From primitive to libertarian communism
ireland / britain |
history of anarchism |
opinion / analysis
Thursday June 16, 2005 18:32
by P. Newell - Organisation of Revolutionary Anarchists (disbanded)

A look at the origins, history and forms of the communist idea
Communism, to many people, is a dirty word. Communism has been associated with Russia, a country which, in fact, had as its social system, not communism or socialism, but a particularly vicious and totalitarian form of State capitalism. I shall discuss, the system of Primitive Communism and then the ideas and theories of Utopian Communism, Authoritarian Communism and, lastly, Libertarian Communism
From primitive to libertarian communism
Communism, to many people, is a dirty word. For much of this
century, communism has been associated with
Russia, a country which, in fact, has as
its social system, not communism or socialism, but a particularly
vicious and totalitarian form of State capitalism. Genuine socialists
and libertarian communists have had an unenviable task of
demonstrating that neither communism nor socialism exists - or has
ever existed - in such countries as Russia, Cuba or even Yugoslavia.
They have also had to explain that communism, in a primitive form,
has indeed existed, as a form of society, for much of Humanity's
existence on this planet, for perhaps two or more million years.
Since the demise of Primitive Communism, and the advent of private
- property society, first of Chattel Slavery, then of Feudalism and,
lastly, of Capitalism, "pockets" of peasant communism, have persisted
up until present times. Small communistic communities have been
established, often by bourgeois and petit-bourgeois "intellectuals",
with varying degrees of success. But throughout the centuries, the
idea of communism, usually in an utopian or backward - looking form,
has been advocated - and sometimes acted upon - by small idealistic
sects. It was not until the middle of the last century, however, that
individuals and political groups began to advocate communism as a
new, advanced, type of society which should, indeed, would, take the
place of capitalism; which would be a "higher" form of society; would
be in the interest of the whole of the people, and not just a small
class as is capitalism and, most importantly, would have to be
brought about by the majority of the population - the workers -
through a social revolution. Some of the modern advocates of
communism, particularly in the earlier decades of the last century,
have been dubbed "utopian" communists; others following Marx and
Engels, have at least called themselves ''scientific'' communists and
socialists, but have been accused of, in fact, being "authoritarian
communists" by their anarchist opponents who, in many instances,
began to advocate a form of non-authoritarian socialism or
collectivism which, later, emerged as Libertarian Communism.
Briefly, I shall discuss, first, the system of Primitive Communism
and then the ideas and theories of Utopian Communism, Authoritarian
Communism and, lastly, Libertarian Communism as advocated by the more
working-class elements within the so-called Anarchist Movement. Some
non-anarchist groups also propagate libertarian communism as their
objective. Their ideas are mainly based upon those of Morris.
Primitive communism
Rousseau's Noble Savage was largely a figment of his own
imagination; nevertheless, the popular conception of the primitive
male savage beating "his" wife's brains out with a club is equally
false. The savage was neither violent nor competitive.
The basic characteristics of savagery was dependence upon "wild"
sources of food supply, with all the disadvantages that this implies.
Primitive people often suffered from malnutrition and the fear of
starvation. Communities were small. Only at certain periods of the
year was food plentiful. Such form of existence, however, gave rise
to an embryonic, rudimentary, ethical code. "Private property",
writes Grahame Clark in his 'From Savagery to Civilisation', "is
limited to such things as weapons, digging sticks, collecting bags
and personal trinkets, although in dividing meat, for example, the
share of each individual is as a rule socially defined. Communal
rights are generally recognised to extend over all the territories
required to provide food for the group, territories within which all
the seasonal wanderings are confined, and the limits of which are
known to neighbouring groups." Of primitive communist, savage,
society Peter Kropotkin observes: "Within the tribe everything is
shared in common; every morsel of food is divided among all present;
and if the savage is alone in the woods, he does not begin eating
before he has loudly shouted thrice an invitation to any one who may
hear his voice to share his meal". "In short", continues Kropotkin,
"within the tribe the rule of 'each for all' is supreme, so long as
the separate family has not yet broken up the tribal unity." (Mutual
Aid) The Biblical concept of "mine and shine' had not yet emerged
Of Primitive Communism, Paul Lafargue in his 'Evolution of
Property from Savagery to Civilisation' comments:
"If the savage is incapable of conceiving the idea of
individual possession of objects not incorporated with his person, it
is because he has no conception of his individuality as distinct from
the consanguine group in which he lives. The savage is envirorened by
such perpetual material danger, and compassed round with such
constant imaginary terrors, that he cannot exist in a state of
isolation; he cannot even form a notion of the possibility of such a
thing. To expel a savage from his clan, from his horde, is tantamount
to condemning him to death; . . To be divided from his companions, to
live alone, seemed a fearful thing to primeval man, accustomed to
live in troops . . . Hunting and fishing, those primitive modes of
production, are practiced jointly, and the produce is shared in
common. . ."
