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Draft for Marxist-Humanist Perspectives, 1999-2000
August/September 1999


World crisis and the theoretic void: Taking responsibility for Marxist-Humanism

by The Resident Editorial Board of NEWS & LETTERS

Note: As part of the preparation for our upcoming national gathering, News and Letters Committees publishes the Draft of its Perspectives Thesis each year directly in the pages of NEWS & LETTERS. We urge your participation in our discussion around this Thesis because our age is in such total crisis that no revolutionary organization can allow any separation between theory and practice, workers and intellectuals, "inside" and "ouside," philosophy and organization. We are raising questions and ask you to help in working out the answers.


I. Kosova reveals Achilles heel of the Left

Ten years after the collapse of the state-capitalist regimes that called themselves "Communist" in Eastern Europe, the war over Kosova has brought to the forefront the depth of reorganization needed to concretize a philosophy of liberation for our life and times. The war has exposed new fault lines in world politics, exposed the missing link in the radical movements, and demonstrated anew the need to meet the challenge posed by the self-determination of the Idea of Marxist-Humanism.

The post-war occupation of Kosova by 50,000 NATO troops, 7,000 from the U.S., will be no short-term affair. Officials talk of the troops remaining there for years, even decades. As Carl Bildt, UN Kosova mediator said, "An international military presence to guarantee peace in the Balkans must be seen in the coming decades as something as natural as it was to have troops in divided Germany during the cold war years."

As we pointed out from the start of the crisis, the U.S. intervention in Kosova had nothing to do with aiding the victims of genocide. (1) Since 1991 Serbia murdered hundreds of thousands in Bosnia and thousands more in Kosova, and the U.S. did nothing to stop it. It instead treated Milosevic as an ally for his help in supporting the partition of Bosnia through the Dayton accords. Clinton decided to intervene against Serbia only after Milosevic's murderous attacks against Kosova threatened to make NATO look like a helpless giant. Yet despite the U.S.'s attack on Serbia, what it has never wavered about, even after killing hundreds of Serbian civilians in its imperialist air war, is opposition to Kosova's independence.

No sooner had Serbian troops begun withdrawing from Kosova in late June than the Kosovar Liberation Army (KLA) moved in and set up interim governments in several cities, establishing new schools, community centers and other associations. A kind of self-government sprang up in the aftermath of Serbia's defeat. This led to conflict between the KLA and NATO troops as to who is in control. One report noted, "Western officials here have been startled by the guerrillas' move to take the helm of nascent civil structures being formed in Kosova, and they are uneasy about it." U.S. troops responded by aggressively disarming the KLA.

The speed with which the KLA filled the vacuum left by the departing Serbian army did not come out of thin air. Throughout the 1990s the Kosovars created a second, underground society in direct opposition to Serbia's oppression. Though Milosevic's ethnic cleansing of Kosova was aimed at destroying this, he did not succeed. Even in the refugee camps Kosovars opened up newspapers, internet services, schools, and other forms of communication and development. As they returned to Kosova, they further re-created the nascent political and social structures that had held them together during the years of Serb military rule.

NATO's military occupation of Kosova is actively undermining this by denying the central aim of the Kosovars-independence. As R. Jeffrey Smith of THE WASHINGTON POST put it, "A long held Western objective in Kosova is to drain away the KLA's militant spirit by integrating its leadership into more moderate ethnic Albanian political structures. The strategy is meant in turn to make the KLA more vulnerable to Western pressures and undermine the group's demand for independence from Serbia." Whether or not Serbia will eventually be able to assert sovereignty over Kosova, NATO's protectorate over it will stifle any move for real independence.

Meanwhile, Serbia's military defeat has enabled new opposition to arise in Serbia. Serbia's defeat resulted not only from NATO's air war, but also from the resurgence of the KLA which put thousands of fighters in the field despite a U.S.-imposed arms embargo. This had a remarkable effect on Serbian nerves. Whereas during the war few in Serbia spoke out against Milosevic, large rallies now demand his dismissal. For the first time, many Serbs are speaking out openly against ethnic cleansing.

Regardless of whether or not Milosevic retains power, it remains to be seen whether these voices of opposition will fully come to grips with Serbia's responsibility for genocide in Kosova and in Bosnia-and centrally its horrific responsibility for the mass rapes of tens of thousands of women. What is already clear, however, is that any opposition in Serbia that tries to go beyond the bounds of bourgeois politics will face the presence of 50,000 NATO troops across the border.

The U.S. intervention in Kosova has also produced new intra-capitalist rivalries. Though West Europe seemed willing to play second fiddle to the U.S. during the war, as soon as it ended the European Union announced plans to form its own military force to free itself from military dependence on the U.S. This may turn out to be a quixotic move, given the time and expense that would be needed for West Europe to catch up to U.S. military firepower. Yet it is a sign of the unease that exists just beneath the surface about the extent of U.S. power.

This disquiet is far more glaring when it comes to relations with Russia and China. Russia's quarrel with NATO over the stationing of its troops in Kosova was followed by such ominous signs as holding its largest military exercise since the end of the Cold War. Russia also announced in May that it is developing a new generation of low-yield, pinpoint nuclear weapons. This is part of Russia's adoption of a policy of first-use of nuclear weapons, as a way to offset its military weakness.

