The following article implies that there is a shadow of the European 
revival of Marxism in America in the recent Occupy Wall Street  movement  
--and more generally as a cause célèbre among various populations 
of the youth demographic.
 
This begs some questions even if, as reporting, the article is accurate  in
describing a new emergence of Marx.  For example  :
 
* What kind of Marxism ?  There are great differences between
Gramscian cultural Marxism and classical proletarian Marxism
and Eduard Bernstein's Marxist Revisionism and the labor  union
semi-Marxism of the Socialist Party of the USA in the first decades
of the 20th century and the hard line militant Marxism of Asian 
revolutionaries and the literary Marxism of French  intellectuals,
and so forth, through still other forms of this philosophy.
 
* What about people who, while not Marxists, nonetheless see value
in  parts of Marx and cherry pick what they consider as  useful ideas
and deploy those ideas within essentially non-Marxist systems ?
Jews and Catholics have done this in the past, as have Buddhists,
and one Baptist intellectual and social reformer, Walter  Rauschenbusch,
borrowed at least a few ideas from Marx in formulating a critique
of social injustices as part of the early Social Gospel movement.
This kind of borrowing is very possible in our own era.
 
* What does the revival of interest in Marx say about how this might
play out in different cultures ?  After all,  this sort of thing  is 
perennial
in Latin America ( sometimes, as with Hugo Chavez, as theater of
the absurd ), it has come and gone in the Arab world ( think Nasser  ),
it exists in parts of India, and there's the possibility
that it could break out once more in China.
 
-----
 
The Big Lesson to take away from this development is that 
the sooner that there is a popular Radical Centrist movement 
in America, the better. For it isn't just Marxism that is an  alternative
to Finance Capitalism, which sees the finance aristocracy as an  enemy,
it is also populism in some forms of the Tea Party movement, 
and some forms of libertarianism. It also exists on the fringes
of the political world as Anarchism. 
 
These various movements are, from an RC perspective, groping in the dark. 
They are like the blind men and the elephant, understanding only one  part
of how the system works.  It is up to Radical Centrists to   fathom how 
everything works, to put forward a new philosophy of economics, 
and provide a vision for the future that can inspire people
to re-invent the world.
 
Billy
 
 
--------------------------------------------------------------
 
 
Why Marxism is on the rise again
Capitalism is in  crisis across the globe – but what on earth is the 
alternative? Well, what about  the musings of a certain 19th-century German 
philosopher? Yes, Karl Marx is  going mainstream – and goodness knows where it 
will end
 
  
_Stuart Jeffries_ (http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/stuartjeffries)  
_The  Guardian_ (http://www.guardian.co.uk/theguardian) , Wednesday 4 July 
2012 
 