When savages no longer lead a nomadic existence, and begin to
build a permanent or semi-permanent dwelling-house, the house is
generally not a private one as we understand it. but a common one. In
such houses, provisions are held in common. Of a somewhat later
period (the lower status of barbarism among some American
aborigines), Lewis H. Morgan observes: "The syndasmian family was
special and peculiar. Several of them were usually found in one
house, forming a communal household, in which the principle of
communism in living is practiced". (Ancient Society). Morgan mentions
the Iroquois with whom he lived, in particular. Later, with the
emergence of the patriarchal family, households become the possession
of single families. Nevertheless, throughout this period, land
continues to be held in common.
But, continues Lafargue, "Very gradually did the idea of private
property, which is so ingrained in and appears so natural to the
philistine, dawn upon the human mind. Humanity underwent a long and
painful process of development before arriving at private property in
land. Indeed, the earliest distribution of the land was into pastures
and territories of chase common to the tribe. The development of
agriculture was a determining cause of the parcelling of common
lands, often into small strips, sometimes on a permanent but usually
on an annual, basis. Lafargue notes that generally "landed property
on its first establishment among primitive nations, was allotted to
women". And regarding women within primitive communism, Frederick
Engels wrote: "Communist housekeeping, however, means the supremacy
of women in the house, just as the exclusive recognition of the
female parent owing to the impossibility of recognising the male
parent with certainty, means that the women, ie the mothers, are held
in high respect. One of the most absurd notions taken over from
Eighteenth-century enlightenment is that in the beginning of society
woman was the slave of man. Among all savages and all barbarians of
the lower and middle stages, and to a certain extent of the upper
stage also, the position of women is not only free, but honourable".
(Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State). And Lafargue
observes that "Landed property, which was ultimately to constitute
for its owner a means of emancipation and of social supremacy was, at
its origin, a cause of subjection; the women were condemned to rude
labour in the fields, from which they were emancipated only by the
introduction of servile labour. Agriculture, which led to private
property in land, introduced the servile labour which in the course
of centuries has borne the names of slave-labour, bond-labour and
wage-labour".
In sum, writes Engels, "At all earlier stages of
society production was essentially collective, just as consumption
proceeded by direct distribution of the products within larger or
smaller communistic communities. This collective production was very
limited; but inherent in it was the producers' control over their
process of production and their product. They knew what became of
their product: they consumed it; it did not leave their hands. And so
long as production remains on this basis, it cannot grow above the
heads of the producers, nor raise up incorporeal alien powers against
them, as in civilisation is always the case."
Thus, in brief, was what has been called Primitive Communism.
Utopian communism
It is, in this short essay, impossible to chronicle all, or even
most, of the utopian movements and revolts which included communistic
elements and tendencies. Suffice it that we mention one or two.
Utopian or backward-looking communist currents can be traced as far
back as the great slave revolt of 71 BC. Spartacus is reported as
saying: "Whatever we take, we hold in common, and no man shall own
anything but his weapons and his clothes. It will be the way it was
in the old times". (Spartacus, by Howard Fast).
Class hatred and an utopian form of communism was practiced by
many of the early Christians, most of whom were, in the early days of
that religion, plebeians or former slaves. The Acts of the Apostles
confirmed that "...all had things in common". And in the eleventh
homily (sermon) of the Acts, one reads: "Grace was among them, since
nobody suffered want, that is since they gave willingly that no one
remained poor. For they did not give a part, keeping part for
themselves; they gave everything in their possession. They did away
with inequality and lived in great abundance... What a man needed was
taken from the treasure of the community not from the private
property of individuals. Thereby the givers did not become
arrogant... All gave all that they have into a common fund..." In his
'Foundations of Christianity', Karl Kautsky comments that in the
Gospel of St. John, the communistic life of Jest and the apostles it
taken for granted. Such communism however, was mainly a communism of
consumption. The Jewish Essenes also practiced a similar form of
communism. Christian communism soon declined and disappeared.
"Acceptance of slavery, along with increasing restriction of the
community of property to common meals, were not the only limitations
the Christian community encountered in its effort to put its
communistic tendencies into effect", writes Kautsky. Rich
sympathisers joined the Church. Money became more important.
Concessions were made; and rich men found that they could enter the
Kingdom of Heaven - at a price! In sum says Kautsky, "It was the
Christian community, not Christian communism, to which the Roman
emperors finally bowed. The victory of Christianity did not denote
the dictatorship of the proletariat, but the dictatorship of the
gentlemen who had grown big in their community. The champions and
martyrs of the early communities, who had devoted their possessions,
their labour, their lives for the salvation of the poor and
miserable, had only laid the groundwork for a new kind of subjection
and exploitation". Nevertheless, the ideas and ideals of communism
did not completely die. Even within the Christian Church.