Russia may appear to be in no position to seriously threaten the U.S., given its weak economy. Indeed, at the very moment Russia was objecting to U.S. actions in the Balkans, Yeltsin came to Clinton hat in hand to ask for another round of IMF loans. Yet Yeltsin is trying to compensate for Russia's economic weakness by asserting himself on the political front. This was seen in July when he invited Syria's Assad to Moscow, as part of an effort to breathe new life into its relations with the Arab world, though Clinton has the upper hand there.

Most important of all is Russia's strengthening ties with China. The bombing of China's embassy in Belgrade infuriated China and led it to freeze U.S.-China relations. Faced with ever-present worker and peasant revolts-such as the massive peasant revolt in January in Dalin in Hunan Province-China's rulers are playing the nationalist card to divert attention from its internal crises. Though Clinton boasted last year about a new "strategic partnership" with China, that phrase is now used by China's rulers to refer to its ties with Russia, which it sees as a way to counterbalance U.S. power.

Clearly numerous flashpoints for future conflicts and wars abound in our nuclearly armed state-capitalist world, from relations between the major powers to those between regional ones like India and Pakistan over Kashmir where full-scale war can break out at any time. The notion that the war over Kosova forebodes some "new era" defined by "humanitarian interventions" is an empty illusion.

This is seen not only in the U.S.'s refusal to support independence for Kosova or the Kurds, but in its silence about crises in Africa. In Congo, the civil war this year displaced 500,000 from their homes, 200,000 of whom have fled the country. In Angola, 1.2 million of its 13 million people have been displaced since the renewal of its civil war. In Sudan, tens of thousands of the Massaleit people have been killed this year in a genocidal campaign carried out by the government. Just as the West earlier stood by and did nothing while 800,000 were slaughtered in Rwanda, so none of these crises have the ear of our "humanitarian" interventionists.

When it comes to Kosova, however, the prize for short-mindedness belongs to the Left. Its disarray is seen in how its opposition to the war was virtually indistinguishable from that of some rightists who also opposed the bombing of Serbia.

The Left's response reveals all that is wrong with those who fail to see the importance of a philosophy of liberation. The Left focused so much attention on opposing the U.S. bombing of Serbia that it failed to take a firm stand in support of the Kosovars. This was true not just of small left groups, but of major intellectuals like Noam Chomsky and organizations like the Black Radical Congress. Even those who paid lip service to the Kosovars as victims refused to support the right of the KLA to obtain arms-though this effectively meant allowing Milosevic to slaughter the Kosovars.

When the Left cannot even extend support to those facing genocide, it has forsaken its ability to say anything meaningful about human liberation.

What we are seeing today is that the economic, political, and military reach of the U.S. is so overwhelming that there is a tendency to accept anything as an alternative to it, no matter how narrow or reactionary it may be. Indeed, the U.S. drive for single world mastery is so overwhelming that it is viewed as "enemy number one." In case the limitations of that are not evident, one need only recall Mao's notion of "Russia as enemy number one." He used it to justify allying with anyone, no matter how reactionary, so long as it suited his agenda of opposing Russia. A not dissimilar situation prevails today when it comes to the U.S. Some are willing to make apologies for any power which opposes it, even if it is a neo-fascist state like Serbia. Meanwhile, what drops from sight are the two worlds within each country, the forces of liberation which can uproot capitalism.

Perhaps no event since the Hitler-Stalin Pact of 1939 has shown how total is the ideological pollution in the Left. Stalin's 1939 pact with Hitler gave the green light to World War II. The Left which followed Stalin turned away from the anti-fascist struggle until Hitler invaded Russia in 1941. In contrast, Raya Dunayevskaya responded to the crisis in thought revealed by 1939 by embarking on the labor that led to the theory of state-capitalism and ultimately the philosophy of Marxist-Humanism.

Theory becomes truly practical when objective crises show a philosophy of liberation to be a matter of concrete urgency. Such a situation faces us today.

We have no illusions about the hypocrisy which guides U.S. actions in Kosova or anywhere. But we do not allow opposition to U.S. imperialism to stop us from recognizing that the way to oppose the forces of global counter-revolution is to solidarize with those struggling against genocide. What allowed us to project our distinctive position in support of Kosova was not just that we held to certain political conclusions, but that we approached the events from the standpoint of the Marxist-Humanist philosophy of liberation. This philosophy, developed over half a century, singled out the forces of revolution not just as force, but as Reason-that is, as subjects of liberation reaching for a philosophy of liberation.

The war in Kosova was not only about the force of arms, it was also part of a struggle for the minds of humanity. This was seen at a NATO summit held right before the war, which formalized the inclusion of Poland, Hungary, and the Czech Republic into NATO. Polish Foreign Minister Bronislaw Geremek and others declared that NATO's expansion "validated the deeds of those who revolted against Soviet domination in the Budapest uprising of 1956, the Prague Spring of 1968, and the Solidarity movement that was born in Gdansk, Poland" in 1980.

This totally distorts history. The Hungarian Revolution of 1956 which pried Marx's humanist essays of 1844 from the archives, the Prague Spring of 1968 with its slogan "Socialism with a human face," and the Polish Solidarity movement of 1980-81 which projected a concept of workers' control of production are reduced to a straight line of march to Western capitalism. The rulers are trying to erase from memory the Reason of the East European masses who aspired for a new humanism opposed to both private and state-capitalism, and so convince humanity that it has no choice but to place its destiny in the hands of state powers like the U.S.