Class conflict once seemed so straightforward. Marx and Engels wrote in the 
 second best-selling book of all time, The Communist Manifesto: "What the  
bourgeoisie therefore produces, above all, are its own grave-diggers. Its 
fall  and the victory of the proletariat are equally inevitable." (The 
best-selling  book of all time, incidentally, is the Bible – it only feels like 
it's 50 Shades  of Grey.) 
Today, 164 years after Marx and Engels wrote about grave-diggers, the truth 
 is almost the exact opposite. The proletariat, far from burying 
capitalism, are  keeping it on life support. Overworked, underpaid workers 
ostensibly 
liberated  by the largest socialist revolution in history (China's) are 
driven to the brink  of suicide to keep those in the west playing with their 
iPads. Chinese money  bankrolls an otherwise bankrupt America. 
The irony is scarcely  wasted on leading Marxist thinkers. "The domination 
of capitalism globally  depends today on the existence of a Chinese 
Communist party that gives  de-localised capitalist enterprises cheap labour to 
lower prices and deprive  workers of the rights of self-organisation," says 
_Jacques Rancière_ (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacques_Rancière) ,  the 
French 
marxist thinker and Professor of _Philosophy_ 
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/philosophy)  at the  University of Paris VIII. 
"Happily, it is possible 
to hope for a world less  absurd and more just than today's." 
That hope, perhaps,  explains another improbable truth of our economically 
catastrophic times – the  revival in interest in Marx and Marxist thought. 
Sales of Das Kapital, Marx's  masterpiece of political economy, _have  soared 
ever since 2008_ 
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2008/oct/15/marx-germany-popularity-financial-crisis)
 , _as  have those of The Communist Manifesto_ 
(http://worldblog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2009/04/08/4376532-chinese-coming-back-t
o-marx-amid-crisis?lite)  and the Grundrisse (or, to give it its  English 
title, Outlines of the Critique of Political Economy). Their sales rose  as 
British workers bailed out the banks to keep the degraded system going and  
the snouts of the rich firmly in their troughs while the rest of us struggle 
in  debt, job insecurity or worse. There's even a Chinese theatre director 
called He  Nian who capitalised on Das Kapital's renaissance to create an 
_all-singing,  all-dancing musical_ 
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/mar/17/china-das-kapital-marx-stage) . 
And in perhaps the most  lovely reversal of the luxuriantly bearded 
revolutionary theorist's fortunes, _Karl Marx_ 
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/karl-marx)  was recently  chosen from a list 
of 10 contenders _to appear  on a 
new issue of MasterCard_ 
(http://boingboing.net/2012/07/03/karl-marx-on-a-mastercard.html)  by customers 
of German bank Sparkasse in  Chemnitz. In 
communist East Germany from 1953 to 1990, Chemnitz was known as  Karl Marx 
Stadt. 
Clearly, more than two decades after the fall of the Berlin  Wall, the 
former East Germany hasn't airbrushed its Marxist past. In 2008,  Reuters 
reports, a survey of east Germans found 52% believed the free-market  economy 
was 
"unsuitable" and 43% said they wanted socialism back. Karl Marx may  be dead 
and buried in Highgate cemetery, but he's alive and well among  
credit-hungry Germans. Would Marx have appreciated the irony of his image being 
 
deployed on a card to get Germans deeper in debt? You'd think. 
Later this week in London,  several thousand people will attend _Marxism  
2012_ (http:///) , a five-day festival organised by the Socialist Workers' 
Party. It's an  annual event, but what strikes organiser Joseph Choonara is 
how, in recent  years, many more of its attendees are young. "The revival of 
interest in  Marxism, especially for young people comes because it provides 
tools for  analysing capitalism, and especially capitalist crises such as the 
one we're in  now," Choonara says. 
There has been a glut of books trumpeting Marxism's relevance. English  
literature professor Terry Eagleton last year published a book called Why Marx  
Was Right. French Maoist philosopher Alain Badiou published a little red 
book  called The Communist Hypothesis with a red star on the cover (very Mao, 
very  now) in which he rallied the faithful to usher in the third era of the 
communist  idea (the previous two having gone from the establishment of the 
French Republic  in 1792 to the massacre of the Paris communards in 1871, 
and from 1917 to the  collapse of Mao's Cultural Revolution in 1976). Isn't 
this all a delusion? 
Aren't Marx's venerable ideas as useful to us as the hand loom would be to  
shoring up Apple's reputation for innovation? Isn't the dream of socialist  
revolution and communist society an irrelevance in 2012? After all, I 
suggest to  Rancière, the bourgeoisie has failed to produce its own 
gravediggers. 
Rancière  refuses to be downbeat: "The bourgeoisie has learned to make the 
exploited pay  for its crisis and to use them to disarm its adversaries. But 
we must not  reverse the idea of historical necessity and conclude that the 
current situation  is eternal. The gravediggers are still here, in the form 
of workers in  precarious conditions like the over-exploited workers of 
factories in the far  east. And today's popular movements – Greece or elsewhere 
– also indicate that  there's a new will not to let our governments and our 
bankers inflict their  crisis on the people."
 
