Review of Maurice Brinton collection - 'For Workers' Power'
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Tuesday August 16, 2005 19:26 by Anarcho
A lengthy review of the excellent new collection of British libertarian socialist Maurice Brinton's work which has been published by AK Press. Brinton was "the most prolific contributor to the British Solidarity Group (1961-1992), he sought to inspire a mass movement based on libertarian socialist politics... Included here are Brinton's finest essays, pamphlets, eye-witness reportage and his most influential works-Irrational in Politics and Bolsheviks and Workers' Control."
Brinton's perspectives on anarchism were too shaded by his Leninist background and the state of the UK anarchist movement in the 1960s and 70s. While he is right to bemoan the anti-organisational and anti-theoretical tendencies of Russian anarchism he does get basic things wrong. Brinton's dismissal of Kropotkin is based on Avrich's summary of his ideas rather than a reading of the source material.
Ultimately, these are minor issues. The core ideas of Brinton in terms of the importance of self-management, the need for revolutionary theory and practice to take into account all aspects of hierarchical society, his consistency and logic, remain as relevant today as when they were written. Anarchists have a lot to gain from reading this collection.
For Workers' Power
For Workers' Power
Maurice Brinton
David Goodway (Ed.)
AK Press
ISBN: 1904859070
Maurice Brinton was the pseudnum under which Christopher Pallis
(1923-2005) wrote and translated for the British libertarian
socialist group
Solidarity from 1960 until the early 1990s. He
was its leading and most influential member, unsurprisingly given the
quality and insightfulness of his work. and his ideas still influence
many today across the world
Brinton's translations of libertarian socialist Cornelius
Castoriadis work (under the pseudonym "Paul Cardan") contributed
immensely to enriching libertarian politics in the English speaking
world. Indeed, many of his translations were used as the basis of the
essential three volume collection of Castoriadis' work entitled
"Political and Social Writings." However, Brinton's own work
was just as important (and in many ways, wider in scope) than
Castoriadis's as can be seen from this collection. The book has a
diverse range of documents: as well as articles on numerous subjects,
there are reviews, introductions to other people's works and his own
pamphlets. The latter include the classics "The Bolsheviks and
Workers' Control" and "The Irrational in Politics", the
former a ground-breaking account of the Russian Revolution and the
latter a popular introduction into the ideas of revolutionary
psychiatrist Wilheim Reich which explores the role of sexual
repression and authoritarian conditioning in creating obedience to
hierarchy and so the continuance of class society.
Especially noteworthy are his vivid eye-witness reports from
upsurges of popular self-activity: the Belgian General Strike of
1960-61, France in May 1968, and Portugal in 1975 and 1976. These
really are windows into what is possible once people start to shake
off their chains and feel they have power over their own fates. Also
of note is the short and clear summary of libertarian socialist ideas
called "As We See It" and the subsequent commentary on that
work required to combat some of the stranger interpretations it
received ("As We Don't See it"). To quote a classic paragraph
from the former document shows why:
"Meaningful action, for
revolutionaries, is whatever increases the confidence, the autonomy,
the initiative, the participation, the solidarity, the egalitarian
tendencies and the self-activity of the masses and whatever assists
in their demystification. Sterile and harmful
action is whatever reinforces the passivity of the masses,
their apathy, their cynicism, their differentiation through
hierarchy, their alienation, their reliance on others to do things
for them and the degree to which they can therefore be manipulated by
others - even by those allegedly acting on their behalf." (As
We See it)
Freedom was at the core of Brinton's vision of (libertarian)
socialism, as he stressed time and time again in the articles that
make up this collection. He knew that genuinely libertarian politics
had to be anti-capitalist, as both it and Stalinism "both seek to
subordinate the great majority to the needs of their ruling groups.
The rulers attempt to stamp of obedience and conformity on every
aspect of social life. Initiative, intellectual independence,
creativeness are crushed and despised. Unless man can develop to the
full these -- his most precious qualities -- he lives but half a
live. Men want to be more than well-fed servants. The desire to be
free is not a pious liberal phrase, but the most noble of man's
desires. The pre-condition of this freedom is, of course, freedom in
the field of production -- workers' management. There can be no real
freedom and no real future for humanity in an exploiting society. The
path to freedom lies through the socialist revolution." No
serious anarchist could disagree.