What makes this such a serious problem today is that for so many the idea of socialism has been discredited. It means that emerging struggles do not speak in the language of revolution that we have been accustomed to hearing in earlier struggles. This does not mean the quest for a new way of life has been stilled. It means that this quest is not easily voiced and worked out in the absence of a clear anti-capitalist alternative.

It is imperative that revolutionaries face the reorganization demanded by this situation, otherwise they will be unable to impact ongoing events. To make explicit the striving for a different future which is implicit in today's struggles, it is necessary to meet them with a philosophy which itself embodies the Reason which has inhered in the freedom movements of our time. Such a philosophy is Marxist-Humanism.

It is not just that the retrogressive times in which we live show a "need" for philosophy. It is that without such a philosophy of liberation it is impossible to penetrate beneath the appearance of political crises and discern the aspirations of the actual human forces of opposition who are trying to be heard, but whose voice is being subsumed by reigning ideologies and crises. Marxist-Humanism is as integral to the historic development of the past half century as the revolutionary developments created by the masses. Bringing this body of ideas to bear upon reality is not a matter of applying certain concepts to reality, but rather of elucidating from reality the nodal points of forward movement embedded within it.

This is needed, not only for approaching events in the Balkans, but for each objective and subjective crisis which confronts us here at home.

II. New battles on the homefront

The oppression of the Kosovars is rooted in the racist attitudes that characterize not just the Balkans but this entire stage of globalized capitalism. Nowhere is that racism spelled out more sharply than in the conditions confronting Black America. Its lethal forms are measured in everything from the rates of young Black male homicides and Black infant mortality, to the level of Black unemployment in urban centers and the staggering percentage of Black and Brown youth in prison.

While most of this "everyday" racism rarely rates national headlines, except when it explodes into a 1992 Los Angeles rebellion, it cannot be separated from the acute form it has taken this year with the growth of deadly home-grown fascism-as seen in the shooting spree in the Chicago area by Benjamin Smith, who celebrated the Fourth of July by gunning down Jews, Blacks and Asians, killing two and wounding nine in the name of a "racial holy war" before he killed himself. Nothing more proves that the Littleton, Colorado massacre-carried out by two other well-off, alienated suburban teenagers to celebrate Hitler's birthday and that likewise ended in their suicide-was no aberration. The news that two brothers in California had been charged with a spate of synagogue burnings and the murder of two gay men there gives a sense both of how extensive is this home-grown fascism and how closely it identifies itself with what transpired in Kosova as seen in the fliers left after the synagogue burnings that blamed a "Jew world order" for the war in Kosova.

The proliferation of hate groups like the World Church of the Creator, to which Smith belonged, is seen in over 250 media-savy neo-Nazi groups now recruiting on the Internet. Many of these groups are aiming at well-to-do, upper-to-middle-class suburban youths. As one older Black worker told N&L,"Never before has the alienation been so extreme that young people like these killers, who seem to have everything, are willing to even give their own lives to preserve the status quo."

This is not the only sign of the decaying foundations upon which U.S. capitalism is driving for single world mastery. Clinton's much-touted "poverty tour" in July reveals the alienation that Marx showed defines relations in capitalism, which denies humanity its human-ness by perversely turning all relations into relations between things. The very language used on his trip shows how everything is being subjected to the logic of capital.

Those barely eking out an existence in Appalachia, the Mississippi Delta, the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation or an urban ghetto in California, were all defined as mere "human capital" while the excessively depressed sites were seen as "responsible markets" and sources of cheap wage labor. In Watts, where the unemployment rate is three times the national average, we were told that such pockets of poverty offer a great untapped market that will keep the economy growing without inflation if Clinton can just convince Congress to approve $1 million in Federal tax incentives to encourage $5 billion in private investment.

As against such free market fantasies, the areas Clinton visited all have a rich revolutionary history. All of them have been and remain integral to the development of Marxist-Humanism. The most powerful of these historic struggles was the coal miners' general strike that erupted 50 years ago. It was the first strike against automation, and broke out where it was first introduced into the labor process, in the coal fields of West Virginia and Kentucky-the very area Clinton just visited, evidently completely unaware of its revolutionary history. What brings this anniversary front and center is that in the 1949-50 strike workers raised a new and profound question that remains to be worked out today.

Whereas the question on workers' minds before the strike concerned the fruits of one's labor, which translated into wages and benefits in a union contract, in 1949-50 the workers opposed automation in the form of the continuous miner, which they called "a man killer." In going out on wildcat strike against the company and union, the strikers posed the question of "what kind of labor should man do?" The roots of Marxist-Humanism are found in the way in which Raya Dunayevskaya saw that question as making concrete for our age Marx 's vision of ending the division between mental and manual labor, which he called the hallmark of capitalist alienation. (2)

Such a search for a different future has characterized our era's struggles. In the 1970s, the Native American movement awakened the whole world. It has not ended, as seen in the protest that took place a week before Clinton's tour of Pine Ridge, when 2,000 Oglala Sioux marched from there to Whiteclay, Neb. to protest treaty violations and unsolved slayings. Clinton said nothing of this in his offer of tax credits and loans to address its 85% unemployment rate.