That, at least, is the perspective of a seventysomething Marxist professor. 
 What about younger people of a Marxist temper? I ask Jaswinder 
Blackwell-Pal, a  22 year-old English and drama student at Goldsmiths College, 
London, 
who has  just finished her BA course in English and Drama, why she considers 
Marxist  thought still relevant. "The point is that younger people weren't 
around when  Thatcher was in power or when Marxism was associated with the 
Soviet Union," she  says. "We tend to see it more as a way of understanding 
what we're going through  now. Think of what's happening in Egypt. When 
Mubarak fell it was so inspiring.  It broke so many stereotypes – democracy 
wasn't supposed to be something that  people would fight for in the Muslim 
world. 
It vindicates revolution as a  process, not as an event. So there was a 
revolution in Egypt, and a  counter-revolution and a counter-counter 
revolution. What we learned from it was  the importance of organisation." 
This, surely is the key to understanding Marxism's renaissance in the west: 
 for younger people, it is untainted by association with Stalinist gulags. 
For  younger people too, Francis Fukuyama's triumphalism in his 1992 book 
The End of  History – in which capitalism seemed incontrovertible, its 
overthrow impossible  to imagine – exercises less of a choke-hold on their 
imaginations than it does  on those of their elders. 
Blackwell-Pal will be speaking Thursday on Che Guevara and the Cuban  
revolution at the Marxism festival. "It's going to be the first time I'll have  
spoken on Marxism," she says nervously. But what's the point thinking about  
Guevara and Castro in this day and age? Surely violent socialist revolution 
is  irrelevant to workers' struggles today? "Not at all!" she replies. 
"What's  happening in Britain is quite interesting. We have a very, very weak 
government  mired in in-fighting. I think if we can really organise we can oust 
them." Could  Britain have its Tahrir Square, its equivalent to Castro's 
26th of July  Movement? Let a young woman dream. After last year's riots and 
today with most  of Britain alienated from the rich men in its government's 
cabinet, only a fool  would rule it out. 
For a different perspective I catch up with Owen Jones, 27-year-old poster  
boy of the new left and author of the bestselling politics book of 2011, 
Chavs:  the Demonisation of the Working Class. He's on the train to Brighton 
to address  the Unite conference. "There isn't going to be a bloody 
revolution in Britain,  but there is hope for a society by working people and 
for 
working people," he  counsels. 
Indeed, he says, in the 1860s the later Marx imagined such a 
post-capitalist  society as being won by means other than violent revolution. 
"He did look 
at  expanding the suffrage and other peaceful means of achieving socialist 
society.  Today not even the Trotskyist left call for armed revolution. The 
radical left  would say that the break with capitalism could only be 
achieved by democracy and  organisation of working people to establish and hold 
on 
to that just society  against forces that would destroy it." 
Jones recalls that his  father, a Militant supporter in the 1970s, held to 
the entryist idea of ensuring  the election of a Labour government and then 
organising working people to make  sure that government delivered. "I think 
that's the model," he says. How very  un-New Labour. That said, after we 
talk, Jones texts me to make it clear he's  not a Militant supporter or 
Trotskyist. Rather, he wants a Labour government in  power that will pursue a 
radical political programme. He has in mind the words  of Labour's _February  
1974 election manifesto_ 
(http://www.labour-party.org.uk/manifestos/1974/Feb/1974-feb-labour-manifesto.shtml)
  which expressed the intention to "Bring 
about a  fundamental and irreversible shift in the balance of power and wealth 
in favour  of working people and their families". Let a young man dream. 
What's striking about Jones's literary success is that it's premised on the 
 revival of interest in class politics, that foundation stone of Marx and  
Engels's analysis of industrial society. "If I had written it four years 
earlier  it would have been dismissed as a 1960s concept of class," says Jones. 
"But  class is back in our reality because the economic crisis affects 
people in  different ways and because the Coalition mantra that 'We're all in 
this  together' is offensive and ludicrous. It's impossible to argue now as 
was argued  in the 1990s that we're all middle class. This government's 
reforms are  class-based. VAT rises affect working people disproportionately, 
for  
instance. 
"It's an open class war," he says. "Working-class people are going to be  
worse off in 2016 than they were at the start of the century. But you're 
accused  of being a class warrior if you stand up for 30% of the population who 
suffers  this way." 
This chimes with something Rancière told me. The professor argued that "one 
