Intellectual Radicalism After 1989: Crisis and Re- Orientation in the British and the American Left Berg, Sebastian
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Libertarian Marxism Mao-Spontex Open Marxism Popular Assembly Sovereign Citizen Movement Spontaneism Sui Iuris
Autonomist Marxist Theory and Practice in the Current Crisis Brian Marks1 University of Arizona School of Geography and Development [email protected] Abstract Autonomist Marxism is a political tendency premised on the autonomy of the proletariat. Working class autonomy is manifested in the self-activity of the working class independent of formal organizations and representations, the multiplicity of forms that struggles take, and the role of class composition in shaping the overall balance of power in capitalist societies, not least in the relationship of class struggles to the character of capitalist crises. Class composition analysis is applied here to narrate the recent history of capitalism leading up to the current crisis, giving particular attention to China and the United States. A global wave of struggles in the mid-2000s was constituitive of the kinds of working class responses to the crisis that unfolded in 2008-10. The circulation of those struggles and resultant trends of recomposition and/or decomposition are argued to be important factors in the balance of political forces across the varied geography of the present crisis. The whirlwind of crises and the autonomist perspective The whirlwind of crises (Marks, 2010) that swept the world in 2008, financial panic upon food crisis upon energy shock upon inflationary spiral, receded temporarily only to surge forward again, leaving us in a turbulent world, full of possibility and peril. Is this the end of Neoliberalism or its retrenchment? A new 1 Published under the Creative Commons licence: Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works Autonomist Marxist Theory and Practice in the Current Crisis 468 New Deal or a new Great Depression? The end of American hegemony or the rise of an “imperialism with Chinese characteristics?” Or all of those at once? This paper brings the political tendency known as autonomist Marxism (H. -
Marx's Capital, Method and Revolutionary Subjectivity / by Guido Starosta
Marx’s Capital, Method and Revolutionary Subjectivity Historical Materialism Book Series Editorial Board Sébastien Budgen (Paris) Steve Edwards (London) Juan Grigera (London) Marcel van der Linden (Amsterdam) Peter Thomas (London) volume 112 The titles published in this series are listed at brill.com/hm Marx’s Capital, Method and Revolutionary Subjectivity By Guido Starosta leiden | boston Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Starosta, Guido. Title: Marx's Capital, method and revolutionary subjectivity / by Guido Starosta. Description: Brill : Boston, 2015. | Series: Historical materialism book series ; 112 | Includes bibliographical references and index. Identifiers: LCCN 2015031121| ISBN 9789004306479 (hardback : alk. paper) | ISBN 9789004306608 (e-book) Subjects: LCSH: Marx, Karl, 1818-1883. Kapital. | Marxian economics. | Dialectical materialism. Classification: LCC HB501.M37 S737 2015 | DDC 335.4/1–dc23 LC record available at http://lccn.loc.gov/2015031121 This publication has been typeset in the multilingual “Brill” typeface. With over 5,100 characters covering Latin, ipa, Greek, and Cyrillic, this typeface is especially suitable for use in the humanities. For more information, please see www.brill.com/brill-typeface. issn 1570-1522 isbn 978-90-04-30647-9 (hardback) isbn 978-90-04-30660-8 (e-book) Copyright 2016 by Koninklijke Brill nv, Leiden, The Netherlands. Koninklijke Brill nv incorporates the imprints Brill, Brill Hes & De Graaf, Brill Nijhoff, Brill Rodopi and Hotei Publishing. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, translated, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior written permission from the publisher. -
Exodus General Idea of the Revolution in the XXI Century