In the 1970s, Shainape Shcapwe, an Oglala Sioux woman resident of Pine Ridge, wrote about the attempt of the Bureau of Indian Affairs to develop small factories on the reservations and how workers organized a strike against conditions in them. The movement's most important accomplishment, she said, was "not that we found ways to make the white man listen to us, but that we created a new awareness of our own strength and ability." What the workers most needed to still work out, she said, was "Where do we go now?" In her effort to answer that, she opposed others in the Native American movement who rejected Marxism and argued that alienation was not within their culture. She pointed to the sexism within the movement and called it one of the deepest forms of alienation yet to be overcome.

Dunayevskaya's concept of "woman as force and Reason of revolution," she wrote, gave her a direction not only to dig into Marx's ETHNOLOGICAL NOTEBOOKS to see the distinctiveness of Marx's Marxism, but also into Marxist-Humanism as a philosophy that "speaks to what we really want, especially what we want after the revolution."(3)

This reaching for the future is seen in a different way with young Black women workers in the Mississippi Delta who have been organizing unions in the catfish industry where they had been told none were possible. Yet they say the changes that are needed "go deeper" than unionism.

Describing a discussion held at a recent conference to plan for a workers' school, one Black woman activist said, "We made a lot of changes [since the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s] but the chains aren't just around the ankles. There are mental chains, and that's what needs breaking...People want this society to change; they want the workplace to change, but they don't know how to go about it. Unionism is an important part of making changes and people see it needs to be improved and the political structure needs to be changed... But to change our society, not just as a Black race, but as a whole, we need to look more at changing the mind and not stop at changing the unions."

There is no question that the most abysmal form of the alienation characterizing capitalism today is found in the prison system. With the warehousing of a whole generation on lock-down, the new millennium will arrive with the prison walls cracking at maximum capacity. The huge growth in the number of women prisoners and the degradation they are subjected to has led to a new movement of women in the "free world" demanding that these conditions be changed.

A whole new economy has grown out of the "celling" of America, a prison-industrial complex in which the prison population, Black, Brown and white, grinds out production for multi-million dollar corporations looking for ever cheaper and cheaper labor. It is no accident that Huntsville Walls Unit in Texas, where labor is exploited with no pay to the convict, has been named by prisoners "the Lone Star State's Death Factory," where "state murders are cranked out in assembly line fashion." It easily makes George Bush Jr., as governor of a state whose press releases proudly proclaim it to be "the largest prison system in the free world," the greatest serial killer in U.S. history. What is integral to such a vicious system is the attempt to dehumanize those whom this society puts in chains.

What is arising against this attempt to destroy the human spirit is a quest for a new humanism. It is proved by two events we have experienced over the past year. One is our pamphlet VOICES FROM WITHIN THE PRISON WALLS, written by a prisoner who elicited our help in achieving a back-and-forth with hundreds of prisoners. The other is the torrent of responses we have received to it, in which prisoners not only describe the oppressive conditions but raise profound questions of philosophy and politics, history and current events, of the human condition as a whole. Here are but two of the responses:

One Black prisoner, commenting on our critique of the Left for its failure to respond to genocide in Kosova, quotes one of Dunayevskaya's writings on the need "for the Left to face itself...None of the mass revolts have suffered either from lack of sacrifice by both masses and leaders. Nevertheless, what the past two decades have revealed is a failure to meet the challenge from the masses. What was demanded was a totally new relationship of theory to practice which was grounded in the new movement from practice that was itself a form of theory." He sees in this the need "to reach out to others not simply on prison issues but issues of concern to all, where prison becomes the U.S. (in)justice system's application of the 'Final Solution.' We have been involved in a Civil War for several decades. The parties of this class war are the poor, people of color, women, lesbian and gay rights activists, and humanists. Non-conformity results in imprisonment. It is important that prisoners, besides their own personal struggles inside the gulags, be involved with the struggle to make revolution, a truly universal concept which promulgates viable change."

Another prisoner writes of the impact on him of the recent articles in N&L on Marx and Hegel: "What I am fascinated by-and terrified by-is Marx's connection between the bourgeois perception of a commodity and theology. The things we produce now appear to define who we are and how we relate to one another. The intellectual may well be deceived in that s/he is conditioned to the theology of the commodity, but the worker is equally deceived in the belief that s/he is engaged in 'freely associated' labor...I agree with Dunayevskaya that the 'proletarian' does indeed 'grasp the truth of the present'-I just think we are afraid of it."

The outpouring we have experienced from the deepest of "the voices from below" shows that an ongoing relationship between a revolutionary body of ideas and the subjects of revolt can elicit and help develop the most revolutionary force of all-the mind of the oppressed. The challenge is to develop such an active relationship between philosophy and revolution in all emerging struggles.

One of the most vibrant of these is the movement against police abuse, which was galvanized by the murders of Amadou Diallo in New York, Tyisha Miller in Riverside, and LaTanya Haggerty and Robert Russ in Chicago. The movement is not only national but multiethnic and crisscrosses with solidarity with prisoners, the struggles against the death penalty, and the effort to free Mumia Abu-Jamal. The intermerging of these movements brings out the need to wage the struggle on the level of changing the whole of society, and shows the todayness of the category of Black Masses as Vanguard of the American revolution.

To fully confront what is involved in working out the needed relationship between a revolutionary body of ideas and the subjects of revolt, we need to take a closer look at the nature of the present historic moment ten years after the collapse of the state-capitalist regimes which called themselves "Communist" in Eastern Europe.