A key part of his work was to study past revolutions, particularly
the Russian, in order learn from the past and not repeat it. This
meant critiquing Leninism. Brinton's work is important in that, while
coming from a Leninist background, he quickly saw the limitations not
only of that form of Marxism but Marxism as such (in this he was like
his major influence, Castoriadis). While (rightly) not dismissing
Marx out of hand, he was now free, again like Castoriadis, to explore
ideas and current events without dragging the deadweight of having to
justify his insights by quoting from the books of long dead Germans
(or their approved followers). Having come through the Leninist myth,
he was well placed to destroy it which he did in his most important
and influential work, "The Bolsheviks and Workers' Control,
1917-1921: The State and Counter-Revolution."
This is a seminal work and, like the work of Goldman, Berkman,
Voline and Arshinov, Brinton's masterpiece on the Bolshevik
counter-revolution has been confirmed by subsequent investigation and
research. In great detail, Brinton documents the anti-worker economic
policies of the Bolshevik regime and shows beyond any doubt their
links with their pre-revolution ideas on what socialism, workers'
control and self-management were. It is a very well-researched piece
of history, chronicling the economic aspects of the Russian
revolution and recounting the battles that occurred in the workplace
between different visions of socialism and what they meant in
practice. It utterly explodes the myth of Bolshevism, showing that
claims to be building "workers' power" to be false. Far from creating
a society based on socialism and freedom, the Bolshevik vision of
socialism helped destroy their possibility. He traces the elimination
of the Russian factory committees of 1917-18 and the role Bolshevik
ideology and policy played in it. He shows that the standard claim
that Bolshevik authoritarianism started as a result of the civil war
is not supported by the facts.
He summarised his findings:
"there is a clear-cut and incontrovertible link
between what happened under Lenin and Trotsky and the later practices
of Stalinism. We know that many on the revolutionary left will find
this statement hard to swallow. We are convinced however that any
honest reading of the facts cannot but lead to this conclusion. The
more one unearths about this period the more difficult it becomes to
define - or even to see - the 'gulf' allegedly separating what
happened in Lenin's time from what happened later. Real knowledge of
the facts also makes it impossible to accept . . . that the whole
course of events was 'historically inevitable' and 'objectively
determined'. Bolshevik ideology and practice were themselves
important and sometimes decisive factors in the equation, at every
critical stage of this critical period. Now that more facts are
available self-mystification on these issues should no longer be
possible. Should any who have read these pages remain 'confused' it
will be because they want to remain in that state -- or because (as
the future beneficiaries of a society similar to the Russian one) it
is their interest to remain so."
Brinton, quite rightly, argues that workers cannot be free as long
as they are subjugated in production. Workers cannot have power in
society without having complete power over production. As he put it,
"the basic question, who manages production after the overthrow of
the bourgeoisie? should therefore now become the centre of any
serious discussion about socialism. Today the old equation
(liquidation of the bourgeoisie equals workers' state) popularised by
countless Leninists, Stalinists and Trotskyists is just not good
enough." Consequently, socialism has to be based on
self-management otherwise it would be state capitalism, nothing more.
It cannot be stressed enough how important and ground-breaking
this work is. Brinton made clear the distinction of "workers'
control" and "workers' self-management." The former is based on the
workers having some say in the decisions others make on their behalf,
the latter directly making the decisions that affect them in
production. Obviously, only the latter is libertarian and while some
anarchists have used the term "workers' control" they have always
meant "self-management." Brinton shows that the Bolsheviks at no time
supported workers' self-management and only took up the slogan
"workers' control" to gain influence in the workplace. Rather than
base the new socialist economy on the organs workers had created
themselves, as anarchists argued, Bolshevism saw these (at best)
playing a minor role within an economy structured around institutions
created by and inherited from capitalism. As Brinton stressed,
"only the ignorant or those willing to be deceived can still kid
themselves into believing that proletarian power at the
point of production was ever a fundamental tenet or
objective of Bolshevism."