Exodus General Idea of the Revolution in the XXI Century Kevin A. Carson 2021 Contents Reviews 5 Abstract 6 Preface 7 Part One: Background 8 Chapter One: The Age of Mass and Maneuver 9 I. A Conflict of Visions .................................... 9 II. The Triumph of Mass in the Old Left .......................... 15 III. The Assault on Working Class Agency ......................... 42 IV. Workerism/Laborism .................................. 49 Chapter Two: Transition 52 I. Drastic Reductions in Necessary Outlays for the Means of Production . 52 II. The Network Revolution and the Imploding Cost of Coordination . 57 III. The Impotence of Enforcement, and Superiority of Circumvention to Resistance . 70 IV. Superior General Efficiency and Low Overhead .................... 74 V. Conclusion ......................................... 78 Part Two. The Age of Exodus 79 Chapter Three: Horizontalism and Self-Activity Over Vanguard Institutions 80 Introduction ......................................... 80 I. The New Left ........................................ 81 II. Autonomism ........................................ 90 III. The 1968 Movements and the Transition to Horizontalist Praxis . 98 IV. The Post-1994 Movements ................................ 100 Chapter Four: The Abandonment of Workerism 115 I. The Limited Relevance of Proletarianism in the Mass Production Age . 115 II. Technology and the Declining Relevance of Proletarianism . 116 III The Abandonment of Proletarianism by the New Left . 117 IV. The Abandonment of Workerism in Praxis . 127 Chapter Five: Evolutionary Transition Models 131 Introduction and Note on Terminology . 131 2 I. Comparison to Previous Systemic Transitions . 132 II. The Nature of Post-Capitalist Transition . 146 Chapter Six: Interstitial Development and Exodus over Insurrection 157 Introduction ......................................... 157 I. The Split Within Autonomism .............................. 159 II. The Shift From the Factory to Society as the Main Locus of Productivity . -
Andy Higgins, BA
Andy Higgins, B.A. (Hons), M.A. (Hons) Music, Politics and Liquid Modernity How Rock-Stars became politicians and why Politicians became Rock-Stars Thesis submitted for the degree of Ph.D. in Politics and International Relations The Department of Politics, Philosophy and Religion University of Lancaster September 2010 Declaration I certify that this thesis is my own work and has not been submitted in substantially the same form for the award of a higher degree elsewhere 1 ProQuest Number: 11003507 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a com plete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. uest ProQuest 11003507 Published by ProQuest LLC(2018). Copyright of the Dissertation is held by the Author. All rights reserved. This work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States C ode Microform Edition © ProQuest LLC. ProQuest LLC. 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Ml 48106- 1346 Abstract As popular music eclipsed Hollywood as the most powerful mode of seduction of Western youth, rock-stars erupted through the counter-culture as potent political figures. Following its sensational arrival, the politics of popular musical culture has however moved from the shared experience of protest movements and picket lines and to an individualised and celebrified consumerist experience. As a consequence what emerged, as a controversial and subversive phenomenon, has been de-fanged and transformed into a mechanism of establishment support. -
Volker Mall, Harald Roth, Johannes Kuhn Die Häftlinge Des KZ
Volker Mall, Harald Roth, Johannes Kuhn Die Häftlinge des KZ-Außenlagers Hailfingen/Tailfingen Daten und Porträts aller Häftlinge I A bis K Herrenberg 2020 1 Die Recherchen Die Recherchen von Volker Mall, Harald Roth und Johannes Kuhn dauern nun schon über 15 Jahre. Im Staatsarchiv Ludwigsburg fanden sie in den Akten des Hechinger Prozesses das sog. Natzweiler Nummernbuch1. Die dort enthaltene Namensliste der 600 jüdischen Häftlinge stellte die Basis für alle weiteren personenbezogenen Recherchen dar. Weitere wichtige Quellen waren die Totenmeldungen und das Einäscherungsverzeichnis der 99 im Krematorium in Reutlingen eingeäscherten Opfer2 und 269 Häftlingspersonalkarten aus dem Archiv des KZ Stutthof. Alle diese 269 Häftlinge kamen mit dem Transport im Oktober 1944 von Auschwitz nach Stutthof3. Auf 260 dieser Karten ist jeweils die Auschwitznummer angegeben. Außerdem enthielten die bruchstückhaften Listen des Transportes von Auschwitz nach Stutthof4 Namen und Nummern von ca. 160 Häftlingen, die nach Tailfingen kamen. Unter ihnen „zusätzliche“ 64, deren Häftlingspersonalkarten nicht erhalten sind. Von weiteren 40 Häftlingen (v.a. bei den Überlebenden) konnten die Nummern durch andere Quellen erschlossen werden. So konnten mithilfe des Auschwitzkalendariums5 Datum und Herkunft des Transports von über 350 Häftlingen festgestellt werden. Dazu kommen noch etwa 35 Häftlinge, die nachweislich nach Auschwitz kamen, ohne dass ihre Nummer bekannt ist. (In den Transportlisten Dautmergen- Dachau/Allach werden die Häftlinge unter ihrer Natzweiler-Nummer, in den Hailfinger Totenmeldungen unter der Stutthof-Nummer geführt). Danuta Drywa (Stutthof-Archiv) teilte außerdem die Daten von einigen Häftlingen mit (aus dem Einlieferungsbuch Stutthof), die in verschiedenen Transporten aus dem Baltikum nach Stutthof deportiert wurden und von dort aus nach Hailfingen kamen. -
