Returning to Jim Cgreegan's answer to my post Meditations on Trotsky and 
Occupy, I want to develop the last point 3).

The first part of the point was that Lenin and Trotsky worked as journalists 
within socialist movements, as opposed to the journalists that I mentioned 
for example like Chris Hedges, Bill Moyers, Arun Gupta, Doug Henwood and the 
many others we depend on to get the word out on this issue or that.

Hold that thought and consider that the above list amounts to a duel 
personality. One part is advocate, expose, and communication media of 
journalism. While all of the above have a spectrum of personal politics, the 
all share something of an intellectual life that in some vague way can be 
called leftist. Most have at least read some of Marx, but likely not in a 
programmatic fashion that Lenin or Trotsky did. In a way it doesn't matter. 
Once you get a handle on what capitalist bourgeois society is all about, you 
can usually fill in the blanks. This battle between classes has been around 
a long time and there is plenty of intellectual and historical material to 
read, discover, and articulate, which in turn leads to shifting 
understanding of the `forces' of our world.

Now to the second half of point 3). The basic thrust of it was that the 
intellectual class or intelligentsia in the US here and now do not have much 
contact with the working class and the working class seems more or less 
immune to whatever insights and messages the intellectuals might offer.

All true on the surface and that is why I've been thinking about this 
separation. This is also a bit of self-examination because I live or lived 
in both worlds, and frankly, thank age and social security that I could 
leave my long standing working class jobs behind. Believe me, it is a 
liberation I would wish on anyone.

Unfortunately there was an upside. Working in a mechanical trade puts me on 
the front lines of class war and in my case, in direct contact with a broad 
spectrum of the poor and working class america. It's a view that only the 
sociologist, committed advocate, and radical journalists are likely to know, 
see, and understand. It creates heart, in the vernacular.

So journalism in its expose and drumbeat modes, informed by less explicit 
intellectual background and instincts forms a bridge between the vast 
collection of knowledge and ideas of the historical intelligentsia and the 
current working class in the US, and certainly in Europe and the Middle 
East. That's the interface.

I realized that most of my posted links and much of my time goes to news 
stories, lectures, panels, and conferences posted on the web. The news 
stories may make it to the interested and receptive working class, and the 
detailed and archane discussions at conferences and panels will probably 
not.

The central art form for this intellectual class is the documentary and its 
most effective medium is video and film. But that requires a lot of money 
and a production crew. The less well endowed don't have those means. The 
most traditional medium is print and once you are used to reading and 
writing it is still just as effective, and hopefully by some more hawking 
the wares, those works will form the basis for a video or film production 
which has the capacity to reach many more people.

It was afterall print that has been used since Guttenburg to advocate and 
organize. That was certainly Marx, Lenin and Trotsky's greatest skill, the 
word.

It took me forever to finally start reading them. I was stalled out on 
Capital maybe fifteen years ago. It is certainly no pleasant read. It took 
David Harvey's video lectures to get over that hump. In a couple of weeks I 
was half way through Capital and got distracted and frankly bored. Yeah I 
got the basic ideas, and I was not interested in the archane economics 
theory. On the other hand, once I started reading just an outline of 
neoclassical economics, it was enough to realize there was no there there. 
It's pretense to objective social science was an outright fraud. This wasn't 
just an ordinary fraud. It was an ideology and went to the root of most of 
our social, political and economic history. As such, unfortunately, it needs 
to be studied anyway.

If anything it was Marx who was the social scientist, because at least he 
went to the factories, he studied the production systems, and he looked at 
the social consequences of the economic systems that oppressed society. He 
made no pretense to objectivity or place it beyond judgement. This system is 
brutal, destructive of everything alive, and it has to be changed in a 
radically different direction.

In any case that is a sketch to answer how the intellectual class can begin 
to effect and merge in a virtual sort of way with working class life.

It helps tremendously to join the working class for awhile to get your 
bearings as Barbara Ehrenreich and others have in various books. It is in 
the grand tradition of journalism, social reform movements, and directly 
corresponds to the history of field studies in other social sciences.

CG 

_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to