From the Writings of Raya Dunayevskaya: Marxist-Humanist Archives
August-September 2000
Marx's unchaining of the dialectic
by Raya Dunayevskaya, founder of Marxist-Humanism in the U.S.
Editors Note: As part of our ongoing effort to spur new discussion on the relation of
philosophy and organization, we republish excerpts of a speech given by
Dunayevskaya on Jan. 1, 1983 to the National Editorial Board of NEWS &
LETTERS. The introduction and first part of the presentation appear here.
Unless otherwise indicated, footnotes are by the author. The original can
be found in THE RAYA DUNAYEVSKAYA COLLECTION, 7639.
Introduction: Where and How to Begin Anew?
The reason that we begin, not objectively as usual, but subjectively, is
that the "here and now" demands a deeper probing into the creative mind of
Marx.
The warp and woof of the Marxian dialectic, the unchained Hegelian
dialectic, THE dialectic of the revolutionary transformation is, after all,
true objectively and subjectively. Yet Part III of ROSA LUXEMBURG, WOMEN'S
LIBERATION, AND MARX'S PHILOSOPHY OF REVOLUTION begins the probing of Marx
before he fully broke with bourgeois society, when he worked on his
doctoral thesis "On the Difference between Democritus and Epicurus." Thus
began his very first critique of Hegel, in 1841, as it appeared in the
Notes that were known only to himself. What did appear in the doctoral
thesis itself was what pervaded those Notes, i.e., the question: How to
begin anew?
The reason that question reappears here is not to emphasize how it
antedated Marx's discovery of a whole new continent of thought and
revolution, but rather because it reappeared in its true profundity in
Marx's own greatest work, CAPITAL (I'm referring to the definitive French
edition, 1875) as well as in the very last decade of his life, in what we
now call Marx's "new moments" of discovery.
Let me rephrase this. The crucial truth is that the question: How to begin
anew? informed the whole of his dialectic methodology-even AFTER his
discovery of a whole new continent of thought, even AFTER the publication
of the first edition of CAPITAL as well as the 1875 edition, AFTER the
Paris Commune, WHEN he took issue with Mikhailovsky who had written what
turned out to be what all POST-Marx Marxists likewise accepted as the
climax of the work, that is, the "Historical Tendency of Capitalist
Accumulation" as a universal. Marx, on the other hand, held that that
summation of Western capitalist development was just that-the particular
development of capitalism-which need not be the universal path of human
development. Here we have the unique way Marx practiced summation as a new
beginning.
The concept of totality as new beginning was true also on the
organizational question: How to begin a new organization WHEN it is to
express a whole philosophy of revolution. Marx answered that question in
his letter to Bracke, in which he enclosed what he modestly called
"Marginal Notes" to the "Program of the German Workers' Party." That was
the letter in which he noted also that finally the French edition [of
CAPITAL] was out and he was sending it to Bracke. The fact that no
post-Marx Marxists saw that inseparable relationship of organization to
philosophy of revolution is the more remarkable when you consider that
Marx's closest collaborator, Frederick Engels, was not only still alive but
worked with Marx very closely in sending letters to the various so-called
Marxist leaders as Marx tried to stop the unification of the Eisenachists
and Lassalleans on the basis of the Gotha program. Beyond the peradventure
of a doubt, the CRITIQUE OF THE GOTHA PROGRAM formulated a totally
different basis for the establishment of a Marxist "Party."
It becomes necessary once again to emphasize that year, 1875, as not only
the year in which both the French edition of CAPITAL was completed and the
CRITIQUE OF THE GOTHA PROGRAM was written. That year also predates by two
years the letter Marx wrote on Mikhailovsky (but never sent), criticizing
his concept of the "historical tendency" as a universal, insisting that it
was the summation of capitalist development in Western Europe and that "the
Russians" could "find a path of development for their country different
from that which Western Europe pursued and still pursues"-and that, in
fact, if Russia didn't find that different path "she will lose the finest
chance ever offered by history to a people and undergo all the fatal
vicissitudes of the capitalist regime."
Think again about the question of how faithful Engels was to the Gotha
Program critique, not only in the letters written when Marx was alive, but
in the fact that he kept at the German Social-Democrats for a full 15 years
after the Party did not publish that criticism, and only in 1891 did get it
published.
The tragic truth is that it didn't make any difference when they did
publish it. It didn't become ground for the new openly Social-Democratic
organization. Nor was any parallel drawn by anyone, including Frederick
Engels, between organization and Marx's whole philosophy, though clearly,
definitively, this was what Marx's Critique aimed at. And just as clearly,
[Marx's] covering letter warned against the unification BECAUSE there was
to be "no bargaining about principles." Quite the contrary, he "and Engels
would make clear" that they had "nothing in common with it" (the Gotha
Program).