III. The untrodden path: Organizational responsibility for Marx's philosophy of revolution

A. Ten years after the collapse of 'Communism'

The tenth anniversary of the collapse of the state-capitalist regimes that called themselves "Communist" in East Europe is an important moment to reflect on the meaning of that event for today. The speed with which the "Communist" regimes collapsed in 1989 was surely unexpected. Yet it is not as if it came out of thin air. It was preceded by some 40 years of mass struggles. This included the East German revolt of 1953, the Vorkuta labor camp uprising in Russia in 1953, the Hungarian Revolution of 1956, the Prague Spring of 1968, and the workers' revolts in Poland in 1970 and 1976.

1980 marked a new stage in this long history of revolt. That was when a new kind of trade union spontaneously arose in Poland-Solidarnosc. With over 10 million members, Solidarnosc brought together virtually all of Poland's production workers with farmers, intellectuals and women's and community groups in a new kind of workers' organization which directly challenged the power of the Communist Party.

Faced with this, the Polish government declared martial law in 1981 and drove Solidarnosc underground. But it failed to crush it. After Solidarnosc launched two major strike waves in 1988, Poland's rulers realized that they had little choice but to make a deal with it. In a series of roundtable talks that began in early 1989, the government and the leaders of Solidarnosc worked out an arrangement which led not to the revolutionary uprooting demanded by so many in 1980, but rather to the dismantling of the regime along the lines of "free market" capitalism and parliamentary bourgeois democracy. What brought about this remarkable transformation into opposite?

The question is not only important for understanding what happened in Poland, for the roundtable talks there set the stage for events that soon followed in the rest of East Europe. After a series of mass demonstrations swept through East Europe in the Fall of 1989, and Russia announced that it would not intervene militarily to support the regimes, the rulers realized that they had little choice but to allow the opposition to come to power. Unlike China's rulers, who crushed the Tiananmen revolt and relied on its army to strengthen single-party rule while pursuing economic "modernization," East Europe's rulers were forced to surrender their monopoly on political power. In turn, the opposition leaders there agreed to limit themselves to goals achievable within the framework of the existing class structures. Those who argued for a more radical transformation were quickly marginalized.

This had a global impact. It set the stage for events in South Africa where the apartheid rulers were forced to strike a deal with Mandela, in which they surrendered political power in exchange for the African National Congress' dismantling of the mass movement.

The surprise of 1989 was not how fast the regimes collapsed, but how quickly their collapse led to the ideological resurgence of Western capitalism. What predominated was a return of the old. Neoliberalism in economics and bourgeois democracy and narrow nationalism in politics predominated everywhere.

This was all the more striking given the decrepit state of Western capitalism which had become especially evident with the 1974-75 world recession. It disclosed a deep, structural crisis and proved that the post-World War II economic "boom" was over. But the 1974-75 global recession crisis did not affect only Western capital; it also impacted Russia and East Europe. Whereas Western capital embarked on a massive restructuring after 1974-75 which included everything from new attacks on labor to the use of new high-tech technologies to promoting the "free" movement of capital across borders, the East European regimes found themselves falling further behind. By the late 1980s, the ruling cliques in Russia and East Europe realized their only hope for survival lay in some sort of accommodation with Western capitalism.

As the economic crisis in East Asia in 1997 showed, capitalism has yet to extract itself from the problems revealed by the 1974-75 recession. According to a recent UN report, vast income inequities and lack of medical facilities for billions around the world have become more acute over the past decade. It is surely not any ability to resolve its economic problems which explains the ideological resurgence of Western capitalism. Nor can its resurgence be due to lack of creativity on the part of mass movements in East Europe and elsewhere. So what does explain it?

The fundamental reason is that the principles of Marx's humanism were not explicitly restated and projected through ongoing dialogue between revolutionaries and the movements from practice. Stalinism had clearly discredited the very idea of socialism by the 1980s. Yet the anti-Stalinist Left did not project an alternative concept of socialism that could be seized by the minds of the masses. This was already evident by 1981, when the intellectuals advising Poland's Solidarnosc promoted the notion of a "self-limiting revolution." Instead of fulfilling their historic responsibility of meeting the mass movement with a restatement of Marx's philosophy of revolution, they satisfied themselves with proposing partial reforms. By 1989, this abdication of responsibility for articulating any radical alternative enabled all the old ideas, like "free market capitalism," to rush in and fill the void.

The events of 1989 underlined the importance of what Dunayevskaya called several years earlier the "untrodden path" in the revolutionary movement -the unity of philosophy and organization. It is not that what was needed was "leadership" by some "vanguard." Rather, the problem, as she wrote in 1986, is that none "took organizational responsibility for Marx's philosophy, not just of revolution 'in general,' but specifically the question of what happens after the overthrow of capitalism." (4)

Since 1989, an array of new freedom movements have arisen. Abroad, we have seen the Zapatista revolt in Chiapas and the massive labor protests in West Europe in 1995-97. At home, we have seen the Los Angeles rebellion of 1992, a new generation of Black women worker-organizers in the Mississippi Delta, and a nationwide movement in defense of political prisoners. These struggles are in search of a concept of a new society which can help them realize the revolutionary strivings contained in the mind of the oppressed. The question is, will revolutionaries respond to this challenge, or will they continue to evade organizational responsibility for Marx's philosophy of "revolution in permanence"?