Communism is occasionally mentioned during what historians have
called the Middle Ages. It is sometimes referred to as "agrarian
communism"; but as Frank Ridley points out in his 'The Revolutionary
Tradition in England', "The communism of the Middle Ages was
essentially and necessarily a religious communism: it took the form
of religious heresies in both East and West...it was one of the major
forces making for social revolution throughout the entire mediaeval
era. Its untiring propagandists were the underground religious
heresies, from that little-known subterranean world which was always
smouldering beneath the surface of mediaeval society." This communism
was, of course, from the nature of the times, an agrarian communism
of consumption, and not an industrial communism of production as in
modern times. It was also a religious, and as such, a
backward-looking communism. What else could it have been? For that
matter, all communism and every revolution that had communism for its
aim prior to the Industrial Revolution, looked to the past for its
models. Of particular interest, however, is the communism of John
Ball and the peasants who took part in the great revolt of 1381.
This is not the place to go into the causes of the revolt. They
include the Hundred Years War, the shortage of peasant labour due to
the Black Death, the terrible miseries of many of the peasants and
the religious-agrarian communist propaganda of the Lollards.
Prior to the great revolt, a hedge-priest, whose 'base" was in
Colchester, by the name of John Ball, roamed the countryside,
speaking to people wherever they gathered. Ball was probably the
world's first communist "agitator". His text was a little jingle:
"When Adam delved and Eve span, Who was then the gentleman?". After
his release from Rochester prison, Ball spoke to an enormous audience
of peasants on Blackheath, on June 12th 1381. His exact speech is not
known, but Charles Poulson in his 'English Episode', and William
Morris in his 'A Dream of John Ball', both give us a very good idea
of what he probably said.
Says Poulson's John Ball:
"...In the beginning all men were equal, all men were
brothers. How is it that some can say 'I am nobler than you'? How is
it that one man delves day-long in the earth, and with all his labour
has not enough to feed his babes, and another takes the life from the
poor and makes from it a jewelled mantle for his back?... I say to
you that in spite of its fine pride and rich clothing, its white
hands and perfumes, Nobility is evil... And in truth it is time to
cry enough. I see you here before me, my brothers, and not one of you
but has lived his life toiling, from the first sun-up till the last
rays fade. And you are clothed in rags. The corn and the cattle grow
great in your care, but there is little fat on you. A handful of
beans is your pottage. All that you grow, all that you make and
build, is taken. This in fines, this in dues, this in labour. The
noble master drains your blood like a vampire. Would there not be
plenty and happiness but for what is taken? So I say, my brothers,
let us feed our children before their lordships. Let us make an end
to this thieving."
And, according to William Morris, John Ball spoke thus:
"...too many rich men there are in this realm; and yet
if there were but one, there would be one too many, for all should be
his thralls... And how shall it be when these (masters) are gone,
what else shall ye lack when ye lack masters? Ye shall not lack for
fields ye have tilled, nor the houses ye have built, nor the cloth ye
have woven; all these shall be yours, and whatso ye will of all that
the earth beareth; and he that soweth shall reap, and the reaper
shall eat in fellowship... then shall no man mow the deep grass for
another..."
On other occasions, John Ball remarked that "things cannot go well
in England, nor ever will, until everything shall be in common". (See
'A People's History of England', by A.L. Morton. Similar views were
expressed elsewhere in Europe, particularly among the French
Jacquerie about forty years before. In England they became largely
dormant for centuries. It is to the "Great Rebellion" - the English
Revolution - of the seventeenth century that we must look next for
communistic ideas and experiments.
Utopian communist ideas found champions among the Levellers; but,
as yet, communism made no appeal among the people of the towns and
cities, which did not possess an industrial proletariat. In his
Cromwell and Communism, Eduard Bernstein remarks: "At the most,
communistic proposals might have attracted the rural workers at
certain times. In fact, there is no instance during the Great
Rebellion of an independent class movement of the town workers,
although during the zenith of the movement there were several
attempts at agrarian communist risings".
An associate of John Liburne, by the name of William Walwyn,
attacked "the inequality of the distribution of the things of this
life"; and claimed, like John Ball before him, that " the world shall
never be well until all things be common". And against objections to
communism, he commented: "There would then be less need for
Government; for then there would be no thieves, no covetous persons,
no deceiving and abuse of one another, and so no need of Government."
William Walwyn would appear to have been Britain's first
anarchist-communist! There were others who advocated somewhat similar
ideas, often with quotations from the Bible.
And there were also others who attempted to put their ideas into
practice. Among them were the "True Levellers", as they called
themselves; or "diggers", as their contemporaries dubbed them.