Moscow Takes Command: 1929–1937
Section 3 Moscow takes command: 1929–1937 The documents in this section cover the period from February 1929 until early 1937, with most of them being concentrated in the earlier years of this period in line with the general distribution of documents in the CAAL. This period marks an important shift in the history of relations between the CPA and the Comintern for two main reasons. First, because the Comintern became a direct player in the leadership struggles within the Party in 1929 (the main catalyst for which, not surprisingly, was the CPA's long-troubled approach to the issue of the ALP). And second, because it sent an organizer to Australia to `Bolshevize' the Party in 1930±31. A new generation of leaders took over from the old, owing their positions to Moscow's patronage, and thusÐuntil the Party was declared an illegal organization in 1940Ðfully compliant with the policies and wishes of Moscow. The shift in relations just outlined was part of a broader pattern in the Comintern's dealings with its sections that began after the Sixth Congress in 1928. If the `Third Period' thesis was correct, and the world class struggle was about to intensify, and the Soviet Union to come under military attack (and, indeed, the thesis was partly correct, but partly self-fulfilling), then the Comintern needed sections that could reliably implement its policies. The Sixth Congress had been quite open about it: it now required from its national sections a `strict party discipline and prompt and precise execution of the decisions of the Communist International, of its agencies and of the leading Party committees' (Degras 1960, 466). -
Bibliography
BIBLIOGRAPHY GENERAL ISSUES SOCIAL THEORY AND SOCIAL SCIENCE ASCHENBRENNER, ERWIN. Kultur - Kolonialismus - Kreative Verweigerung. Ele- mente einer antikolonialistischen Kulturtheorie. [Sozialwissenschaftliche Studien zu internationalen Problemen, Band 145.] Verlag Breitenbach Publishers, Saar- briicken [etc.] 1990. 620 pp. DM 74.00. The aim of this doctoral thesis (Regensburg, 1989-1990) is to make a contribution to an anti-colonialist and non-Eurocentric theory of culture. The book consists of four more or less independent "tracts" in which, among other things, existing cultural theories are considered critically, the "essence" of culture is discussed and the liberating potential of traditional cultures is treated. Autonomie et autotransformation de la societe. La Philosophic militante de Corne- lius Castoriadis. [Par] G. Busino, E. Morin, P. Vidal-Naquet [e.a.] [Traveaux de droit, d'6conomie, de sciences politiques, de sociologie et d'anthropologie, No 162.] Librairie Droz, Geneve 1989. 521 pp. 111. S.fr. 100.00. The thirty contributions in this Festschrift for the Franco-Grecian philosopher, econ- omist, psycho-analist and revolutionary theorist Cornelius Castoriadis are partly biographical (much information is provided about the group Socialisme ou Barbarie (1949-1967) to which Castoriadis belonged together with Claude Lefort and other people), but chiefly discuss the work of the man it celebrates. The covering themes are "Philosophy", "The social and historical approach and the psyche", "The con- temporary world: the Russian question and modern capitalism" and "Ethics and politics". Centenary Essays on Alfred Marshall. Ed. by John K. Whitaker. [A Royal Eco- nomic Society Publication.] Cambridge University Press, Cambridge [etc.] 1990. xii, 298 pp. £ 27.50. To mark the centennial of the Principles of Economics by Alfred Marshall (1842- 1924), the Royal Economic Society has commissioned the present collection of twelve essays dealing with various aspects of Marshall's life and thought. -
What Is to Be Done? Leninism, Anti-Leninist Marxism and the Question of Revolution Today
Chapter 1 What is to be Done? Leninism, anti-Leninist Marxism and the Question of Revolution today Werner Bonefeld and Sergio Tischler I Of one thing we can be certain. The ideologies of the twentieth century will disappear completely. This has been a lousy century. It has been filled with dogmas, dogmas that one after another have cost us time, suffering, and much injustice (Garcia Marquez, 1990). Amid the resurgence of anti-capitalist movements across the globe, the centenary of Lenin’s What is to be Done? in 2002 has largely gone unnoticed. Leninism has fallen on hard times – and rightly so. It leaves a bitter taste of a revolution whose heroic struggle turned into a nightmare. The indifference to Leninism is understandable. What, however, is disturbing is the contemporary disinterest in the revolutionary project. What does anti-capitalism in its contemporary