B. The new moments of Marx and Marxist-Humanism

In the decade since the events of 1989, new developments have arisen not only from practice, but also from theory. This is seen in new discussions and debates on Marx's work, despite the prevailing ideological notion that Marxism is dead.(5)

As we noted last year about the conferences and discussions on the 150th anniversary of Marx's COMMUNIST MANIFESTO, many are being hit with a shock of recognition concerning the relevance of Marx for understanding our globalized capitalist world. Yet while there is an emerging sense of the need to return to Marx to grasp globalized capitalism, few are projecting Marx's concept of the alternative to it. Even those who recognize the importance of restating Marx's concept of socialism act as if the task can be left to spontaneous action, as if theoreticians do not have a crucial role to play in speaking to what upsurges from below.

In response, this year we held a nationwide series of classes on "The Dialectic of Marx's CAPITAL and Today's Global Crises." In them we explored CAPITAL in light of its underlying Hegelian foundations by including as a core reading Dunayevskaya's "Rough Notes on Hegel's SCIENCE OF LOGIC ," which will appear in a new forthcoming collection of her writings on dialectical philosophy, "The Power of Negativity." Studying CAPITAL in light of Hegel's LOGIC is crucial not only for grasping the logic of capital. It is also crucial for projecting its alternative. The Hegelian dialectic of negativity signifies not just the destruction of the old, but the creation of the new through the "negation of the negation." Hegel's concept of "absolute negativity," Marxist-Humanism holds, contains the philosophic expression of the struggle for total freedom. Our study of Marx's CAPITAL and the "Rough Notes on Hegel's SCIENCE OF LOGIC " was part of an effort to fill the void in the restatement of Marx's concept of a new society.

One part of CAPITAL which we focused on, and which speaks directly to our age, is its concluding section on "the absolute general law of capitalist accumulation." As Dunayevskaya argued from as early as her 1953 "Letters on Hegel's Absolutes," the "philosophic moment" for the entire development of Marxist-Humanism, Marx's chapter on "the absolute general law of capitalist accumulation" is based on Hegel's Absolute Idea. In a letter of May 12, 1953, she said that just as the Absolute Idea in Hegel's SCIENCE OF LOGIC contains "the highest contradiction within itself," Marx showed that the logic of capitalist production contains an internal, irreconcilable, absolute contradiction-the accumulation of capital at one pole and the emergence of "new passions and new forces" striving to uproot it at the other.

Yet what is distinctive about Dunayevskaya is that she did not stop by pointing out the connection between Hegel's Absolute Idea and Marx's accumulation of capital. That became for her a new beginning as it signaled the need to go even deeper into the dialectic by venturing into the work intimated at the end of the LOGIC, the PHILOSOPHY OF MIND. In that work Hegel projects his concept of full-blown liberty which he calls "individualism which lets nothing interfere with its universalism."

Marx had broken off his commentary on the PHILOSOPHY OF MIND with ¶384 in his 1844 Manuscripts. Without being conscious of this at the time, Dunayevskaya b egan her commentary on the PHILOSOPHY OF MIND with ¶385. This also led to her philosophic break from post-Marx Marxism, as no prior Marxist-whether Lenin, Lukacs or her then-colleague and co-founder of the Johnson-Forest Tendency, C.L.R. James-had recognized the importance of Hegel's PHILOSOPHY OF MIND. In exploring the PHILOSOPHY OF MIND in a letter of May 20, 1953, Dunayevskaya achieved continuity with Marx's Marxism in light of the realities of our age.

Marxist-Humanism's contribution centers on this movement from the LOGIC to the PHILOSOPHY OF MIND. For it poses the challenge of meeting the forces of revolt arising against the accumulation of capital with a full-fledged notion of freedom. As Dunayevskaya said in a 1958 letter to Herbert Marcuse which will appear in "The Power of Negativity," our task is to "make the abolition of the division of mental and manual labor as concrete for our day as Marx had made 'the absolute general law' of capitalism concrete for the movement of 'the new passions and new forces' for the establishment of the new society."

To work this out for today, we need a closer look at what Marx meant by a new kind of freely associated labor. He addressed this in his 1875 Critique of the Gotha Program: "In a higher phase of communist society, after the enslaving subordination of individuals under the division of labor, and therewith also the antithesis between mental and manual labor, has vanished; after labor, from a mere means of life, has itself become the prime necessity of life; after the productive forces have also increased with the all-round development of the individual, and all the springs of cooperative wealth flow more abundantly-only then can the narrow horizon of bourgeois right be fully left behind and society inscribe on its banner: from each according to his ability, to each according to his needs!"

This vision took on new concreteness in the post-World War II era, when workers battling automated production posed such questions as "what kind of labor should man perform?" As we noted earlier, this was central to the 1949-50 miners' general strike where workers focused not only on the distribution of the products of labor but on conditions of labor. Dunayevskaya drew from this that the question of "what kind of labor" had to be worked out in the very course of the freedom struggles in order to realize the "quest for universality."

Creating a new kind of non-alienating labor, however, is not only a class question. It is inseparable from the question raised by the women's liberation movement of how to uproot alienated man/woman relations. The women's movement's critique of the family and man/woman relations raises the issue of how to develop non-alienating forms of social relations that break down the division between thinking and doing. The same is true of the struggle of the Black masses against racism which has raised the question of consciousness of self, of gaining a mind of one's own, in the fight against the ultimate thingification of human relations-racism. The quest for new, non-alienating human relations is likewise central to youth's struggle against parental authority which Marx called a "cruel substitute for all the submissiveness and dependency people in bourgeois society acquiesce in, willingly or unwillingly.'"(6)

Abolishing capitalism clearly involves far more than changing property relations, deeds of ownership, or eliminating the personifications of capital-the capitalists and bureaucrats. The abolition of capital requires the creation of new social relations which dispense with the division between mental and manual labor.