In a word, it wasn't only the Eisenachists and Lassalleans who knew how to
misuse the fact that Karl Marx and Frederick Engels didn't make public
their break with the Gotha Program and the German Workers' Party. The truth
is that the German Social-Democrats, who did consider themselves "orthodox"
under its leading "Marxist" theoretician, Karl Kautsky, did the very same
thing later. This time the reason rested in the claim that, since they
adhered to Marx's "theories," their Party was the organization of vanguard
socialism. They succeeded in so twisting the very concept of vanguardism
that they made "the Party" read "the VANGUARD Party." That was NOT Marx's
concept, as we shall see in a moment as we turn to the third new moment in
Marx on organization. It is high time for Marxist-Humanists to concretize
"Where and how to begin anew" for our age by looking at those "new moments"
in Marx as the trail to the 1980s.
The Four New Moments in Marx
The first new moment that was not grasped by the first post-Marx Marxist
generation was due not merely to the fact that Engels had omitted the
paragraph from the French edition of CAPITAL, which had been definitively
edited by Marx, when Engels transferred Marx's additions to the German.(1)
Marx's point in that omitted paragraph on further industrialization (as it
covered the whole nation) and, with it, the predomination of foreign over
internal trade, was that although the world market annexed "vast lands in
the New World, in Asia, in Australia," that wouldn't abate the general
crisis of capitalism. On the contrary. The new development in capitalism
meant that the ten-year cycle he had originally cited as the crisis that
regularly follows capitalism's growth would occur more often.
What wasn't grasped by a less creative mind than Marx's was that, far from
the climactic "Historical Tendency of Capitalist Accumulation" signifying
universality for all technological development, it characterized only
Western Europe while "the Russians" could choose a different path.
Post-Marx Marxists failed to grasp this because they separated economic
laws from the dialectics of revolution. For Marx, on the other hand, it was
just this concept of revolution which changed everything, INCLUDING
ECONOMIC LAWS. He rejected the fact of Western capitalist development as a
universal for all, delved into the latest anthropological studies, and then
wrote to Vera Zasulich stressing the possibility for revolution to erupt in
a technologically backward country like Russia "ahead of the West." In this
letter to Zasulich he had made direct reference to the "American" (he was
referring to [Henry Lewis] Morgan's ANCIENT SOCIETY) whose studies of
pre-capitalist societies, Marx thought, further proved that the peasant
commune form of development could lead Russia, if the historic conditions
were ripe AND it was working with West Europe, as well, to initiate
revolution.
To make sure that none misunderstood his concept of revolution and the
prediction of revolution in the "East" ahead of the "West," he (this time
with Engels) had written a new Introduction to the Russian edition of
nothing less important than his COMMUNIST MANIFESTO. There he publicly
spelled out that prediction. That was 1882!
This was not the only new moment Marx discovered which post-Marx Marxists
didn't grasp. The second new moment again related to theory. This time it
was a new interpretation of the dialectic itself in two crucial areas in
the transformation of reality. Everyone knows the 1850 Address [to the
Communist League], which ended with the call for "revolution in
permanence," though hardly anyone has related it to Marx's continuing
concretization of the dialectic of negativity, as the dialectics of
revolution. None seem to have even begun to grapple with what it meant for
Marx, as he was already completing economic analysis of capitalism (AND
pre-capitalist societies) in the GRUNDRISSE in 1857, to have so fully
integrated the dialectic and the economics as to articulate that the
socialism that would follow the bourgeois form of production signified "the
absolute movement of becoming."(2) What an Hegelian expression to use to
describe that full development of all the talents of the individual that
would mark the new socialist society!
That the question of individual self-development and social, revolutionary,
historical development would thus become one manifests itself in the
GRUNDRISSE. It is no accident that it was there where Marx stopped speaking
of only three universal forms of human development-slave, feudal and
capitalist-and included a fourth universal form: the "Asiatic mode of
production." That post-Marx Marxists failed to have that as ground for
working out the reality of their age and thus anticipate what we now call a
whole new Third World is exactly what this age is still suffering from.
The third new moment-that on organization-was not only not grasped, but
actually rejected. Post-Marx Marxists were always "proving" that, because
Marx had not worked out a "theory" of organization, while Lassalle knew how
to build a mass party, he left them no model to practice. The First
International, they said, had included so many contradictory tendencies
that Karl Marx was forced to "consign it to die in the U.S." Indeed, all of
them were quick to twist the whole concept of "vanguardism" as if it meant,
simply and only, "the party." Neither "Leninists" NOR OPPONENTS OF LENIN
have been willing to acknowledge that the ground for [Lenin's] WHAT IS TO
BE DONE? was, PRECISELY, the ground of the German Social-Democracy. And
that includes Rosa Luxemburg, despite all her great achievements on the
actuality of spontaneity. While Lenin rejected any type of "half-way
dialectic" on the National Question, he did not see that same type of
"half-way dialectic" in himself on the question of the "vanguard party."