All this is not some academic point. As Brinton noted in "The
Malaise on the Left", while "various strands of Bolshevism
have sought posthumously to rehabilitate the concept of 'workers'
control'" the facts show that between 1917 and 1921 "all
attempts by the working class to assert real power over production --
or to transcend the narrow role allocated by to it by the Party --
were smashed by the Bolsheviks, after first having been denounced as
anarchist or anarcho-syndicalist deviations. Today workers' control
is presented as a sort of sugar coating to the pill of
nationalisation of every Trotskyist or Leninist micro-bureaucrat on
the make. Those who strangled the viable infant are now hawking the
corpse around " The same is happening today, with Leninists now
proclaiming with a straight face that they stand for
"self-management"! As such, reprinting Brinton's classic work will
provide genuine revolutionaries with the necessary facts and ideas to
combat what Brinton called the "tradleft" ("traditional left") who,
then as now, infest social struggles and movements in order to use
them to expand their party and, in the process, kill them off --
while, ironically, alienating from socialism most of those they do
manage to recruit.
Needless to say, what the Bolsheviks meant by "workers' control"
and what the workers did was radically at odds. Initially, the
Bolsheviks saw this as workers "controlling" their bosses within the
context of general state control of the capitalist economy (for
Lenin, "state capitalism" was an inevitable and essential stage
towards socialism). Needless to say, this was significantly different
from what the factory committee movement thought of as "workers'
control" (or, for that matter, the casual observer today). Once in
power, the Bolsheviks imposed their vision of the term. As historian
S.A. Smith correctly summarises in his in depth study of the
revolution in Petrograd's workplaces, while the "factory
committees launched the slogan of workers' control of production
quite independently of the Bolshevik party. It was not until May that
the party began to take it up" Lenin used "the term in a very
different sense from that of the factory committees." His
"proposals . . . [were] thoroughly statist and centralist in
character, whereas the practice of the factory committees was
essentially local and autonomous." (Red Petrograd, p. 154)
It soon became a case of socialism being based on state appointed
managers (who would be given, in Lenin's words, "dictatorial"
powers) and all talk of workers' control was dropped in favour of
state control and one-man management. The Bolsheviks, as Lenin had
promised, built from the top-down their system of "unified
administration" based on the Tsarist system of central bodies which
governed and regulated certain industries during the war. So within
six months of the October revolution, Lenin had replaced private
capitalism with state capitalism. It is this process, and its
ideological roots, which Brinton chronicles so ably.
Brinton's pamphlet was (and is) essentially ignored by the
Leninist left, for obvious reasons. His reply to one attempt to
refute his account is included in "For Workers' Power." In the
unlikely event of other Leninists trying to address Brinton's
arguments rather than ignore them, the standard Leninist excuse will
probably be trotted out, namely accusing him of ignoring the
breakdown of Russian industry in the period in question. This is done
presumably in the hope there would be a relationship between economic
chaos and Bolshevik authoritarianism. However, the strength of
Brinton's account is that he links the pre- and post- revolutionary
ideas and policies in order to show their similarities. Consequently,
the infamous "objective circumstances" excuse trotted out by
Leninists fails to refute Brinton's work. As the Bolsheviks
themselves stressed, the policies implemented were not emergency ones
imposed by difficult circumstances. Moreover, Lenin (at least in
early 1918, the last time it was discussed) made a point of arguing
(against the left-communists) that his apparently new
"state-capitalist" policies had already been expressed by him during
1917!
And the net result of Bolshevism's vision of a centralised economy
structured around the institutions created under capitalism? Pretty
much a disaster, as Silvana Malle's The Economic Organisation of
War Communism, 1918-1921 shows. Ironically, while the Bolsheviks
(and their latter day followers) blamed workers' control (in part)
for the terrible state of the economy (so necessitating Bolshevik
policies of one-man management, et al) the opposite is the
case. The Bolshevik system quickly demonstrated how to really
mismanage an economy as they imposed a bureaucratic and unresponsive
system which wasted the local knowledge in the grassroots in favour
of orders from above which were issued in ignorance of local
conditions. Unused stock coexisted with acute scarcity and the centre
unable to determine the correct proportions required at the base.
