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NEWS & LETTERS, NOVEMBER 2003Philosophic DialogueDialectics as a way of lifeEditor’s note: These excerpts of a review of THE POWER OF NEGATIVITY: SELECTED WRITINGS ON THE DIALECTIC IN HEGEL AND MARX, by Raya Dunayevskaya (ed. Peter Hudis and Kevin B. Anderson, Lexington Books, 2002), was recently published in THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PHILOSOPHY (Vol. 32, No. 2, 2003) in The Philippines. * * * In examining the Hegelian underpinnings of Marx’s writings, Raya Dunayevskaya developed the philosophical perspective of Marxist-Humanism traced in her book THE POWER OF NEGATIVITY. It is based upon the idea of assessing mental and physical work at equal value and focuses upon the self-actualization of every person without distinctions of gender, class, and race. Marxist-Humanism is a philosophy of revolution and the negation of the negative is central to her dialectics. In “Toward philosophic new beginnings in Marxist-Humanism,” which appeared in the 1989 QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF IDEOLOGY (Vol. 13), Hudis remarks:
While the above passage was written by one of the editors 13 years before the publication of Dunayevskaya’s book, it forewarns the reader of the importance of the process, in addition to the product. The organization of the book follows the same form by presenting in the first chapter Dunayevskaya’s last major discussion of dialectics before her death....The remainder of the book chronicles the process through her correspondence and other writings. It is through the correspondence that the reader gains a more personal glimpse of the inquiring nature of the author. She encourages others to share their thoughts and engage in dialectics with her about the meaning, usage, and implication of Marx’s work. Dunayevskaya plumbs the work of Hegel and Marx for an understanding of their use of dialectics; however, she is not writing to clarify dialectics for the uninitiated. As stated above, she seeks to share the process of her philosophic development and her own understanding of dialectics. The editors choose selections, that help the reader trace the development of her understanding and application of dialectics. The strength of the book lies in the craft of editing. The editors are meticulous in footnoting the changes between the original and subsequent copies of her work. They add the historical and personal perspectives of the author to create a context for understanding the writings and her process of development. The reader will receive the grounding to read her work with greater understanding because of the editors’ synthesis and explanations. It is easiest to understand Dunayevskaya’s work from a critical theorist framework. She moves towards change by concretizing dialectics in the realities of the day. Her development can be understood only through her study of dialectics. It is her application of dialectics to the realities of life that allows her such growth. PHILOSOPHIC MOMENTS The first chapter...walks the reader through Marx’s philosophic moment in 1844 when he praises Hegel for discovering the "negation of negation” and criticizes him for shrouding it in mysticism or the esoteric. It is her application that distinguishes her writing, and the reader is able to share her concretization of the philosophical perspective of Marxist-Humanism:
The editors identify Dunayevskaya’s philosophic moment in the second chapter of the book, writing:
This is part of the beauty and intellectual challenge of reading the book. There are no concrete definitions but there are rich discussions and works in progress as she returns to the same issues in a different context and reshapes her ideas. New readers will shape their ideas as a post-structuralist by defining what something is not rather than what it is or by what it has been as they are being concretized by the author. There is confusion in tracking the changes and it is best to focus on the ideological changes of the author herself. Dunayevskaya’s mantra--that “most of the post-Marx-Marxists did not go far enough”--is explained in the first chapter by quoting from the final chapter of her ROSA LUXEMBURG, WOMEN'S LIBERATION, AND MARX'S PHILOSOPHY OF REVOLUTION:
DIALECTICS OF PHILOSOPHY Dunayevskaya uses the dialectics of philosophy to analyze the dialectics of organization. When she and C.L.R. James were leading the Johnson-Forest Tendency, James found that Hegel’s PHILOSOPHY OF MIND held nothing more for their organization. Dunayevskaya pushed on with her studies to find what she called “the new society” where there would be an end to the division between mental and manual labor. This was a philosophic moment for Marxist-Humanism. The dialectic means development through contradiction, not only as the first negation--when you say no and overthrow what is--but on through second negativity, the establishment of something new. While the first negativity is only general negativity, the second is a concrete absolute negativity. It is important to distinguish them. The positivity of a double negative does not bring you to the starting point nor is it intended to. For a simplistic example, one can think of students observing a teacher. A student sitting close to the window at the back of the room will have a different perspective of the teacher than one sitting near the door on the opposite side of the room. In simple terms this represents the general negativity. The absolute negativity (negation of the negative) would place its opposite directly behind the teacher within a different proximity. Instead of being far away, the absolute negative students would be in closer proximity to the teacher. This is closer to its absolute than the original student on the opposite side of the room. This does not address dialectics as the tendency of a notion to pass over into its own negation as the result of conflict with its inherent contradictory aspects, as Hegel identified it. This example does not help me to understand the original concept which the Greeks were trying to find, i.e., a common understanding when there was a difference of opinion that resulted in a totally different position than either initially had. Dialectics is more than ideas that bump in the night. Dialectics is the development of ideas through contradictions reaching a common view of what is correct for both sides. It has moved from polemics to understanding and working together for a common good. It is the language of revolution... The book repeatedly returns to Marx’s use of Hegelian dialectics, the importance of absolute negativity, and that Lenin was the first post-Marxist to appreciate Marx’s use of Hegel’s dialectics. While Dunayevskaya returns to these frequently she does so to share new insights she has gained. The chapters of the book are in chronological order with the exception of the first chapter. Each chapter is a vignette of what Dunayevskaya was thinking and her current development of thought. Her insights get sharper and more focused as she turns to current affairs; however, there is no intention to leave dialectics.
--John Jenckes, De La Salle University |
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