The whole truth is-and that is first and foremost-Marx never separated
organization forms from his total philosophy of revolution. Indeed, as was
shown when we kept stressing the year, 1875, Marx had worked out his whole
theory of human development in CAPITAL and in the organizational document,
THE CRITIQUE OF THE GOTHA PROGRAM-because his principle, a philosophy of
revolution, WAS THE GROUND ALSO OF ORGANIZATION. In a word, it was not only
the state which Marx held must be destroyed, totally uprooted. He showed
that the proletarian organization likewise changed form. Thus, the First
International, Marx said, "was no longer realizable in its FIRST HISTORICAL
FORM" (CRITIQUE OF THE GOTHA PROGRAM).
This, history shows, was not understood by the first post-Marx Marxists. It
would take nothing short of the German Social-Democracy's betrayal at the
outbreak of World War I before Lenin totally broke with them, and first saw
Marx's CRITIQUE OF THE GOTHA PROGRAM as most relevant for his day. It was
then also that he spelled out most concretely how revolutionaries could not
just "take over" the bourgeois state machinery. That had to be smashed to
smithereens. Lenin made that revolutionary message both more concrete and
more comprehensive-a true concrete Universal-when he saw, as inseparable,
Marx's theory of revolution and his theory of human development,
concluding, "The whole theory of Marx is an application of the theory of
development." Yet, as we know, Lenin still left the concept of the vanguard
party in its old (though modified) form.
A new historic age was needed to work out all the ramifications. A new
movement from practice as a form of theory had to emerge and be recognized
before a new attitude could be worked out, and that meant, far from freeing
the movement from theory of ITS responsibilities, the movement from
practice was demanding that theory, too, undergo self-development so that
it could concretize for a new age Marx's revolutionary dialectical
philosophy, which he had called a "new Humanism."
By the time, in 1956, that the Hungarian Revolution brought Marx's
philosophy onto the historic stage, we had developed that new Humanism in
the U.S. By 1960, the Third World theorist Frantz Fanon had developed his
liberation philosophy and called it "a new Humanism." By the 1970s Marx's
ETHNOLOGICAL NOTEBOOKS were finally transcribed so that MARX'S Marxism
could be seen AS A TOTALITY. It is this which ROSA LUXEMBURG, WOMEN'S
LIBERATION, AND MARX'S PHILOSOPHY OF REVOLUTION is rooted in when it takes
a new look at Marx's 1875 Critique. The new book devotes a whole chapter to
the Critique, entitling that chapter: "The Philosopher of Permanent
Revolution Creates Ground for Organization." This sums up that third new
moment in Karl Marx on organization in his age and in ours.
The fourth new moment which opened with the ETHNOLOGICAL NOTEBOOKS (finally
transcribed in the 1970s) reveals itself equally and even more urgently
relevant to our age for Women's Liberation. It is this work which enables
us to see with new eyes that Marx's 1844 concept of Man/Woman(3)-far from
being something that only the allegedly "utopian" young Marx had
articulated-was deepened throughout his life.
Thus, in 1867, as he was preparing the first edition of CAPITAL for the
press, and Dr. Kugelmann had given him his early essays, Marx wrote to
Engels: "We have nothing to be ashamed of." Marx also related these early
essays to the 1867 debates around CAPITAL, holding that "the feminine
ferment" was inherent in revolutions THROUGHOUT HISTORY.
From his activities in the Paris Commune, we know how Marx had laid the
ground in establishing the Union des Femmes, following this through by
making it a principle that the First International establish autonomous
women's organizations. Finally, with his last work, the ETHNOLOGICAL
NOTEBOOKS, he further enshrined this new attitude by showing the
revolutionary presence of women throughout history, from the Iroquois women
to the Irish women before British imperialism conquered Ireland.
Clearly, all four new moments, in theory and practice, in organization and
spelling out "the new passions and new forces" for the reconstruction of
society on new, Humanist beginnings-first naming the proletariat as
Subject; then working out the revolutionary role of the peasantry, not only
as in Engels' PEASANT WARS but as in the peasant communal form in the
1880s; and always singling out youth and then women as Reason as well as
forces of revolution-have laid new paths of revolution...
NOTES
1. This refers to the paragraph, added to chapter 25 of the French edition
of CAPITAL, in which Marx refers to how "the world market had successively
annexed extensive areas of the New World, Asia and Australia..." Left out
of the fourth German edition by Engels, it appears as a footnote to p. 786
of the Ben Fowkes translation of CAPITAL, Vol. I, p. 78.-Ed.
2. Marx was rereading Hegel's LOGIC as he worked on the GRUNDRISSE and
wrote to Engels [on January 16, 1858], that this chance rereading was a
great help to him in creating a newform for presenting his economic
studies. That "new form" of integrating dialectics and economics
further[more] led Marx to reworking the first draft, GRUNDRISSE, into the
final form, CAPITAL.
3. One so-called independent Marxist, Hal Draper, dared to refer to these
1844 Essays as being no more than "the lucubrations of this new-fledged
socialist."
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