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Title: Kropotkin’s ecology Author: Brian Morris Date: 2022, January 22 Language: en Topics: Peter Kropotkin, ecology Source: The Ecologist, January 22, 2022; accessed October 23, 2022 at [[https://theecologist.org/2021/dec/24/kropotkins-ecology]]
“The present is where we get lost – if we forget our past and have no
vision of the future.” So wrote the Ghanaian poet Ayi Kwei Armah.
This year marks the centenary of the death of the anarchist-geographer,
Peter Kropotkin – a figure from the past who we should certainly not
forget.
A talented Geographer, a pioneer social ecologist and a revolutionary
socialist, Kropotkin generated a “treasure of fertile ideas” (as his
friend Errico Malatesta put it) that still have contemporary relevance.
Born in Moscow in 1842, it is one of the curious ironies of history that
Kropotkin, who became one of the fiercest opponents of all forms of
state power, was born into the highest ranks of the Russian aristocracy.
For his princely forebears had been among the earlier rulers of Russia.
After exploring and undertaking scientific research in the remote
regions of Manchuria and Siberia during the 1860’s, Kropotkin was later
to become a member of the International Workingmen’s Association.
He was twice imprisoned for his political activities. Coming to Britain
in 1886 he was to remain an “honourable exile”, as Nicolas Walter
described him, for the next thirty years.
Until his return to his native land in 1917 at the outbreak of the
Russian Revolution. During his many years of exile, Kropotkin became one
of the leading theoreticians of the anarchist movement, as well as
continuing his scientific studies. In fact, Kropotkin’s portrait still
hangs in the library of the Royal Geographical Society in London.
An evolutionary naturalist like Darwin, Kropotkin was a polymath, and
multi-talented. He wrote books on the great French revolution, as he
called it, on Russian literature, on climate change and the physical
geography of Eurasia, on evolutionary biology and social ecology, as
well as writing, in his final years a philosophical treatise on ethics.
Here I will focus on one aspect of his rich and extensive oeuvre,
namely, his seminal writings on social ecology.
At the heart of human life, for Kropotkin, there was an essential
“paradox” given that, on the one hand, humans were an intrinsic part of
nature, the product of an evolutionary process, and totally dependent
upon the Natural World for food, water, and air – for their very
existence.
But on the other hand, humans were in a sense “separate” from nature:
the earth itself had existed for billions of years, long before humans
emerged, and humans, as a species-being, were rather unique in combining
a high degree of self-consciousness, a deep sociality, and in having
developed complex symbolic cultures and technology.
Indeed, humans are now described as having become a “geological force”
on the planet earth. Humans were in a sense “separate” from nature.
What is important about Kropotkin is that he always endeavoured to hold
together these two dimensions of human social life.
He thus combined humanism, with its emphasis on human agency and human
culture, and naturalism, fully recognizing the ecological dimension of
human life, that humans are always “rooted in nature”. As a social
philosopher Kropotkin was, therefore, fundamentally an ecological
humanist, a social ecologist.
Two books that he wrote (both based on articles published in the 1890’s)
exemplify his social ecology: these are “Fields, Factories and Workshops
Tomorrow” (1899) and “Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution” (1902).
Towards the end of the nineteenth century Kropotkin became increasingly
concerned with two interrelated issues or developments.
One was the growing “abyss” that was developing between the countryside
emptied of people and increasingly of its wildlife, and the city, with
people living in squalor and poverty in overcrowded tenements and
working in factories in which the conditions were unhealthy,
exploitative, and completely undemocratic.
The other concern was the development within capitalism, of an
industrial form of agriculture, a system of monoculture which depleted
the fertility of the soil, and in which farming was geared not simply to
the production of food but to the generation of profit.
He was also concerned that virtually all the land in Britain was
privately owned, and that huge tracts of land were given over to
shooting preserves – of pheasants and grouse – specifically for the
recreational pursuits of a rich and powerful ruling class.
Although people like Trotsky, and liberal scholars generally, have
depicted Kropotkin as a dreamy intellectual, a utopian socialist,
completely out of touch with social and political “realities”, in fact
Kropotkin was a very practical and down to earth scholar.
While Marx had spent his time in the library of the British Museum
studying economics — mainly government reports, Kropotkin travelled
widely making empirical studies of agricultural practices, and all his
life, he and his wife Sophie cultivated an allotment. He even made his
own furniture!