On Sunday, April 8th, 1649, there suddenly appeared near Cobham in
Surrey, a group of men, armed with spades, who started to dig up
uncultivated land at the side of St. George's Hill. Their intention
was to grow corn and other produce on it. They explained to the local
country-folk that their numbers were, as yet, few but would soon
increase to 4,000. They proposed that "the common people ought to
dig, plow, plant, and dwell upon the Commons without hiring them, or
paying any rent". After they had erected tents, worked the land and
prepared to dig on a second hill, also for sowing, (their numbers had
increased to about fifty), they were attacked by troops and many were
arrested. Winstanley, their leader, was brought before General
Fairfax. None of the "diggers" were prepared to defend themselves by
force, however. Most were heavily fined. Later, they attempted again
to take over common lands, but were again arrested - and fined. They
also published pamphlets, some of which were "couched in somewhat
mystical phraseology, which", says Bernstein, "serves as a cloak to
conceal the revolutionary designs of the authors". One such pamphlet
argued that "In the beginning of time the Creator Reason made the
earth to be common treasury." They also composed a 'Digger's Song' in
a similar vein.
In 1651, Gerrard Winstanley wrote his 'The Law of Freedom on a
platform' - in which he said:
"Is not buying and selling a righteous law? No, it is
the law of the conqueror, but not righteous law of creation: how can
that be righteous which is a cheat?... When mankind began to buy and
sell, then did he fall from his innocency; for then he began to
oppress and cozen one another of their creation birthright."
He continues that, though Crown and Church lands should be for
common use, they were being sold to land-grabbing army officers and
speculators of all kinds. He says that there should be neither poor
nor rich; that there should be no inequality that the "earth and
storehouses be common"; that there should be no buying or selling,
and, lastly, no need for any lawyers. Winstanley was not, however,
opposed to organisation "All officers in a true Magistrace of the
Commonwealth are to be chosen officers. All officers in a
Commonwealth are to be chosen new ones every year". "When publique
officers remain long", he contended, "they degenerate". Indeed, the
"True Levellers" had quite a platform of "articles" and "clauses!
Utopians, the Levellers and True Levellers may have been, but at
least their ideas and organisation was, indeed, more advanced and
practical than some of our own "modern" anarchists! Moreover, far
from all the utopian communists of the period were pacifists. Within
the Cromwellian army, there were a number of rebellions from 1647
onwards. Unfortunately, the movements of the period seem to have
evolved or degenerated into Quakerism, and relative repeatability.
Marxism
The society of the early savage was Primitive Communism. But a few
thousand years ago, with the cultivation of the soil and the
subsequent production of a surplus, class divisions became apparent.
Warfare became organised; a repressive State emerged and prisoners
were taken captive. They were, more often then not, made to toil in
the fields or build temples and pyramids for their new masters. Hence
the slave empires of antiquity. Wealth tended to accumulate in the
hands of a few wealthy people. The fall of the last of the slave
empires - that of the decadent Roman Empire - marked the dawn of a
new era. About a thousand years ago, in what we call Europe and
elsewhere, a new form of private property society, and a new form of
slavery for the many, gradually emerged. It has been called
feudalism. The slave became the serf. His master owned the land, and
the serf toiled on his lord's land, producing wealth for him, and in
return he was allowed to work upon tiny strips of land for himself.
The wealth he, thus, produced was generally just enough for him to
live on. "It had taken several thousands of years of chattel slavery
to prepare the way for serfdom. And it took several centuries of
feudalism to prepare the way for a new form of society - capitalism -
the kernel of which already existed in the feudal society."
('Socialist Manifesto', S.P. of C.).
The wealth and power of the townsmen, or at least a section of
them, increased and that of the landowning nobility declined. The
nobleman became a complete parasite upon society. Society's new
masters - after many struggles and setbacks, as well as revolutions -
became the burghers or, as they were later called, the bourgeoisie.
Trade and commerce increased. "Once freed from the fetters of
feudalism, the onward march of capitalism became a mad, headlong rush
. Everywhere mills, factories, and furnaces sprang up. Their smoke
and fumes turned fields once fertile and populous into desolate,
uninhabitable wastes; their refuse poisoned and polluted the rivers
until they stank to Heaven..." (Socialist Manifesto).
A new condition of slavery replaced serfdom. Socialists, both
Marxist and non-Marxist, called, and still call, it "wage-slavery"
Former serfs and, quite often, free peasants, were driven from the
land and herded into the towns, where they were forced (otherwise
they would have starved - and often did!) to work in the mills and
mines, and the factories, of their new masters, the bourgeoisie, the
owners of capital - the capitalists. The workers created, as did the
slaves and serfs, a surplus for their masters, over and above what
was needed to keep them more or less in working order. Capitalism, as
a society, is based upon wage-labour and capital.
