction if he keeps up the pressure. In 
short, the question is not the worth of the project, which is beyond doubt, but 
how to go about doing it. His recent spat with Brazilian and Argentine 
parliaments was not a good sign.

As for the rest, I don’t quite understand the term Global South even though my 
friend Walden Bello loves it. My sense is that Chávez is loved and admired by 
not just the left but even beyond the left by many around the world for the 
simple reason that he is today the only head of state anywhere in the world who 
holds out a promise reminiscent of those of Ho Chi Minh and Che. He reminds 
countless Indians, for example, of the promise that was inherent in the 
anti-imperialist component of the Non-Aligned Movement, and he reminds 
countless Arabs of how their rulers might have used oil wealth for resisting 
imperialism, and did not. He is not the revolutionary that we, the Marxists, 
had looked for, and I am not surprised that many of us feel uneasy.

But revolutions are messy things and they don’t always succeed; they rarely do, 
in fact, and the ones that do typically leave an imprint and then recede into a 
much more complex history, leaving a legacy for revolutions to follow. If I 
have learned anything from some 40 years of activity on the left, it is that 
revolution is not an event that happens once and for all, but a process, 
exhilarating and unbecoming at the same time, pushing the history of human 
emancipation just so much! In that sense, chavismo is an event of great 
importance. We, the intellectuals, can—and should—have all sorts of skepticism 
about the way Chávez goes about doing things, but we should also keep in view 
the fact that he has stirred the imaginations of millions upon millions, far 
beyond his own country, in a way that few have in these dark times.

Your own intellectual and political engagements are firmly within the Marxist 
tradition, and you have written a stimulating essay, “The Communist Manifesto: 
In Its Own Time, and in Ours.” Could you speak more broadly about the relevance 
of Marxist analysis and Marxist politics for our own time?

Heavens! Should I simply recall Jean Paul Sartre’s dictum, formulated in the 
early 1950s, that Marxism is the unsurpassable science of our age and that 
anything that claims to be post-Marxist always turns out to be a throwback to 
pre-Marxism? Let me offer just a couple of random ideas.Toward the end of the 
essay that you refer to, I argue that the past 50 years have witnessed greater 
proletarianization than in all previous epochs of human history. The expansion 
of the proletariat in Europe through all the centuries was nothing compared to 
the expansion of the proletariat in Asia since the Second World War. I have 
also argued, at great length in many writings, that it is only after the Second 
World War that we can speak of a united global capital and a singular global 
empire, over and above nationally based capitals and colonial empires like 
those of Britain and France. For the first time in human history, Marx’s 
prediction comes true: capital and labor face each other on a world scale.

I have also said, in numerous writings, that we must rethink the very 
categories of Marxist thought, which have fundamental value at the theoretical 
level but have to be rethought at the concrete historical level. For example, 
if it is true, as we now know empirically, that women perform some two thirds 
of the world’s productive labor (calculable according to the prevailing 
accounting systems, let alone what these systems do not count), and if it also 
true, as we now know empirically, that female labor is not only paid generally 
less than male labor but is also slotted into the sectors least protected by 
labor laws and is most prone to extra-economic coercions like sexual 
exploitation, then would it not be obvious that women are at the very heart of 
the proletarian class formation as such? With appropriate modifications, the 
same could be said of the indigenous people in Latin America or the oppressed 
castes in India, in terms of their specificity as well as centrality in labor 
regimes. Let me also say that we now know a lot more about the “extra-economic 
coercion” that goes on within both waged and nonwaged labor within capitalism 
(e.g., sexual exploitation of women, debt bondage of male labor in mines and 
plantations) that classical Marxism always conceived of as “precapitalist.”

We thus have a very interesting situation. Marx’s prediction that the vast 
majority of humanity shall be eventually divided between capital and labor, 
regardless of nationality, comes true precisely at the time when we also come 
to understand that the very fundamental categories of Marxist theory need to be 
rethought. I would argue that Marxism itself provides the ground on which its 
own categories can actually be rethought and would offer only one simple 
example for this: Only if you do believe that work and labor is what is 
fundamental to what the vast majority of human beings do, an activity that 
defines the most fundamental truth about human existence as such—only then can 
you think of women’s labor as the overwhelming part of human labor and rethink 
the category of “the proletariat” as such. Hence, a very different idea of what 
a “proletarian revolution” would actually look like, in any real sense.

I referred earlier to Sartre’s famous book-length essay, The Problem of Method. 
Let me invoke two more ideas from it: That Marxism contains within itself 
principles that make it possible for it to rethink itself, and that Marxism as 
a knowledge of the world that exists at any given historical conjuncture is 
necessarily and always an incomplete knowledge, always in the process of 
completing itself, since it has to constantly rethink itself as the material 
world, whose knowledge it is, keeps changing. Always incomplete! It is for you 
and me to contribute to further elaborating and updating it, while also 
cherishing its inherent state of incompletion. You could always say roughly the 
same thing more poetically, in the words of Charles Olson, the U.S. poet, 
speaking in his finest poem, “The Kingfishers”: “What does not change/is the 
will to change,” derived, I think, from the closing lines of Marx’s famous 
Theses on Feuerbach. One changes one’s thinking, within Marxism, to address the 
world as it actually is, and thus to help change it, through an activity that 
is not just an activity of thought. And we must be prepared for further changes 
in our thought and action as the world itself shall keep changing.

Seemin Qayum is an independent researcher on Latin America and India. She is 
co-editing The Bolivia Reader: History, Culture, Politics (Duke University 
Press, forthcoming) with colleagues in the United States and Bolivia, and is 
completing a book project with Raka Ray, Cultures of Servitude: Modernity, 
Domesticity, and Class in India. 



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