In his small book of reflections Fields, Factories and Workshops
Tomorrow, which Colin Ward described as one of “the great prophetic
works of the nineteenth century”, Kropotkin advocated the following:
decentralized, and he made a plea for what we would now describe as the
“greening” of city life.
involving vegetable gardens, intensive field cultivation, irrigated
meadows, orchards, greenhouse culture, as well as kitchen gardens.
Through these, Kropotkin argued, high yields of a variety of crops could
be produced. Self-sufficiency in food could be achieved, he felt,
without recourse to industrial farming (under capitalism), if the
cultivator could be free of the three “vultures” (as Kropotkin described
then) – the state, the landowner, and the banker. Kropotkin thus opposed
both the state collectivization of agriculture and capitalist farming.
reduced to a few hours a day, enabling people in a community to have
plenty of time for leisure pursuits and cultural activities.
All this, Kropotkin recognized, would involve a social revolution, and
the creation of an ecological society based on anarchist communist
principles.
It is worth noting, that Kropotkin’s book had an important influence on
many people, including for example, Lev Tolstoy, Ebenezer Howard (and
his advocacy of garden cities), Lewis Mumford and Paul Goodman.
The book on “Mutual Aid” is perhaps the best known of all of Kropotkin’s
works and is still in print. A work of popular science, it expressed
Kropotkin’s concern at the end of the nineteenth century, at the rise of
a school of thought that became known as “Social Darwinism”.
What initially provoked Kropotkin was an article by Thomas Huxley, who
was widely known as “Darwin’s bulldog”, given his defence of Darwin’s
theory, published in the journal The Nineteenth Century in 1888.
It was titled, The Struggle for Existence and its Bearing upon Man.
Quoting Hobbes Huxley specifically described life in nature – both
organic nature and the social life of tribal people – as being one that
was “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short”.
Following Huxley, the Social Darwinists – which included such ruthless
American entrepreneurs as Rockefeller and Carnegie – applied Darwinian
theory – specifically Herbert Spencer’s concept of the “survival of the
fittest” to human social life.
This concept was used as an ideological justification to promote
capitalism and imperialism, and the colonial exploitation of tribal
peoples. It also implied that humans were by nature, motivated by
aggressive impulses, and were intrinsically selfish, egoistic,
competitive, and possessive individualists.
Kropotkin, of course, was critical of Rousseau, and never doubted the
existence – the reality – of conflict, competition, and egoism
(subjective agency), in both the living world and in human social life.
But he nevertheless strongly challenged the Hobbesian (capitalist)
worldview, arguing that it was exaggerated and completely one-sided. He
therefore came to write a series of articles on “mutual aid” – the
cooperative activities and mutual support and care that was expressed
not only by animals, but in all human societies and throughout history.
The mutual aid tendency, or what he also described as “anarchy” was also
clearly evident “among ourselves” people in Western Societies.
It co-existed with, and often in opposition to, the state and capitalist
institutions. Mutual aid (or anarchy) was expressed, Kropotkin argued,
in worker’s associations, trade unions, family life, religious
charities, various clubs and cultural societies, as well as many other
forms of voluntary associations. Mutual Aid, Kropotkin stressed, was an
important factor in evolution and in human social life.
Mutual Aid is not an anarchist text, nor a work of political theory, but
it does reflect Kropotkin’s conception of a future society that he
described as free or anarchist communism.
This would imply the need for a social revolution and a form of politics
that involved the following three essential tenets or principles:
that inhibited the autonomy and well being of the person as a unique
social being;
system (which for Kropotkin was a form of slavery) private property, its
competitive ethos and its ideology of possessive individualism;
aid, voluntary associations, participatory forms of democracy and a
community-oriented form of social organization. Such a society would
both enhance the fullest expression of individual liberty and express a
mutualism, a co-operative relationship with the natural world.
In an era when corporate capitalism reigns triumphant, creating
conditions that induce fear, social dislocations, gross economic
inequalities, and an acute ecological crisis, Kropotkin’s vision, and
his form of politics, still has a contemporary relevance.
In contrast to the advocates of the “Green New Deal” — supported by
Naomi Klein et al — Kropotkin would have insisted that the capitalist
state rather than being the solution to the ecological crisis was in
fact the cause of it.
For, as the social ecologist Murray Bookchin long ago argued, capitalism
in symbiotic relationship with the state plunders the earth in search of
profits and is as a result the main cause of the “modern crisis”.
Brian Morris is emeritus professor of anthropology at Goldsmiths
College, and author of several books on ecology and anarchism, including
Kropotkin: The Politics of Community (PM Press 2018). “To the memory of
a colleague, David Graeber (1961–2020).”