form of anti- globalization mean if it is not a practical critique of capitalism and what does it wish to achieve if its anti-capitalism fails to espouse the revolutionary project of human emancipation? Anti-capitalist indifference to revolution is a contradiction in terms. Rather then freeing the theory and practice of revolution from Leninism, its conception of revolutionary organization in the form of the party, and its idea of the state whose power is to be seized, as an instrument of revolution, remain uncontested. Revolution seems to mean Leninism, now appearing in moderated form as Trotskyism. Orthodox Marxism invests great energy in its attempt to incorporate the 2 What is to be Done? class struggle into preconceived conceptions of organization, seeking to render them manageable under the direction of the party. -
Tribute to Leon Trotsky -.::: FLTI
SPECIAL DOSSIER International Leninist Trotskyist Fraction Collective for the Refoundation of the Fourth International /e-mail: [email protected] • www.flti-ci.org August 20 Tribute to 1940-2020 Leon Trotsky 80 years since his assassination by the hand of a KGB Stalinist agent Leon Trotsky together with Leon Sedov Days of Tribute to Leon Trotsky AUGUST and the founders of 22 AND 23 the Fourth International 80 years of the murder of Leon *in Zoom Organizes: Trotsky by the International Leninist Trotskyist Fraction (FLTI) hand of Stalinism International Leninist Trotskyist Fraction Collective for the Refoundation of the Fourth International Editorial Board of the paper “The International Workers Organizer” /e-mail: [email protected] • www.flti-ci.org Sign up to participate In the 80th anniversary of the murder of Leon Trotsky, we reproduce excerpts of the Manifesto of the Collective for the Re-foundation of the Fourth International / FLTI published in 2010, in the 70th anniversary In spite of Stalinism having slaughtered the Bolshevik and the 3rd International’s General Staff… In spite of KGB, fascism and imperialism having murdered and chased ceaselessly the Bolsheviks of the resistance in the ‘30s: Leon Trotsky, Leon Sedov, Rudoph Klement, Abraham Leon among other martyred champions of the world proletariat … In spite of Pabloites and all kinds of revisionists which razed Bolshevism and the Fourth international to the ground … On the 70th Anniversary of Leon Trotsky’s murder From the Fracción Leninista Trotskista Internacional (International Leninist Trotskyist Fraction) we assert, The Fourth International is not dead! Long live the struggle for the Re-foundation of the Fourth International! eventy years after the murder of Leon Trotsky, from the Inter- national Leninist Trotskyist Fraction we pay tribute to his most grandiose work: the foundation of the Fourth International, Swhich was the continuity of Bolshevism and the Third Internation- al, that is, of the internationalist, revolutionary fraction of the world proletariat. -
The Socialist Calculation Debate and New Socialist Models in Light of a Contextual Historical Materialist Interpretation
THE SOCIALIST CALCULATION DEBATE AND NEW SOCIALIST MODELS IN LIGHT OF A CONTEXTUAL HISTORICAL MATERIALIST INTERPRETATION by Adam Balsam BSc [email protected] Supervised by Justin Podur BSc MScF PhD A Major Paper submitted to the Faculty of Environmental and Urban Change in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master in Environmental Studies York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada December 11, 2020 Table of Contents The Statement of Requirements for the Major Paper ................................................................................. iii Abstract ........................................................................................................................................................ iv Foreword ...................................................................................................................................................... vi Section I: Introduction, Context, Framework and Methodology .................................................................. 1 Preamble ............................................................................................................................................... 1 Introduction .......................................................................................................................................... 4 Context of this Investigation ................................................................................................................. 5 The Possibilities of Socialist Models .................................................................................................. -
Libertarian Marxism: Reality Or Illusion?