The questions and demands posed by the multiple forces of revolt is where the work of projecting an alternative to capitalism begins. But it is not where it ends. For these forces are themselves in need of a philosophy of revolution rooted in the dialectic of negativity. Recognition of that is what drove Dunayevskaya to dig into the Hegelian dialectic as early as 1949, during the miners' general strike. Her studies on dialectics in that period, some of which will appear in "The Power of Negativity," led her to explore Hegel's Absolute Idea and Absolute Mind in 1953. The philosophic breakthrough of 1953 led to the projection of a new concept of organization rooted in a unity between forces of liberation and a philosophy of liberation.

The tragedy of our times is that this new unity has yet to be realized. In the post-World War II era many revolutionaries tailended one or another form of state exploitation calling itself "socialist," cutting themselves off from the "new passions and new forces" as well as from recognition of the need to restate Marx's vision of a new society. Their limitations, however, are rather easy to see. No less important are those who did oppose the state-capitalist regimes on revolutionary grounds and who did try to root themselves in the new passions and new forces-but who fell down by saddling the spontaneous struggles with the responsibility for spelling out Marx's vision of a new society. This was the case with tendencies ranging from the Council Communists to anarchists to followers of C.L.R. James. None took organizational responsibility for projecting philosophy as a force of revolution, specifically, one rooted in a restatement of the dialectic of absolute negativity for our life and times.

C. From LOGIC to MIND: Concretizing absolute negativity as new beginning

We do not view ourselves as outside this problem. For we were so excited by the mass subjectivities that arose in the post-World War II era that we were hardly as concrete about taking organizational responsibility for Marxist-Humanism's philosophic contributions. Dunayevskaya spoke to this in a speech given to News and Letters Committees in 1976, entitled "Our Original Contribution to the Dialectic of the Absolute Idea as New Beginning: In Theory, and Leadership, and Practice":

Whether we take our very founders, Marx and Lenin, or any of the Hegelian Marxists: Lukacs when he was at his best, Marcuse when he was at his best, Adorno when he was at his best, the East Europeans when they were at their best-in an actual revolution-NO ONE, no one, had formulated or even given us any indication that if you are going to break your head over [Hegel's] Absolute Idea, IT WOULD BE AS NEW BEGINNING. THAT'S OUR ORIGINAL CONTRIBUTION. That's our original contribution. It isn't only that we did this great thing by saying Absolute isn't absolute in the ordinary sense of the word-it's the unity of theory and practice; Absolute isn't absolute in the bourgeois sense of the word-it's the question of the unity of the material and the ideal. But who ever said Absolute was a new beginning? None but us. And if we don't understand that original contribution-THAT WE HAVE TO BEGIN WITH THE TOTALITY-then we won't know what a new beginning is. A new beginning could just be that we discovered the four forces of revolution. We're certainly very proud of that-but that isn't all we're saying. In fact, I would say that if there's anything we do understand, it's the movement from practice. We certainly have that embedded in our being. We DO understand that part of the Absolute. We do not understand the other part, Absolute Idea as second negativity. And until we do understand it, we will not be able to project.

This stress on working out Absolute Negativity as New Beginning, which is central to Dunayevskaya's PHILOSOPHY AND REVOLUTION, was at the heart of all she developed from then to the end of her life. It remains our fundamental challenge. New forces of revolt clearly will arise. But what is not clear is whether the IDEA of SECOND negativity-which signifies not just the negation of the old but the creation of the new-will be projected anew. For this reason, this year we took the step of publishing in four issues of our newspaper the "Rough Notes on Hegel's SCIENCE OF LOGIC." It is also why we put together "The Power of Negativity." We aim to assume responsibility not just for the forms of struggle and consciousness which comes from below, but for the projection of the idea of absolute negativity itself.

As Dunayevskaya put it in ROSA LUXEMBURG, WOMEN'S LIBERATION AND MARX'S PHILOSOPHY OF REVOLUTION, "Absolute negativity manifests its pivotal role in the Idea precisely because it is both totality (summation) and new beginning, which each generation must first work out for itself....It is not a question only of meeting the challenge from practice, but of being able to meet the challenge from the self-determination of the Idea, and of deepening theory to the point where it reaches Marx's concept of 'revolution in permanence.'" (p. 194-5)

This was the point of departure for her work on "The Dialectics of Organization and Philosophy" in 1986-87. Though her work on this was left unfinished at the time of her death in 1987, she left important indications of where she was headed in a series of writings in which she returned with new eyes to her 1953 Letters on Hegel's Absolutes. What became newly concrete was the way the 1953 Letters moved from the Absolute Idea in Hegel's LOGIC to Hegel's PHILOSOPHY OF MIND. She now viewed this movement in terms of the challenges facing revolutionary organization itself. (7)

Working out the organizational ramifications of the 1953 Letters for today requires recognizing that the mind of the oppressed which arises from spontaneous mass struggles is not the same as the full-fledged vision of liberation which flows from a revolutionary body of ideas. This does not mean that working out the dialectics of organization frees one from responsibility for working out new relations between philosophy and the movements from practice that are themselves a form of theory. Quite the contrary. As Dunayevskaya put it in 1986, "Let us not forget that a form of theory is not yet philosophy. Rather, it is the challenge to the theoretician to end the one-sidedness of theory, as practice is challenged to end its one-sidedness so that theory and practice can create a new unity, the new relationship of practice to theory in order finally to reach the realization of philosophy."