With the development of capitalism, economists and others
including social reformers and utopian socialist "intellectuals"
began to analyse the new and developing society. A new body of ideas
began to emerge as to the nature of capitalism. In the main, from
about 1844 onwards, they have been associated with two Germans, who,
for many years lived in England, the then most advanced capitalist
country. They were Karl Marx and Frederick Engels - though both
admitted their debt to earlier economists and philosophers.
nevertheless, both Marx and Engels were particularly scathing in
their attacks on what they considered to be ''unscientific''
socialists and communists as well as those whom called themselves
"True Socialists". However, in 1845, Engels was still influenced by
utopian communist ideas. In the penultimate paragraph of his The
Condition of the Working-Class in England in 1844 he asserts that
"communism stands, in principle, above the breach between bourgeoisie
and proletariat... Communism is a question of humanity and not of the
workers alone... And as Communism stands above the strife between
bourgeoisie and proletariat it will be easier for the better elements
of the bourgeoisie... to unite with it..." But by 1847, when he
drafted Principles of Communism (that is the first draft of the
famous Communist Manifesto by Marx and Engels), Engels begins by
saying that "Communism is the doctrine of the conditions of
liberation of the proletariat". Incidentally, Engels in his
Principles of Communism says that the workers are propertyless and
are obliged to sell their labour to the bourgeoisie; later, after
Marx had studied the capitalist mode of production, he asserted that
the workers did not sell their labour, but their labour-power, their
abilities to work.
In 184S, Marx wrote his German Ideology, in which he deals with
and attacks the idealistic thinkers of Germany and, in the second
part of the book, such "True" socialists and utopian communists as
Saint-Simon, Fourier and Proudhon. He also attacks Proudhon in his
Poverty of Philosophy. However, the first great "classic" of
"scientific" or what, later on, has been called authoritarian,
communism was, of course, the Communist Manifesto. In the main, it
has remained so; though Engels writes in his 1872 Preface that parts
of the program had "in some details become antiquated".
The Communist Manifesto begins by asserting that "A spectre is
haunting Europe - the spectre of Communism". The history of all
hitherto existing (recorded) society, it proclaims, is the history of
class struggles. But our society - capitalism - has simplified class
antagonisms. "All society is more or less splitting up into two
opposing camps, into two great hostile classes: the bourgeoisie and
the proletariat", says the Manifesto. (I quote from the SLP, that is
the De Leonist version, though I have four or five different versions
and translations, all more or less the same). Marx and Engels, in the
Communist Manifesto (which saw the light of day in 1848) openly break
with the utopians and the "True" socialists in advocating that it
will be the proletarians - albeit through a Communist Party - who
must overthrow bourgeois society. Says the Manifesto "All previous
historical movements were the movements of minorities, or in the
interests of minorities. The proletarian movement is the conscious
movement of the immense majority in the interest of the immense
majority". This is, indeed, worth remembering as many so-called
latter-day Marxists and all Leninists plug the "vanguard party" line.
Marx and Engels emphasise that the workers have no country. They are,
to all intents and purposes, propertyless. It is worth noting that,
in 1848, and more or less throughout their lives, Marx and Engels
combine their propaganda for communism with a list of reforms. Like
many others, they felt that one could advocate both the abolition of
bourgeois society and reforms of that society at one and the same
time! The Manifesto, therefore calls for, among other things, a heavy
progressive income tax, abolition of inheritance, confiscation of the
property of emigrants and rebels, centralisation of credit in the
hands of the State, centralisation of the means of transportation in
the hands of the State, organisation of industrial armies and free
public education. In other words: state-capitalism!
Their vision of communism of the future, is summed up thus:
"When in the course of development class distinctions
have disappeared, and all production is concentrated in the hands of
associated individuals, the public power will lose its political
character. Political power, properly speaking, is the organised power
of one class for the purpose of oppressing another. If the
proletariat, forced in its struggle against the bourgeoisie to
organise as a class, makes itself by a revolution the ruling class,
and as the ruling class destroys by force the old conditions of
production. It destroys along with these conditions of production the
conditions of existence of class antagonism, classes in general, and,
therewith, its own domination as a class.
In the place of the old bourgeois society, with its classes and
class antagonisms, an association appears in which the free
development of each is the condition for the free development of
all".
The Communist Manifesto ends with the now famous: "Workers of all
Lands, Unite! "
In his paper addressed to the General Council of the First
International (later published as Value, Price and Profit and not
Wages, Price and Profit, as has been stated on occasions,
particularly in Russia), Marx calls on the working class to abolish
the wages system, though as an ultimate, not immediate, aim. This was
in 1865. Ten years later, in his 'Critique of the Gotha Program',
Marx elaborates on what he considers a communist society would be
like. Like the 'Communist Manifesto', the 'Critique of the Gotha
Program', is readily available, and should be read by anarchists and
libertarian communists. I will, therefore, only quote the main points
from the third section. (I use the Workers' Literature Bureau
version, published in Melbourne, Australia, in 1946. The other
editions are much the same, whether they be the Russian, De Leonist
or Lawrence and Wishart editions).
