Philosophy and Religion, Part 10

Philosophical Battlefield
This week brings the last of the ten parts of our CU Generic Course
called “Philosophy, Religion, and Revolution”. There will be three
items, of which this is the first. The suggested item for discussion is
the last one: Ron Press’s “New Tools for Marxists”, linked below.


We meet in the UJ Doornfontein Library. The next session will be as
follows: Date: 2 September (Thursday) Time: 17h00 sharp to 18h30 sharp
Venue: The Library, University of Johannesburg , Doornfontein,
Johannesburg (former Technikon Witwatersrand). Entrance on slip road by
the bridge on Siemert Road. Topic: New Tools for Marxists, by Ron Press


The question of the collective human subject has been most concisely
and forcefully expressed in this series by Cyril Smith in the section
of “The Communist Manifesto after 150 Years” called “The Subject of
History”.
The first linked download for this final part is “Postmodernism & Hindu
Nationalism” by the philosopher Meera Nanda [pictured]. This work is
given because it shows how several pathological, anti-human strands of
philosophy can play out in concert, mutually reinforcing and amplifying
each other. In the case of India as shown in this article, these were
Postmodernism, Hindu Nationalism (“Hindutva”), “Vedic Science” and
reactionary feminism.
Time has passed since the CU first began using this text. Five years
ago it was cutting-edge, and it is still useful to South Africans
because the question of rational science, of feminism and of “Congress”
politics and potential successors to “Congress” have meaning for us.
But Postmodernism has receded. It is no longer so sure of itself or so
hegemonic as in the past.
Meera Nanda described her purpose thus:
“This essay is more about the left wing-counterpart of [Yankee]
Hindutva: a set of postmodernist ideas, mostly (but not entirely)
exported from the West, which unintentionally ends up supporting
Hindutva's propaganda regarding Vedic science. Over the last couple of
decades, a set of very fashionable, supposedly "radical" critiques of
modern science have dominated the Western universities. These critical
theories of science go under the label of "postmodernism" or "social
constructivism". These theories see modern science as an essentially
Western, masculine and imperialistic way of acquiring knowledge.
Intellectuals of Indian origin, many of them living and working in the
West, have played a lead role in development of postmodernist critiques
of modern science as a source of colonial "violence" against
non-Western ways of knowing.”
The Indian case is not altogether different to what was, and could
again be, the situation in South Africa, where under President Thabo
Mbeki we had Postmodernism (bourgeois “normality” following the
liberation struggle); pseudo-science around HIV/AIDS (Virodene, African
potato, beetroot et cetera); Africanism; and again, reactionary
feminism.
What is common to all of these aspects, whether in India or in South
Africa, is the evacuation of popular agency and refusal of the mass
Subject of History following the liberation struggle, which in both
cases had promised this above all other things. In India the promise
was “Swaraj” and in South Africa, “Power to the People”.
Independence and national sovereignty were supposed to be inseparable
from mass popular agency. In practice political independence co-existed
with bourgeois dictatorship and neo-colonialism, and these latter
factors trumped and negated mass popular power. The flight from mass
popular agency was a middle-class and bourgeois betrayal of the workers
and the poor.
Revolutionary organs of people’s power were dismantled in each case.
Golden Calves were raised up for worship, in substitution for the
slogans of popular power. The substitutes were the slogans of bourgeois
nationalism and of national mystique.
Postmodernism is the hopeless, degenerate philosophy of the hopeless,
degenerate thing called Imperialism. The fight for full freedom in a
world dominated by Imperialism was unavoidably a fight against
Postmodernism. It is a revolutionary necessity. The purpose of this CU
Generic Course called “Philosophy, Religion, and Revolution” has been
to arm the communists for such battles. Above all what is needed is
devotion to and priority for the human Subject. Power, to the People!
Please download this text:Postmodernism & Hindu Nationalism, 2004,
Nanda (9126 words)
Further reading:Cuba - A Nation Becoming a University, DuRand, MRZine
(2476 words)Khrushchev, 20th CPSU Congress, 1956, Extracts re ‘Short
Course’ (1398 words)New tools for Marxists, 1995, Ron Press (5100 words)



Previous main Communist University posts: Channel [members] Course
Archive Weeks Last Posted SADTU Pol Ed [441] Development, Rural and
Urban 6/10 24 August 2010 CU Africa [230] Marx’s Capital, Volumes 1,
2 & 3 12/33 23 August 2010 CU [2811] Philosophy and Religion 9/10 20
August 2010
Courses completed in 2010 to date: SADTU Pol Ed Lenin’s The State &
Revolution 6 June - July
National Democratic Revolution 12 March - June
Basics 10 January - March SADTU Pol Schools 3-Day School 3 days 2-4
June CU No Woman, No Revolution 10 March - June
Basics 10 January – March
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Posted By DomzaNet to Communist University on 8/27/2010 06:54:00 AM

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