On Sun, Oct 28, 2018 at 8:48 AM ari <a...@kein.org> wrote:

> Does an understanding of politics as transformative action not clash with
> one of it as a practice of belonging?
>

Certainly not. The whole Marxist tradition conceived of class consciousness
as a practice of belonging.
However there are problems the Marxist tradition never solved. You want a
universal working class conscious of its own transformative agency; but you
will not be able to describe this class in terms concrete enough to address
any member of it in particular. No one can, those days are over, the
language does not fit the times.
When the *industrial* working class could still be conceived as a
revolutionary subject, such a description was possible. Marx and Engels did
it brilliantly, by spending years debating their ideas directly directly
with the workers. But after the crisis of the 1930s, all capitalist states
recognized the danger represented by the working class and made
extraordinary efforts to integrate the industrial workers to capitalist
practice, first through wage bargaining, then through benefits, then
through a variety of cultural and even military appeals, culminating in the
current situation where industrial workers are recruited to fascism with
anti-immigrant nationalism and the vague promise of industrial jobs.
This doesn't mean there is no transformative potential left in the
industrial working classes. But they can't hold the place of a universal
political subject,and the class you are looking for -  singular, concrete,
conscious of itself and ready to act - is not solely defined by work
anymore.
In fact, the focus of the state on work and the workplace encouraged anyone
who cared about class to look outside the factory and even the wage
relation for the inequality and injustice of capitalist societies. Because
those societies now focused as much on consumption - and more broadly, on
what Marxists call "social reproduction" - as they did on production,
direct oppression exerted by the capitalist state and by the forms of
social reproduction that it mandated could be found in many different
places. Identity politics emerged as a way of naming those sites of
oppression, and even more importantly, as a way to gain transformative
agency through the consciousness of belonging to an oppressed group.
The upshot is, that if you wanted to redo Marx and Engels, you would have
to start not by rereading their books and their tradition, but by taking
new ideas of both oppression and transformation down to the places where
identity politics is debated, and giving those new ideas a go.
Now, this all does not mean everything is fine with identity politics as it
is practiced today. Certainly just abandoning the question of work is the
wrong path (but no one serious does it, so I don't know what the problem
is?).  A new universal is definitely lacking, and much can be learned from
the attempts to conceive a universal working class. However, it does mean
that you can't just diss off identity in favor of some supposedly correct
concept which you have totally dehistoricized, particularly by ignoring the
dialectical negations to which it was subject. No one will take you
seriously if you do. Today, pretty much every "return to Marx" is a return
to some nostalgic and usually privileged self, alone even in the typically
tiny groups, trying to convince themselves that their pure idea from the
past can overcome everything that has happened in global society since 1968.

Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying "Marx to the trashcan." I'm just saying
that if you do go to the barricades, you will not find a universal working
class, and the language with which you seek to invoke or catalyze one, will
remain empty and useless. Doing real politics is far more demanding than
most of us can handle. The "back to class' posts in this thread are so
vague, so nostalgic, so empty, that they do not come anywhere near the goal.

What we are missing is a theory of social relations in the future. To be
transformative it will have to be inclusive, combative and aspirational,
attuned to a possible life beyond the dead-ends of the twentieth century.

best, BH
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