"In a word we must face what we consider the burning question of today-ORGANIZATION AS INSEPARABLE FROM THE IDEA, i.e., Marx's philosophy of revolution vs. the visage of Hitler and the ongoing reality of Reaganism."(8)

IV. Philosophic-Political-Organizational Tasks

Taken together with Marxist-Humanism's major works, the projection of the new collection "The Power of Negativity," for which we are now seeking a publisher, creates an opening for making the dialectic of negativity central in all our work. Part I of "The Power of Negativity" contains the 1953 Letters as well as an important commentary on it. Part II contains summaries of Hegel's major works as well as letters to Herbert Marcuse who asked "why do you need the Absolute Idea to express the subjectivity of self-liberation." Part III contains lectures and essays on dialectical philosophy and forces of revolt, especially the Black dimension. Part IV contains studies of the Hegel-Marx relation, a critique of Lukacs, and a speech to the Hegel Society of America on "Hegel's Absolutes as New Beginning." Part V contains essays on the relation of dialectics to women's liberation and youth as well as on dialectics of organization.

In focusing on "The Power of Negativity," this Plenum needs to demonstrate that the philosophy of Marxist-Humanism can become the energizing principle of outreach, action and elicitation. As part of our follow-through from our CAPITAL classes, we propose issuing a pamphlet on Marx's value theory, to explore today's economic reality and ongoing debates on the relevance of Marx. We also plan to issue a pamphlet on Queer Theory, as part of our work on the subjectivity of sexuality. We also aim to complete the work on the Marxist-Humanist Statement on the Black Dimension, "Reason, Rebellion, and Revolution." These new publications are part of our effort to deepen our dialogue and activity with forces of revolt.

This year we also made important steps in participating in the battle of ideas, as seen in Marxist-Humanists contributing to a new book on Frantz Fanon, a book of Marx's writings on suicide, and to ongoing debates on dialectics of organization and value theory in Left journals. Furthering such battle of ideas in NEWS & LETTERS newspaper, in which ideas are developed inseparable from voices from below and analyses of ongoing world events, remains an ongoing challenge. As part of furthering our organizational growth and outreach, we wish to undertake a major subscription drive this year as follow-through from the modest beginnings we made this year in tying such a drive to projection of VOICES FROM WITHIN THE PRISON WALLS. This will be the core of our work around meeting our financial responsibilities, for which we will need an additional $45,000 sustaining fund for the continuance of N&L.

We will also have to ensure that the major philosophic works of Marxist-Humanism remain in print. We have obtained a new edition of MARXISM AND FREEDOM, and we will now have to obtain one of PHILOSOPHY AND REVOLUTION. We have also achieved a new step in the internationalization of Marxist-Humanism this year with the Chinese edition of MARXISM AND FREEDOM and German edition of ROSA LUXEMBURG, WOMEN'S LIBERATION AND MARX'S PHILOSOPHY OF REVOLUTION, as well as with the new Marxist-Humanist organization and journal in England, HOBGOBLIN.

Of foremost importance is our responsibility for the Archives of Marxist-Humanism. At a moment when the rulers are trying to erase the very memory of humanity's effort to transcend the horizons of capitalism, projecting the Idea of freedom embodied in the historic-philosophic development of Marxist-Humanism becomes the way to develop the revolutionary potential of the mind of the oppressed. Nothing short of that will put us on the path of dialectics of organization.

NOTES

1. See our analyses of Kosova in the April, May, June and July issues of NEWS & LETTERS, as well as BOSNIA-HERZEGOVINA: ACHILLES HEEL OF WESTERN 'CIVILIZATION' (Chicago: News and Letters, 1997). [back]

2. For Dunayevskaya's participation in the 1949-50 strike and how it helped lead to Marxist-Humanism, see THE COAL MINERS' GENERAL STRIKE OF 1949-50 AND THE BIRTH OF MARXIST-HUMANISM IN THE U.S. (Chicago: News and Letters, 1984). [back]

3. BLACK, BROWN AND RED (Detroit: News and Letters, 1972); see also Shainape Shcapwe'S column in the December 1985 NEWS & LETTERS. [back]

4. "Marx's New Moments and Those of Our Age," reprinted in NEWS & LETTERS, October 1998. [back]

5. For these discussions, see our bulletin, ON THE 150TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE 'COMMUNIST MANIFESTO' (Chicago: News and Letters, 1998). [back]

6. This comment is from Marx's 1845 essay "Peuchet on Suicide," which has recently been published along with an Introduction by Kevin Anderson in MARX ON SUICIDE (Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1999). [back]

7. Dunayevskaya's work in progress on "Dialectics of Organization and Philosophy" can be found in Vol. 13 of SUPPLEMENT TO THE RAYA DUNAYEVSKAYA COLLECTION. For her return to Hegel's PHILOSOPHY OF MIND in 1987, see "Presentation on the Dialectics of Organization and Philosophy of June 1, 1987," in THE PHILOSOPHIC MOMENT OF MARXIST-HUMANISM (Chicago: News and Letters, 1989). [back]

8. "Marx's New Moments and Those of Our Age," reprinted in NEWS & LETTERS, October 1998. [back]

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