Unfinished products were transferred to other regions while local
factories were shut down, wasted both time and resources (and given
the state of the transport network, this was a doubly inefficient).
The inefficiency of central financing seriously jeopardised local
activity and the centre had displayed a great deal of conservatism
and routine thinking. In spite of the complaints from below, the
Communist leadership continued on its policy of centralisation (in
fact, the ideology of centralisation was reinforced).
There are flaws with the book of course. While Brinton mentioned
some political developments in his chronology, he failed to interlink
the economic and political policies of Bolshevism as well as he could
have. This, of course, would have increased the length of the book
considerably but Bolshevik authoritarian policies were not limited to
just undermining economic democracy. To be fair, source material was
not as available then as it is now (Israel Getzler's "Martov"
and Leonard Schapiro's "The Origin of the Communist Autocracy"
contained some relevant information on this matter). Today, Brinton's
account can be supplemented by subsequent work which discusses the
Bolshevik onslaught on soviet democracy in the spring of 1918, for
example (Vladimir Brovkin's "The Mensheviks After October"
provides a good summary). Similarly, at the time there was little
source material on working class resistance to, and organisation
against, Bolshevism. Today, that is not the case. There are many
works available which account, in varying degrees of detail, workers
resistance to the "workers'" state and "revolutionary" government
(Jonathan Aves' "Workers Against Lenin" being the best one).
These show beyond doubt that the standard Leninist account of an
"atomised" or "declassed" working class is false. Simply put, such a
working class does not conduct general strikes nor need martial law
to tame.
In summary, subsequent research has strengthened Brinton's
analysis rather than refuted it. The same cannot be said of the
various Leninist hagiographies written at around the same time (or
since).
Then there is his obvious sympathy with such dissident Bolsheviks
as the 1918 Left Communists (LC) and the 1920-1 Workers
Opposition (WO). By concentrating on their economic ideas,
Brinton fails to see how their political vision (particularly on the
role of the party) undermined their socialist credentials. For the
LC, like any Bolshevik, the party played the key role. As one Left
Communist put it, the only true bastion of the interests of the
proletariat was the party which "is in every case and everywhere
superior to the soviets . . . The soviets represent labouring
democracy in general; and its interest, and in particular the
interests of the petty bourgeois peasantry, do not always coincide
with the interests of the proletariat." (quoted by Richard Sakwa,
Soviet Communists in Power, p. 182). Thus, according to the
only in depth study of the LC, their "call for a revived soviet
democracy was becoming vitiated by the dominant role assigned, in the
final analysis, to the party" (Ronald I. Kowalski, The
Bolshevik Party in Conflict, p. 136) Thus their politics were
just as authoritarian as the mainstream Bolshevism they attacked on
economic issues.
The same can be said of the WO. While Brinton states that they and
the Kronstadt rebels had much in common, the facts are different --
they did not share the same vision. True, the WO did see an increased
role for trade unions within the Soviet regime but not at the expense
of party power. Like their opponents within the CP, they stood for
party dictatorship and the guiding role of the party in the unions
and only differed in that they wanted increased democracy and freedom
within the party and an increased role for the trade unions in
production. (Leonard Schapiro, The Origin of the Communist
Autocracy, p. 294) In contrast, the Kronstadt rebels stood for
genuine workers' democracy in both economic and political spheres and
had most in common with the SR-Maximalists, a political grouping
popular in Kronstadt during 1917 whose politics were between the
Left-SRs and the anarchists. As such, while Brinton was puzzled by
members of the WO helping to storm Kronstadt, the contradiction is
more apparent than real.