Says Marx:
"Within the co-operative society, based on the common ownership of
the means of production, the producers do not exchange their
products... What we are dealing with here is a Communist society, not
as it has developed on its own basis, but, on the contrary, as it is
just issuing out of capitalist society. Hence a society that still
retains, in every respect, economic, moral and intellectual, the
birthmarks of the old society from whose womb it is issuing". Here,
Marx argues that the producer gets back exactly as much as he gives;
he receives a community cheque showing that he has done so much
labour. "Equal right is here, therefore, still according to the
principle capitalist right...". It is still tainted with "a
capitalist limitation" It is, therefore, says Marx, "a right of
inequality". Nevertheless he argues, "these shortcomings are
unavoidable in the first phase of Communist society". But - and here
we come to the all important and well-known passage of the 'Critique
of the Gotha Program' - "In the higher phase of Communist society
after the enslaving subordination of the individual under the
division of labour has disappeared, and therewith also the opposition
between manual and intellectual labour; after labour has become not
only a means of life, but also the highest want of life; when the
development of all the faculties of the individual, the productive
forces have correspondingly increased, and all the springs of social
wealth flow more abundantly - only then may the limited horizon of
capitalist right be left behind entirely, and society inscribe on its
banners 'From everyone according to his faculties, to everyone
according to his needs!' ".
In Section Two of the 'Critique', Marx asks the question: "What
then is the change which the institution of the State will undergo in
a communist society?". And his answer is: "Between the capitalist and
communist systems of society lies the period of the revolutionary
transformation of the one into the other. This corresponds to a
political transition period, whose State can be nothing else but the
revolutionary dictatorship of the proletariat". Nowhere in this stage
in Marx's thinking does he seem to envisage any sort of dying out or
'withering away' of the State. For such ideas, we have to look - at a
somewhat later date - to Engels.
Engels' most important works on the subject of communism/
socialism are his 'Anti-Duhring', first published in 1878, and his
'Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State', first
published in 1884. Part of 'Anti-Duhring' has appeared as 'Socialism:
Utopian and Scientific', a work much admired by groups such as the
SPGB in this country. In Part Three of 'Anti-Duhring', Engels first
discusses Robert Owen's communist theories and colonies as well as
the ideas of Saint-Simon and Fourier. Such people, Engels dubs as
utopians; but remarks that "The utopians...were utopians because they
could be nothing else at a time when capitalist production was as yet
so little developed". After analysing bourgeois society in the same,
but somewhat clearer, manner as did Marx, Engels then outlines what
has remained the 'classic' Marxist method of bringing socialism
about.
"The proletariat seizes the State power, and transforms the means
of production in the first instant into State property. But in doing
this, it puts an end to itself as the proletariat, it puts an end to
all class differences and class antagonisms, it puts an end to the
State as the State." And "When ultimately it (the State) becomes
really representative of society as a whole, it makes itself
superfluous. As soon as there is no longer any class of society to be
held in subjection; as soon as - along with class domination and the
struggle for individual existence based on the former anarchy (sic!)
of production the collisions and excesses arising from these have
also been abolished - there is nothing more to be repressed that
would take a special repressive force, a State necessary. The first
act in which the State really comes forward as the representative of
society as a whole - the taking possession of the means of production
in the name of society - is at the same time its last independent act
as a State The government of persons is replaced by the
administration of things and the direction of the processes of
production. The State is not 'abolished', it withers away." In the
'Socialism: Utopian and Scientific' version it says: "It dies out".
In his section on production, Engels argues that production must be
revolutionised from "top to bottom"; productive labour will become a
pleasure, not a burden, production, utilising modern industry, will
be on the basis of "one single vast plan'; and there will also be the
abolition of the separation between town and country, as well as the
old division of labour.
In his 'Origin of the State', Engels argues that the proletariat
must constitute its own Party and vote for its own representatives to
Parliament. "Universal suffrage ', he says, "is thus the gauge of the
maturity of the working class. It cannot and never will be anything
more; but that is enough". Of the State, he contends that it has not
existed from all eternity. Societies have managed without it. The
State will inevitably fall. In fact he says, "The society which
organises production anew on the basis of free and equal association
of the producers will put the whole State machinery where it will
then belong - into the museum of antiquities, next to the spinning
wheel and the bronze axe".
Before leaving the Marxian view of communism/socialism I think it
is worth mentioning that Marx and Engels envisioned a quite
authoritarian state of affairs within such a society, at least in the
early days. In his essay on Authority, Engels write
"Authority . . . means the imposition of the will of
another upon ours; on the other hand, authority presupposes
subordination. Now, since these two words sound bad and the
relationship which they represent is disagreeable to the subordinated
party, the question is to ascertain whether there is any way of
dispensing with it, whether - given the conditions of present-day
society - we could not create another social system, in which this
authority would be given no scope any longer and would consequently
have to disappear . . .
. . . Everywhere combined action . . . displaces independent
action by individuals; now, is it possible to have organisation
without authority?
Supposing a social revolution dethroned the capitalists, who now
exercises authority over the production and circulation of wealth.
Supposing, to adopt entirely the view of the anti- authoritarians,
that the land and the instruments of labour had, become the
collective property of the workers who use them. Will authority have
disappeared, or will it only have changed its form?"
