Marxism, the United States, and the Twentieth Century

http://www.monthlyreview.org/090504buhle.php

Paul Buhle
May 2009

The previous century now seems to be drawing away from us at an 
increasing speed, especially in the global society's existing 
superabundance of communications. Readers of Monthly Review know that 
the basics have remained the same in the all too physical world of 
capitalism and neocolonialism, as much as they might have changed in 
terms of resistance and apparent alternatives. Still, as the graying 
of the 1960s generation continues, and the New Deal era draws ever 
further into a kind of archeology, a summing up of some points is 
useful and may even be fun.

My effort here runs parallel with nearly four decades of Monthly 
Review. The focus is personal as well: Marxist thought, the 
interpretation and guidance that Marxists provided and (at the local 
level) lived by, was my interest from the spring of 1964 when my 
first subscription began and when, by no coincidence, the antiwar 
movement began to reach my Midwest campus. (I could brag in 1966 that 
I read every Monthly Review Press book­there weren't all that many 
yet.) My sensibility grew as I published the magazine Radical America 
for Students for a Democratic Society, and deepened with the collapse 
of the New Left, as I plunged into oral histories of the left-wing 
octogenarians, and continued on with my interviews and studies of the 
Hollywood Reds who seemed to have shaped some important zones of 
popular culture. It reflected, as well, my own engagements with local 
left movements, labor support and education, third world support 
blending into solidarity with the new immigrant waves, and so on 
through the passage of time.

What may surprise today's younger readers of Monthly Review is that 
the dialogue about Marxism was so vital in the seemingly fallow years 
of the left in the early 1960s, with politics barely recovering from 
both the widespread repression and the despair at the revelations 
about the Soviet Union. Screenwriter Walter Bernstein remarked to me 
decades later that he and his friends, the "disorganized left," 
high-powered intellectuals scripting television and films that 
touched my generation, had stayed within the wider boundaries of the 
Popular Front even while leaving the Communist Party. What they saw 
now was not Russia but rather, a community of peoples struggling 
against colonialism and neocolonialism. (Judy Ruben, the wife of one 
of his close friends, Al Ruben, actually worked in the Monthly Review 
office.) Marxism supplied the intellectual energy and also a sort of 
collective personal glue. People from afar were "comrades" on contact 
and even without direct contact. Culturally as well as politically, 
it seemed a new world was opening.

The same sensibility applied, without any particular theory of 
organizational apparatus, across generations. Shortly after I began 
to read Monthly Review, the campus scholar who brought the very first 
antiwar activities into existence had been, fifteen years earlier, a 
young Communist intellectual "industrializing" a factory near 
Chicago. Now she was probably fearful that the shadow of the past 
might catch up with her as a young academic, but she was nevertheless 
determined to make a statement and to make things possible for us 
youngsters. I gave her the first Christmas gift subscription that I 
had given anyone in my life­to Monthly Review, naturally. We had 
reached out to each other. Multiply this hundreds or thousands of 
times, vary the details, and you can envision all sorts of 
rapprochements and discoveries, often with subtle hints from the 
older generation before some past connection with the "subversive" 
left was to be revealed.

There was also much going on from a more rarefied intellectual 
standpoint. For instance, the debate of "Marxism versus 
Existentialism" was enormously fruitful. Only dogmatists would claim 
absolutes for either side; the two schools despised the social 
relations of modern capitalism for somewhat disparate reasons, but 
with no less intensity. This particular philosophical discussion was 
to fade beneath the vast popularity of Herbert Marcuse (and to a 
lesser degree, the more difficult members of the Frankfurt School 
like Theodore Adorno, no radical but lucid in his analysis of social 
norms), and the revival of Phenomenology. The translation and 
readings of the "Young Marx" seemed to bring it all to the surface, 
even when (or because) the interpretations of the significance were 
starkly different and sometimes bitterly opposed to each other. None 
of it was far from Marxism, as Marxism was steadily being reinterpreted.