It would also have been useful for Brinton to link Bolshevik
ideology and policy to the Marxist tradition. Looking at Lenin's
pronouncements of early 1918, it is not difficult to see where he got
them from -- the same stupidities can be found in Engels' infamous
diatribe against anarchism "On Authority." Sadly, Brinton
tended to distance himself from anarchism and the insights it offers
to genuine revolutionaries. If he had been better acquainted with,
say, Kropotkin he would have been aware that he had predicted many of
the problems facing the Russian Revolution (such as isolation,
economic disruption, mass unemployment) and had suggested solutions
to them (rooted in the mass participation and popular
self-organisation Brinton's own politics are). While eschewing the
anarchist label may have allowed him to avoid the petty and silly
arguments that so frequent what passes for an anarchist movement in
the UK, it also ensured that a rich source of realistic revolutionary
ideas was effectively ignored. This ignorance still exists today as
can be seen when Marxists claim that anarchists think that
libertarian communism can be created overnight. In reality, Kropotkin
ridiculed that notion and stressed the difficulties any revolt would
face.
So while his politics were extremely close to communist-anarchism
(editor David Goodway calls them "fully anarchist" in his
excellent introduction), Brinton's perspectives on anarchism were too
shaded by his Leninist background (and, unfortunately, the state of
the UK anarchist movement in the 1960s and 70s did little to disabuse
him of such opinions). This can be seen from his review of Paul
Avrich's book "The Russian Anarchists." While he is right to
bemoan the anti-organisational and anti-theoretical tendencies of
Russian anarchism (something all too commonly shared in the English
speaking anarchist movement), he does get basic things wrong, like
Kropotkin's ideas on the role of "Mutual Aid" in society (his
comment on Kropotkin "idealis[ing] the autonomous social units of
a bygone age" is equally ill-informed).
Brinton's dismissal of Kropotkin is based on Avrich's summary of
his ideas rather than a reading of the source material. While Brinton
quotes Avrich maintaining that, for Kropotkin, "co-operation
rather than conflict is at the root of the historical process"
the fact is Kropotkin said no such thing. In reality, Kropotkin
stressed that mutual aid was a factor in evolution
along with mutual struggle. At no time did he deny the role of
struggle, in fact the opposite. In "Mutual Aid" itself he
stressed that the book's examples concentrated on mutual aid simply
because mutual struggle (between individuals of the same species) had
been emphasised so much in biology that he felt no need to illustrate
it. He did note that based on the findings he summarised the relative
importance of each factor may have to be reviewed but at no stage did
he deny either factor (unlike the bourgeois apologists he was
refuting).
Equally, regardless of what Brinton thought "Mutual Aid"
was not amongst Kropotkin's "earlier" writings. His actual
earliest writings (as compiled in "Words of a Rebel",
"Conquest of Bread" and, more recently, "Act for
Yourselves") are clearly based on class struggle and only someone
who had never read Kropotkin could claim, as Brinton did, that his
"aim is to convince and reason with (rather than to overthrow)
those who oppress the masses" and that he stood for "a
co-operation that clearly transcended the barriers of class." The
reality is different. To quote one of Kropotkin's "earlier"
works: "What solidarity can exist between the capitalist and the
worker he exploits? Between the head of an army and the soldier?
Between the governing and the governed?" (Words of a
Rebel, p. 30) Clearly Kropotkin was well aware that co-operation
could not be applied between classes.
Even "Mutual Aid" (which was essentially a work of popular
science rather than a book of revolutionary anarchist propaganda) was
not blind to the importance of social struggle, highlighting as it
did trade unions and strikes was examples of "the workers' need of
mutual support" (one which developed in the face of extensive
state repression). Nor was it blind to the fact that individuals
struggle "to attain personal or caste superiority" but simply
noted that these "conflicts . . . have been analysed, described,
and glorified from time immemorial" and so history, "such as
it has hitherto been written, is almost entirely a description of the
ways and means by which theocracy, military power, autocracy, and . .
.the richer classes' rule have been promoted, established, and
maintained." Social progress lay in the practices and
organisations of the oppressed for "in so far as" as new
"economical and social institutions" were "a creation of
the masses" they "have all originated from the same
source" of mutual aid. (Mutual Aid, p. 213, p. 231, p.