Engels then instances a factory, a large cotton mill. He says
". . . particular questions arise in each room and at
every moment concerning the mode of distribution, production of
materials, etc., which must be settled at once at pain of seeing
production immediately stopped; whether they are settled by decision
of a delegate placed at the head of branch of labour or, if possible,
by a majority vote, the will of the single individual will always be
subordinate itself, which means that questions are settled in an
authoritarian manner".
Engels' conclusions regarding the "delegation of function" are, of
course, open to debate; but in fact, he goes much further in his
praise of authority. He continues
"But the necessity of authority, and of impervious
authority at that, will nowhere be found more evident than on board a
ship on the high seas. There, in time of danger, the lives of all
depend on the instantaneous and absolute obedience of all to the will
of one".
Engels was, of course, wrong then, as he would be now! I have, in
fact, dealt with this in an article entitled 'Anarchy in the Navy',
in Anarchy 14, instancing the running of much of the Spanish
Republican Fleet by rank-and-file sailors during the revolutionary
period in 1936.
We will leave Engels to his "impervious authority"; though it may
not come amiss to mention here that, surprisingly, even William
Morris, who has always been considered something of a libertarian
socialist and a quasi-anarchist, also takes a similar line to Engels
regarding the running of a ship "in socialist condition", in his
essay, 'Communism'.
Lastly, I shall briefly turn to the libertarian or anarchist
communist viewpoints, which in the last century were mainly
associated with two Russians - Michael Bakunin and Peter Kropotkin,
though others also espoused similar views.
Libertarian communism
Between 1842 and 1861, Bakunin could best be described as a
revolutionary pan-Slavist, though there are indications of
libertarian tendencies before 1861. I would say, however, that he
could not really be called a libertarian or anarchist before 1866,
when he wrote his 'Revolutionary Catechism'.
In his 'Catechism', Bakunin argues that "freedom is the absolute
right of every adult man and woman" that "the freedom of each is
therefore realisable only in the equality of all". He asserts the
absolute rejection of every authority, "including that which
sacrifices freedom for the convenience of the State"; "order in
society" he says, "must result from the greatest possible realisation
of individual liberty, as well as of liberty on all levels of social
organisation". He calls for the "establishment of a commonwealth",
and the "abolition of classes, ranks and privileges" and, rather
surprising, "universal suffrage", though Max Nettlau says that he did
not mean in the State, but in the new society. Bakunin also calls for
the abolition of the "all-pervasive, regimented, centralised State",
and the "internal reorganisation of each country on the basis of the
absolute freedom of individuals, of the productive associations and
of the communes". Freedom can only be defended by freedom, he says.
"The basic unit of all political organisation in each country - must
be the completely autonomous commune constituted by the majority vote
of all adults of both sexes. No one shall have either the power or
the right to interfere in the internal life of the commune..." The
nation, continues Bakunin, must be nothing but a federation of
autonomous provinces. Without political equality there can, be no
real political liberty, but political equality will be possible only
when there is social and economic equality. The majority, says
Bakunin, live in slavery And "This slavery will last until capitalism
is overthrown by the collective action of the workers". Therefore the
land, and all the natural resources, are (to be) the common property
of everyone..." He concludes his 'Catechism': "The revolution, in
short, has this aim: freedom for all, for individuals as well as
collective bodies, associations, communes, provinces, regions, and
nations, and the mutual guarantee of this freedom by federation".
Later, also in 1866, Bakunin wrote another Catechism on very much
the same lines, in which he again asserts that the land is to be the
common property of all, and that "The revolution must be made not
for, but by, the people, and can never succeed if it does not
enthusiastically involve all the masses of the people; that is, in
the rural countryside as well as the cities."
In his 'Federalism, Socialism, Anti-Theolgism', Bakunin says that
socialism means "to organise society in such a manner that every
individual endowed with life, man or woman, may find almost equal
means for the development of his various faculties . . . to organise
a society which, while it makes it impossible for any individual
whatsoever to exploit the labour of others, will not allow anyone to
share in the enjoyment of social wealth, always produced by labour
only, unless he has himself contributed to its creation with his own
labour". He thinks that the complete solution - to the problems
thrown up by capitalism - "will no doubt be the work of centuries''.
Nevertheless, "history has set the problem before us, and we can no
longer evade it if we are not to resign ourselves to total
impotence".
Bakunin, again and again, asserts that the people must make the
revolution themselves, that the State must go first: that society
must be "organised from the bottom up by revolutionary delegations .
. ."; that the "revolutionary alliance" of the people must exclude
any form of dictatorship. But, at least in 1869, Bakunin argued that
a well-organised revolutionary "society" can assist "at the birth of
the revolution by spreading among the masses ideas which give
expression to their instincts. and to organise, not any army of the
revolution - the people alone should always be that army - but a sort
of revolutionary general staff, composed of dedicated, energetic,
intelligent individuals, sincere friends of the people above all . .