 thing about Marxist thought that remains solid is class struggle. The  
disappearance of our factories, that's to say de-industrialisation of our  
countries and the outsourcing of industrial work to the countries where labour  
is less expensive and more docile, what else is this other than an act in 
the  class struggle by the ruling bourgeoisie?" 
There's another reason why Marxism has something to teach us as we struggle 
 through economic depression, other than its analysis of class struggle. It 
is in  its analysis of economic crisis. In his formidable new tome Less 
Than Nothing:  Hegel and the Shadow of Dialectical Materialism, Slavoj Žižek 
tries to apply  Marxist thought on economic crises to what we're enduring 
right now. Žižek  considers the fundamental class antagonism to be between 
"use value" and  "exchange value". 
What's the difference between the two? Each commodity has a use value, he  
explains, measured by its usefulness in satisfying needs and wants. The 
exchange  value of a commodity, by contrast, is traditionally measured by the 
amount of  labour that goes into making it. Under current capitalism, Žižek 
argues,  exchange value becomes autonomous. "It is transformed into a spectre 
of  self-propelling capital which uses the productive capacities and needs 
of actual  people only as its temporary disposable embodiment. Marx derived 
his notion of  economic crisis from this very gap: a crisis occurs when 
reality catches up with  the illusory self-generating mirage of money begetting 
more money – this  speculative madness cannot go on indefinitely, it has to 
explode in even more  serious crises. The ultimate root of the crisis for 
Marx is the gap between use  and exchange value: the logic of exchange-value 
follows its own path, its own  made dance, irrespective of the real needs of 
real people." 
In such uneasy times, who  better to read than the greatest catastrophist 
theoriser of human history, Karl  Marx? And yet the renaissance of interest 
in Marxism has been pigeonholed as an  apologia for Stalinist 
totalitarianism. In a _recent  blog_ 
(http://50.56.48.50/blog/alan-johnson/specter-‘
new-communism’)  on "the new _communism_ 
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/communism) " for the journal  World Affairs, 
Alan Johnson, professor of democratic 
theory and practice at Edge  Hill University in Lancashire, wrote: "A 
worldview recently the source of  immense suffering and misery, and responsible 
for 
more deaths than fascism and  Nazism, is mounting a comeback; a new form of 
leftwing totalitarianism that  enjoys intellectual celebrity but aspires to 
political power. 
"The New Communism matters not because of its intellectual merits but 
because  it may yet influence layers of young Europeans in the context of an 
exhausted  social democracy, austerity and a self-loathing intellectual 
culture," wrote  Johnson. "Tempting as it is, we can't afford to just shake our 
heads and pass on  by." 
That's the fear: that these  nasty old left farts such as Žižek, Badiou, 
Rancière and Eagleton will corrupt  the minds of innocent youth. But does 
reading Marx and Engels's critique of  capitalism mean that you thereby take on 
a worldview responsible for more deaths  than the Nazis? Surely there is no 
straight line from The Communist Manifesto to  the gulags, and no reason 
why young lefties need uncritically to adopt Badiou at  his most chilling. In 
his _introduction  to a new edition of The Communist Manifesto_ 
(http://www.versobooks.com/books/1109-the-communist-manifesto) , Professor Eric 
Hobsbawm 
 suggests that Marx was right to argue that the "contradictions of a market 
 system based on no other nexus between man and man than naked 
self-interest,  than callous 'cash payment', a system of exploitation and of 
'endless  
accumulation' can never be overcome: that at some point in a series of  
transformations and restructurings the development of this essentially  
destabilising system will lead to a state of affairs that can no longer be  
described 
as capitalism". 
That is post-capitalist society as dreamed of by Marxists. But what would 
it  be like? "It is extremely unlikely that such a 'post-capitalist society' 
would  respond to the traditional models of socialism and still less to the 
'really  existing' socialisms of the Soviet era," argues Hobsbawm, adding 
that it will,  however, necessarily involve a shift from private appropriation 
to social  management on a global scale. "What forms it might take and how 
far it would  embody the humanist values of Marx's and Engels's communism, 
would depend on the  political action through which this change came about." 
This is surely Marxism at its most liberating, suggesting that our futures  
depend on us and our readiness for struggle. Or as Marx and Engels put it 
at the  end of The Communist Manifesto: "Let the ruling classes tremble at a 
communist  revolution. The proletarians have nothing to lose but their 
chains. They have a  world to win."

-- 
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