180) These are hardly the comments of someone who ignored class
conflict and the role it played in society!
Brinton does provide a quote from "Mutual Aid" to bolster
his argument, but that is taken out of context. Rather than stress
the need for inter-class solidarity, as Brinton claimed, Kropotkin
was in fact explaining why members of the ruling and middle classes
turn their back on capitalist morality and become philanthropists,
reformers or (like Kropotkin and Brinton himself) revolutionaries.
Thus, Kropotkin argued, feelings of human solidarity can surface in
even the most unlikely of places, including those who have benefited
from the current competitive system. However, the focus of his those
parts of "Mutual Aid" which dealt with humanity was on popular
organisation of solidarity and how it expressed itself at different
times. As part of this, Kropotkin showed how these institutions
changed in the face of changes in the society (i.e. due to the rise
of classes and hierarchies and popular resistance to them).
While this may seen an incredibly trivial point, this
misunderstanding (or ignorance) of Kropotkin's arguments in
"Mutual Aid" does seem to crop up whenever Leninists try to
address anarchist ideas (a classic example would be the SWP's Pat
Stack and his embarrassingly inaccurate diatribe "Anarchy in the
UK?" which appeared a few years back in "Socialist
Review"). As such, clarifying the facts of the matter may help
anarchists to counter such nonsense when it is repeated in the future
(as it will be, regardless of how many times it is refuted). It is a
shame that Brinton, like the Leninists he had so recently left, did
not bother to acquaint himself with anarchist ideas before deciding
to attack them.
Brinton, like Solidarity as a whole, was marked by his complete
rejection of Leninism and the concept of the vanguard party. Instead,
like his intellectual mentor Cornelias Castoriadis and the council
communists, he advocated of workers councils as both the means to
fight capitalism and the basic building blocks of a socialist
society. In this, his ideas echo the best traditions of anarchism
rather than Marxism (it was Bakunin and the libertarian wing of the
First International who first raised this idea in the 1860s). It took
Marxists until 1917 before a "councilist" interpretation of Marx's
ideas on the state became mainstream within it thanks, ironically, to
Lenin's "State and Revolution" (needless to say, that book's
libertarian rhetoric was quickly jettisoned once the Bolsheviks were
in power). Before then, the dominant idea was that a workers' party
would be elected to power democratically and the state machine
destroyed by decree (this interpretation, it should be said, has far
more support in Marx and Engels than Lenin's highly selective account
would suggest).
Some have attacked this "councilist" vision of revolutionary
transition as being "self-exploitation" or "self-managed capitalism."
Others have argued that self-management is a key aspect of socialism
because it is not inherently socialist. Brinton himself effectively
answered the latter claim by noting that while one "could conceive
of self-management without socialism" it was impossible to
"imagine any socialism worth living under without self-managed
individuals, collectives and institutions. . .
Who, if not those directly involved, would have
the greatest say in the fundamental decisions? And how
would such a non-self-managed 'socialist' society differ
from all the monstrous societies we see around us today, societies in
which minorities take all the fundamental decisions, and -- through
their access tom information and power -- perpetuate their own
privileges?"
As for the "self-exploitation" argument, this hardly makes sense
from a socialist perspective. Yes, basing your ideas on transition on
a market system with self-managed economic units may result in
unpleasant consequences (for example, competition resulting in longer
and harder working hours or driving the accumulation of means of
production) but it is hardly exploitative in the socialist sense.
This is because workers are controlling both their labour and its
product. As such, it is not capitalism which, as both Proudhon and
Marx stressed, requires the replacement of self-employment with wage
labour. Given that no revolution has succeeded in immediately
abolishing money and that any future revolution will be as perfect as
some would like, Brinton's and Castoriadis's position was sensible as
a starting point.