And Marxism was definitely being reinterpreted. To my young eyes, 
Monthly Review was not only a venerable institution (I had only been 
five-years-old when it began!), but also a strikingly innovative 
youngster in a new way of Marxists seeing the world. Rosa Luxemburg 
apart, hardly anyone, not even Lenin, had seen imperialism as the 
salvation of capitalism, however temporary that might be. Paul 
Baran's Political Economy of Growth was one of the books of 
revelation that knocked me on the head at a young age: it was hard 
and took many readings but the points were finally clear. Capitalism 
was a truly global system, as Marx had begun to elucidate, and no 
liberal or conservative theory of third world "backwardness," whether 
based upon supposed particular histories or national psychologies, 
could explain why the West took the natural resources for its own 
purposes and left starvelings behind, to be ruled over and widely 
abused by the CIA's favorites.

It might well be asked why this conclusion seemed so novel as late as 
the 1960s. Part of the answer is that the old Marxism remained fairly 
fixed, a doctrine that sooner or later, as capitalism failed or 
perhaps under some other circumstance, the American industrial 
working class would make a revolution, and the thing to do was to 
join them, organize them, and pull them leftward. Not that Communists 
and their left-wing critics or competitors disbelieved in U.S. 
imperialism­that view was left to Reinhold Niebuhr and the other 
liberals of the day, many of them former socialists who had made a 
career choice­but it was always a side issue, inflected further by 
the argument of the proper revolutionary party in the particular 
country involved.

The New Left emerging in the mid-1960s, which came to consciousness 
in and around the civil rights movement and/or the ban-the-bomb 
phase, fixed at once upon the African-American poor and the 
progressive, mostly white, middle-class students in the North. 
Consequently, it found little in common with the older views and left 
parties. Moreover, sclerotic and just plain conservative-bureaucratic 
leadership dragged the AFL-CIO ever downward, with no real interest 
in the growing, and largely female, clerical workforce and with the 
looming prospect of automation (no one yet talked of rust zones). No 
reform campaign seemed to make much of a dent, and a generation or 
two of industrial workers now looked increasingly toward retirement 
plans and health benefits. Indeed, the then-recent unionization of 
government workers was already the last successful major effort at 
spreading unionism, and it had the side effect of making the newly 
organized bodies rather scornful of the unemployed, and largely 
dependent upon political deals at every level. Notwithstanding the 
promising developments among hospital workers and the heartening 
efforts by and for agricultural workers, the only union 
representatives likely to be found at a campus rally far from New 
York were from the expelled unions, especially the United Electrical, 
Radio and Machine Workers. George Meany and his speechwriters 
demanded military-industrial jobs and as many wars as possible.

The problems of the older Marxism were evident, but the synthesis of 
anything like a new Marxism remained elusive. Harry Magdoff shed 
light on this in one of his luminous essays, observing that in the 
first half of the century (the half without MR, one might say), the 
eclipse of capitalism had been looked upon as a certainty, not only 
from the left but from many political standpoints. In the second half 
of the century, however, social contradictions continued to mount 
(including the danger of thermonuclear devastation) but the certainty 
of capitalist decline and collapse disappeared from view. (Magdoff 
later quipped to me that if capitalists were willing to risk nuclear 
war to preserve their power and profits, they would be willing to go 
over the edge of ecological devastation: it was their nature to do 
so.) Marxists faced a new situation with a successfully contained 
working class at the center of the empire.