Libertarian Marxism: Reality or Illusion? Adam Lovasz Lovasz, A.: Libertarian Marxism: Reality or Illusion? In: Ostium, roč. 15, 2019, č. 2. Libertarian Marxism: Reality or Illusion? Over the past few years, several works have been written relating to the issue of libertarian socialism. In my presentation, I seek to critically investigate two contemporary systematic attempts at a distinctly libertarian reading of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels’ work. Theodore A. Burczak’s 2006 book, Socialism After Hayek constitutes an ambitious synthesis of F.A. Hayek’s notion of catallaxy and Marxism. Self-organization, Burczak argues, has a place in Marxist theory and may be unified with an anti-capitalist social philosophy. In fact, socialism would be the epitome of society as a self-organizing system, and the inclusion of market mechanisms does not endanger egalitarianism. A similar emphasis on freedom may be found in Ernesto Screpanti’s 2007 book, Libertarian Communism. From Marx’s work, Screpanti extracts an emphasis on voluntary association, and suggests that true communism would constitute the emancipation of the individual, a paradoxical position that contradicts the standard view of communism as collectivist politics. I suggest that both Burczak and Screpanti’s approaches ultimately fail to produce a political philosophy that is consistently libertarian. Keywords: catallaxy, individualism, libertarianism, Marxism, social philosophy Introduction: Socialism and Economic Freedom One of the primary dilemmas in socialist thought has been the issue of what place, if any, market mechanisms should have in an ideal, egalitarian society. During the 1920s and 1930s, economists of various persuasions, most notably Ludwig von Mises and Friedrich August Hayek on the libertarian side, and Oskar Lange on the part of the socialists, debated whether socialism is compatible with the calculation of prices. -
“The Blue Labourism” and “The Good Society” Concept
ISSN 2336 R5439 EUROPEAN POLITICAL AND LAW DISCOURSE • Volume 2 Issue 1 2015 Mykola Kulachynskyi, PhD in Political Science Odessa State Agrarian University “THE BLUE LABOURISM” AND “THE GOOD SOCIETY” CONCEPT OF THE MODERN LABOURITES OR THE ATTEMPT OF THE RELOADING “THE THIRD WAY” CONCEPT The new theoretical changes of the ideological laborite’s field were discovered in this article. The modern social democracy in Europe with its approaches to the society classes, direct state involvement into the economy, the social distribution of resources, and common labor market, essentially, exhausted themselves and try to build the new pri nciples of the social welfare considering significant changes in the capitalist relations those supply the new quality of life. There is an uneasy task before the modern laborites, and especially before their new leader Ed Miliband: to preserve the old electorate of the Labor Party and to enlarge the new one, while distanci ng from traditional trade unions and maintaining the neutrality with the supporters of T. Blair “The Blairists”, giving the own alternative of the development of the social democracy in the country. Key words: the electorate, the blairism, the third way, the blue laborism, labor market, social democracy, ethical individualism, trade unions. Toda y the dominance of the Labour Party in the trust degree from the side of the British electorate is apparent. According to rough estimates for the 2014, there are 45% of electorates, who are ready to vote for this party. This is 15% more than the Conservatives. In its campaign the Labor Party should focus on the critics of the ruling coalition economic policy.