Brinton correctly stressed that working class people, due to their
position in society, resisted hierarchy and, as a consequence of
their experiences, could draw revolutionary conclusion (helped, of
course, by those who had already made that journey). As a necessary
consequence of this perspective, he rightly viewed a revolutionary
organisation as an instrument that working class people could use to
transform society rather than seeking to lead them. In other words,
the basic anarchist idea of revolutionaries influencing the class
struggle as equals rather than as repositories of the correct
revolutionary ideology which others should follow (whether they want
to or not). As Bolshevism showed, the latter mentality leads to the
inevitable substitution of party power for workers power.
Similarly, he was correct to stress that any revolutionary
organisation should try to prefigure as much as possible the future
society we want in its structure and decision-making, in other words
by practising "self-management." Again, the similarities with
anarchism are clear. Finally, Brinton was right to argue that a
genuinely libertarian organisation had to encourage people to rely on
their own efforts rather than trust in leaders. As he put it, "We
consider irrational (and/or dishonest) that those who talk most of
the masses (and of the capacity of the working class to create a new
society) should have the least confidence in people's ability to
dispense with leaders." ("As We Don't See It")
His dismissal of Leninist organisation in the essay
"Revolutionary Organisation" is short but devastating. He
notes that while Leninists argue that "to fight the highly
centralised forces of modern capitalism requires an equally
centralised type of party" this "ignores the fact that
capitalist centralisation is based on coercion and force and the
exclusion of the overwhelming majority of the population from
participating in any of its decisions." Equally, while Leninists
claim that such organisations are robust under state repression in
reality they are "particularly vulnerable to police
persecution" for when "all power is concentrated in the hands
of the leaders, their arrest immediately paralyses the whole
organisation . . .With their usual inconsistency, the Trotskyists
even explain the demise of their Wrestern European sections during
World War II by telling people how their leaders were murdered by the
Gestapo!"
There are aspects of this book which show its age. For example,
the assumption, so common before the 1980s, that Russian-style state
capitalism was a more rational and advanced form of capitalism.
Looking back, this was obviously not the case. Bureaucratic waste and
inefficiency marked the Leninist/Stalinist system from the start (any
serious account of Lenin's "War Communist" regime cannot but conclude
that the Bolshevik dogma of centralisation made matters much worse).
Of course, this was obscured by the rapid industrialisation of Russia
under Stalin and anti-Soviet propaganda by Western states to justify
their own spying and weapons budgets (an honest account of the
failings of Stalinism would hardly provoke the fear required). Then
there is the notion, again so common before 1974, that Keynesianism
had ensured that major economic crises within capitalism had been
solved. Brinton, to his credit, revised his views on this and by the
early 1980s saw the limitations in Castoriadis's ideas which were
based on this perspective (in 1974 he denied that capitalism faced a
crisis). Brinton did, however, keep the valid core of Castoriadis's
economic analysis and continued to stress that class struggle was the
real source of capitalism's problems and capitalist policies evolve
to combat it (as can be seen, for example, from the rise and fall of
Monetarism, for example).
Ultimately, these are minor issues. The core ideas of Brinton in
terms of the importance of self-management, the need for
revolutionary theory and practice to take into account all aspects of
hierarchical society, his consistency and logic, remain as relevant
today as when they were written. Anarchists have a lot to gain from
reading this collection and AK Press should be applauded for making
it available for a new generation of libertarian activists to read
and, hopefully, apply.
Buy
it from AK press
Bibliography
Aves, Jonathan, Workers Against Lenin: Labour Protest and the
Bolshevik Dictatorship, Tauris Academic Studies, London,
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Jump To Comment: 1 2Any article as detailed as this remains fatally flawed without any mention of ' The guillotine at work' by G Maximoff. Maybe I missed it - if so I apologize and withdraw but this is a critical book about this critical period.
Marxists began murdering anachists in April 1918 in Russia and they never really stopped since. Not enough anarchists seem aware of this and in fact many of todays ' anarchists' sound more like neo-marxists than anarchists. ( esp ' anarchist-communists' )
Just my 2 kopeks.
Alexandre' Skirde's "Makhno: Cossack of Anarchy" does a good job of showing that as well.