Radical America rested much of its collective work on the thesis that 
the world revolution would continue but that at home, the working 
class was being transformed and the results of that transformation 
were definitely in the making. The industrial base was becoming more 
demographically black (a trend only arrested by factory shut-downs) 
as the office was becoming more demographically female. The two 
trends coincided in various sectors, including the post office. A 
synthesis to come would clarify the delays and deformations of the 
past radical movements. Or so we thought. As the New Left collapsed, 
it seemingly combined multiracial "power" movements, feminist, and 
gay liberation movements, and even the counterculture into a rough 
perspective. In a way, we were only thirty years early, because the 
immigration law changes of 1965 would complete a transformation of 
the working class­but by that time, our human synthesis had been 
shattered and so much lost that the New Left vision of Marxism would 
need still more drastic revision. Only a neo-traditional Leninism, 
and the short-lived romantic urban guerilla phenomenon, offered other 
alternatives upholding a vision of a future socialism.

C. L. R. James, arguably the last of the great Pan-African figures, 
was a great convenience as an idol of Radical America in those years. 
He had written The Black Jacobins decades earlier, he was a Hegelian, 
not to mention sports historian and critic, his collapsed following 
had upheld visions of black power and women's power, and of the 
significance of wildcat strikes and other moves against existing 
bureaucratic union leaderships. He was also, in advancing old age, 
still hugely attractive as a public speaker and a persuasive 
personality at close range. We tended to hope that everything would 
work out, because the neatness of the Marxism was not matched by 
anything like tactical certainty. Having the proper view, we would 
see the situations as they arose and figure out what to do.

The optimism ebbed away by the Reagan years if not before. Radical 
America continued to uphold (until its demise in the early 1990s) 
something like the New Left or even Students for a Democratic Society 
version of Marxist ideas. By this time, deconstructionist adaptations 
of Marxism ruled in most higher zones of the academy, if rivaled in 
some places by the scholars of black studies, women's studies, 
development studies, and so on. The invention of new and esoteric 
languages seemed to coincide logically with the hopelessness of the 
political narrative in whatever version of Marxism dependent upon 
actual organizing and mobilization. The projects involving support 
for Sandinistas or for the rebel movements in El Salvador, not to 
mention the final decade of struggle against Apartheid South Africa, 
might as well have happened in a different galaxy from this campus 
crypto-Marxism where straightforward prose had become an enemy of progress.

Nonetheless, important scholarly work on empire, often produced by 
partisans of Monthly Review, continued to count. Great 
personalities­to mention only three, Noam Chomsky, Howard Zinn, and 
Edward Said­drove home the points in public forums of all kinds­and 
were often more influential outside, rather than inside, the United 
States. With the later 1990s, a new kind of Marxist scholarship took 
form on the inner empire of media communications, and it was not by 
accident that Robert McChesney would title his later magnum opus The 
Political Economy of Media. The apple had truly not fallen far from the tree.

The newer waves of repression, the familiar but technologically 
improved horrors of war and occupation, likewise the crises of 
capitalism, were all ahead. None would be exactly unexpected and much 
all too familiar. But Marxism in the United States had not survived a 
deeply disappointing twentieth century for nothing.

By the dawn of the new century, to come back to the examples closest 
to myself, a considerable majority of the organizations and 
personalities of those explored in the Encyclopedia of the American 
Left were gone, and even the list of living authors had been thinned. 
The living memories of the 1930s and 40s, the Great Depression, the 
New Deal, the young CIO, the Popular Front, the fight against 
fascism, and the onset of the Cold War­all these were becoming more 
dim. Hardly anyone could remember that feeling of certainty that the 
days of capitalism were numbered.

And yet the ideas banned in the 1950s, amid resurgent consumer 
capitalism and FBI raids, had sprung up in new form to be popularized 
continually in a thousand ways, from music to comic books, in the 
face of a resurgent empire, a resurgent capital, and where vaunted 
tolerance always turns out to be limited. Of course, the ideas 
changed in the process. We are left with no certainties. The 
realities of a collapsing ecosystem are as fearful as the threats of 
nuclear war in the first decade of MR's existence. Still, there are 
lots of prospects in front of us and around the corner. Marxism, 
always unfinished, is going to be a big help in figuring out what 
they are and what to do about them.

.


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