. capable of serving as intermediaries between the revolutionary idea
and the instincts of the people". There need not, says Bakunin, be a
great number of such people. Two or three hundred, he suggests, for
the organisation in the largest countries. What our British
"traditional" anarchists - who it would seem are not traditionalists,
or at least Bakuninists - would say to this idea I fear to think!
Bakunin was particularly critical of those whom he called the
"State Communists". He was also scathing of those whom he considered
wished to impose communism or as he sometimes called it,
collectivism, on the peasants. These he considered to be Jacobins.
Bakunin and Marx were, of course antagonists. This was partly
personal and partly political. In his 'Letter to La Liberte', Bakunin
attacks Marx, saying that the popes had, at least, an excuse for
considering that they possessed "absolute truth"; but "Mr. Marx has
no such excuse''. In Bakunin's view, "the policy of the proletariat.
necessarily revolutionary, should have the destruction of the State
for its immediate goal". But Bakunin could not understand how Marx
and the Marxists wished to preserve, or use the State, as an
instrument of emancipation. "State means domination, and any
domination presupposes the subjection of the masses and,
consequently, their exploitation for the benefit of some ruling
minority", asserts Bakunin against Marx. "The Marxists profess quite
contrary ideas," argues Bakunin. "Between the Marxists and ourselves
there is an abyss. They are the governmentalists; we are the
anarchists in spite of it all", he says.
Basically, then, this was the great argument between Bakunin and
Marx; it is still the argument between revolutionary anarchists and
Marxists; between authoritarian communists and libertarian
communists.
(Note: All quotations from Bakunin are
taken from 'Bakunin on Anarchy', edited by Sam Dolgoff. Much the same
material can also be gleaned from 'Bakunin', edited by Maximoff.)
Of Bakunin, Peter Kropotkin writes: "Bakunin was at heart a
Communist; but, in common with his Federalist comrades of the
International, and as a concession to the antagonism that the
authoritarian Communists had inspired in France, he described himself
as a 'collectivist anarchist'. But, of course he was not a
'collectivist' in the sense of Vidal or Pecqueur, or their modern
followers, who simply aim at State Capitalism." (Modern Science and
Anarchism). Nevertheless, as early as 1869, a number of "Bakuninists"
described themselves as Communists.
Kropotkin, to a large degree, developed the ideas put forward,
often in a rather unscientific, uncoordinated, form, by Bakunin.
Before becoming an anarchist, Kropotkin had a scientific training and
background. In his 'Memoirs of a Revolutionist', he sees, as it were,
a new form of society germinating within "the civilized nations"; a
society that must, one day, take the place of the old one: a society
of equals, "who will not be compelled to sell their hands and brains
to those who choose to employ them in a haphazard way, who will be
able to apply their knowledge and capacities to production, in an
organism so constructed as to combine all the efforts for procuring
the greatest sum possible of well-being for all, while free scope
will be left for every individual initiative". Kropotkin says that
such a society will be composed of a multitude of associations,
federated for the purposes which require federation - communes of
production, communes of, and for, consumption, all kinds of
organisations, covering not just one country but many. All of these
will combine directly, be means of free agreements between them.
"There will be", he says, "full freedom for the development of new
forms of production, invention and organisation". People will combine
for all sort of work "in common". The tendency towards uniformity and
centralisation will be discouraged, remarks Kropotkin. Private
ownership and the wages system must go. There will be no need of
government; because of the free federation and "free agreement" of
organisations, which will take its place. And in his 'Modern Science
and Anarchism', Kropotkin particularly attacks the "State
Socialists", who under the name of collectivism (we should say
nationalisation today), advocated, not communism or socialism, but
State Capitalism. This, he says, is nothing new; perhaps just an
improved. but still undesirable, form of the wage-system.
Kropotkin, in the same work, refers to "the coming social
revolution", which is quite different from that of a Jacobin,
dictatorship. And of such a revolution, he remarks: "During a
revolution new forms of life will always germinate on the ruin of the
old forms, but no government will ever be able to find their
expression so long as these forms will not have taken a definite
shape during the work of reconstruction itself, which must be going
on in a thousand spots at the same time." Such was Kropotkin's
federalist - libertarian - communism and socialism.
Since Bakunin and Kropotkin formulated their ideas of free,
federalist, anarchist, libertarian, communism, others have, followed
and developed them. Malatesta popularised them; and so did Alexander
Berkman, particularly in 'What Is Communist Anarchism'. In 1926,
Archinov, Makhno, Ida Me and others developed the ideas of
libertarian, anarchist communism and organisation in their
'Organisational Platform of the Libertarian Communists'. I will not
discuss the views of Malatesta, Berkman and the "Platformists" here
as, no doubt many of you are as, if not more, familiar with them as I
am. Naturally, the formulation of libertarian communist and socialist
ideas, and forms of organisation, will continue, in the words of
Kropotkin, "to germinate". Let us hope so!
PETER E NEWELL
February, 1976
-
- Originally published in Libertarian
Communist Review by the
Organisation of
Revolutionary Anarchists
- No. 2 1976