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Title: Bakunin’s Women
Author: Michael Schmidt
Date: November 12, 2012
Language: en
Topics: Mikhail Bakunin, book review
Source: Retrieved on 5th August 2021 from http://anarkismo.net/article/24259

Michael Schmidt

Bakunin’s Women

Mikhail Bakunin “reappeared as a bogeyman after September 11” because

the 1920 bombing of Wall Street by the Galleanist anarchist Mario Buda

which left thirty dead, 200 injured, demolished the magnate J.P.

Morgan’s office, and caused $2-million in property damage was the worst

prior terror attack in New York, “but his casting as the grandfather of

terrorism was an exercise of mystification rather than explanation.”

Bakunin’s towering intellect has always been reduced to caricature of

his supposedly chaotic nature, despite the fact that the 1872 split in

the First International left the Marxists with perhaps a total of 1,000

adherents across the world, while the anarchist faction (usually

misrepresented as the minority) could count mass trade unions such as

the Spanish FRE of 60,000 members, the Mexican CGO of 15,000 members,

and the Italians unions with 30,000 members. It speaks volumes about the

proletarian threat that Bakunin’s ideas posed to power that unlike

Marxism, with its state-sponsored press and comfortable academic

sinecures, that his complete writings only became available in 2000

thanks to the International Institute of Social History’s multilingual

CD-ROM Bakounine: Ouvres complètes.

Given that Leier’s timely biography was published several years ago –

part of a wave of new anarchist movement studies emanating from Canada,

not least focused on what was perhaps the highest expression of “real,

existing anarchism,” the Makhnovist Ukraine – I am not going to attempt

a complete review, but rather focus on a key area in the formulation of

Bakunin’s thought: the women in his life.

While clearly sympathetic to Bakunin, Leier treats fairly with his not

very likeable primary antagonist, Karl Marx, to whom all his turbulent

life, Bakunin acknowledged a huge debt: Marx “advanced and proved the

incontrovertible truth, confirmed by the entire past and present of

human society, nations, and states, that economic fact has always

preceded legal and political right. The exposition and demonstration of

that truth constitutes one of Marx’s principle contributions to

science.” Leier also has sympathies for libertarian strains of Marxism,

concluding the book by saying that “with the main protagonists now long

dead, it may be possible to consider the similarities [between anarchism

and Marxism] and find ways to pose the differences as a progressive,

dynamic, and creative tension as we confront the problems of the

twenty-first century.”

Lively, accessible and judicious, in essence, Leier’s work is a crucial

restoration of Bakunin the thinker, who always tested his theories

against the barricades in a manner anathema to the reclusive Marx. What

emerges is a long progression from an idealistic pan-Slavism to a

rigorously materialist anarchist-collectivism, Bakunin’s evolving praxis

continually tested in the fires of revolt and reaction. And the clarity

of his thought is revealed to be penetrating, even today. Take for

example his comment on speculative capital: “speculation and

exploitation undoubtedly constitute a sort of work, but work that is

entirely unproductive. By this reckoning, thieves and kings work as

well.”

But I want to focus briefly on a group that Leier shows to have been

formative in the shaping of that intellect, the women who surrounded him

in youth: his sisters Liubov, Varvara, Tatiana and Alexandra, and their

friends, the Beyer sisters, Alexandra and Natalie. In the claustrophobic

atmosphere of the Russian academy of the 1830s where philosophy was

outlawed because it rejected received wisdom, the creation of reading

circles by the most progressive students proved a crucial first step in

creating a new post-Decembrist generation of Russian militants. “The two

most important circles were one headed and named after Nicholas

Stankevich and another jointly by Alexander Herzen and Nicholas Ogarev.

Almost exclusively male, the Stankevich circle and the Herzen-Ogarev

circle became centres for avant-garde thought in literature, philosophy

and politics.

“According to Herzen and the many historians who have accepted his

memoirs uncritically, the circles sprang up spontaneously. More careful

historians, however, have noted that they owed much to the sophisticated

discussion groups of the Bakunin and Beyer sisters. One reason Bakunin

loved his sisters was the intellectual equality they shared, and they

proved able sparring partners as he thought and rethought his own

philosophy.” The older sisters, Liubov and Varvara, “were more conscious

rebels” than their brother and the Bakunin-Beyer circle, properly

called, created “the first spaces for provocative discussion” among the

new generation that would eventually flower into the nihilist, narodnik,

Essaire, maximalist, Marxist, and anarchist strands that would play such

key roles in challenging and finally overthrowing the power of the Tsar.

Curiously, it was above all the narodniks, whose quasi-anarchist

philosophy of “going to the people” that drew an unprecedented number of

women into their ranks.

Tragically constrained by the gendered confines of Russian society,

Liubov Bakunin died of tuberculosis in 1838, and it was only Varvara who

to some extent lived her ideals, following her brother Mikhail abroad

and mimicking his wandering, free-thinking lifestyle. But Leier’s work

suggests that the Bakunin-Beyer circle and its far-reaching influences

is deserving of further serious in-depth study. Certainly, his sisters’

example early confirmed Bakunin in his sexual egalitarianism: women

“differing from man but not inferior to him, intelligent, industrious,

and free like him, is declared his equal both in rights and in political

and social functions and duties.”

His beliefs were sorely put to the test when he allowed the love of his

life, his wife Antonia, of whom he wrote to Herzen “she shares in heart

and spirit all my aspirations,” to follow her heart in falling in love

with and even bearing the children of fellow militant Carlo Gambuzzi.

Perhaps because of this generosity of spirit, Antonia Bakunin “with no

prospect of a comfortable or easy life… would stay with the errant

anarchist until his death.”

After the suppression of anarchism in Russia by Marx’s ideological

heirs, it was another woman, the indomitable historian Natalia

Mikhailovna Pirumova (1923–1997), who rescued much of the works of

Bakunin and Kropotkin from obscurity, and whose brave and tireless work

in doing so is credited with the revival of the Russian

anarchist/syndicalist movement from 1979. By 1962, Pirumova was working

for the USSR History Institute and had already scandalised Soviet

academia with her work on Bakunin and Kropotkin in the historical

journal Prometey. By 1966, she had gathered sufficient material to

publish a book on Bakunin which was extended in 1970 and reprinted in

the popular Life of Remarkable People series. Despite disgruntled

reviews from the official press, she followed this up with a book on the

life of Kropotkin in 1972. In this period, in echo of the Bakunin-Beyer

circle, she gathered around her not only historians of Russia’s

socialist movements, but the Vorozhdeniye (Renaissance) literary group

as well as political prisoners including anarchists and socialists who

had survived the gulags. A 93-year-old Essaire who attended Pirumova’s

funeral in 1997 said that in Pirumova’s presence “we stopped thinking of

ourselves as outcasts, forever excluded from society by Stalin”.

It is a distinct irony that when he died, Bakunin remained an outcast,

his funeral drawing a mere 40 mourners (albeit more than Marx’s),

whereas a measure of the movement he helped initiate is given by the

fact that Buenaventura Durruti’s funeral, 50 years later during the

aerial bombardment of Madrid, drew 500,000 mourners. In Bakunin’s very

last public fray with his pen, the tired old fighter asked only that he

be forgotten so that a new generation could take up the torch of

liberty. Fortunately, while largely deprived of Bakunin’s writings, the

militants who built the mass anarchist trade unions that came to

dominate the organised working class of Latin America in particular –

fully 50 years in Cuba, for instance, before the tiny Communist Party

was founded – relied heavily on his praxis, demonstrating to our own age

that a libertarian proletarian counter-power is viable and not only a

pretty dream.