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Title: Bakunin for 21st Century Activists Author: Anarcho Date: November 26, 2009 Language: en Topics: Mikhail Bakunin, 21st century, Black Flag (U.K.), interview Source: Retrieved on 1st February 2021 from https://anarchism.pageabode.com/?p=373 Notes: Published in: Black Flag no. 229 (BM Hurricane, London, WC1N 3XX, UK)
Mark Leier is a Canadian historian of working class history and the
director of the Centre for Labour Studies at Simon Fraser University. An
anarchist, he has written on extensively on British Columbiaâs rich
history of labour radicalism. His fourth book, Bakunin: The Creative
Passion (Thomas Dunne Books, 2006), is an excellent biography of one of
the founders of anarchism. We thought it would good to ask him why
Bakunin would be of interest to 21^(st) century activists.
Q. So, first, why write a biography of Bakunin?
I first started thinking about a biography of Bakunin in the aftermath
of some of the anti-globalization and anti-WTO protests, such as the
âBattle in Seattleâ and the terrible police brutality in Genoa that
resulted in the death of Carlo Giuliani. The anarchist presence at these
protests had the media and âterrorism expertsâ scrambling to explain
what was going on. Of course they were trying to explain away anarchism,
not to understand, and they relied on parodies of anarchism. When they
tried to do historical analysis, they always took it back to Bakunin,
painting him as the father of propaganda by the deed, which they always
interpreted as blind violence and terror. That worsened after the 9/11
destruction of the World Trade Towers. My first reaction was to blame
the journalists and pundits, but when I went back to the English
language works on Bakunin, such as Carrâs book and Mendelâs and Berlinâs
articles, it was obvious that there was no comprehensive book, aimed at
a more general audience, that treated Bakunin seriously as an activists
and a thinker. So I decided to try to do that. I didnât set out to write
the biography of Bakunin or the most comprehensive biography; I tried to
write a biography that used some primary research and that built on the
splendid academic work on Bakunin that was not easily accessible to a
non-academic audience.
Q. What would you say Bakunin has to offer todayâs radicals?
First, he offers some hope, hope in the importance of struggle. This was
an activist who fought on the losing side all of his life, yet did not
lose his passionate hope, his understanding, that the struggle itself
was meaningful, for without it, the world would certainly get worse.
While some seem him as a quixotic figure, I see him as one who
realistically assessed the opportunities for success and failure and
decided to fight for an ideal even when he thought there was no
immediate chance of victory.
Second, he offers a clear appraisal of what the radicalsâ targets should
be. After all, capitalism and the state have not changed much since his
time; Bakunin would recognize much in the 21^(st) century. He wrote
powerful critiques of capital and the state that still serve as useful
starting points for understanding the world, and he did so in
accessible, evocative language.
Third, while there is a tendency to draw a dividing line between
âclassical anarchismâ and contemporary anarchism and post-anarchism, a
careful reading of Bakunin suggests that the âclassical anarchistsâ
wrestled with many of the same problems of goals, strategy, and tactics
that anarchists face today. In fact, I believe that Bakunin offers a
useful critique of todayâs post-anarchism, for the ideas of
postmodernism that inform post-anarchism are not as new as its advocates
suggest. That is, Bakunin rejected the idealist thought of his day to
become a materialist and a realist, and I believe materialism and
realism offer a stronger foundation for criticism than idealism and some
variants of post-modernism.
Q. What where Bakuninâs strengths and weaknesses as a thinker? As an
activist?
Like most of us, his strengths and weaknesses often stemmed from the
same source. As an activist, one of his strengths was his optimism,
optimism not so much about the possibility of success so much as
optimism about the necessity for radical analysis and action. At the
same time, it is often the case that refusing to appreciate incremental
change can be immoral. Let me give you an example. Many anarchists
refuse to vote, for many very good reasons. At the same time, voting for
a slightly more progressive party may mean real benefits for people.
Even if that benefit is only, say, $50 a month more for someone on
welfare, that $50 is crucial for some people. And so it may be that some
practical politics should also inform anarchist ideas about what to do
now. Of course I am simplifying the question and I would not presume to
tell anarchists what should be done, but I offer this as an example
where a straightforward argument on refusing to vote may not be as
principled as it first seems. As a thinker, one of his great strengths
was his ability to write passionate, inspiring prose. At the same time,
he could be a little imprecise in his analysis. Political movements need
all sorts of people: orators, analysts, rebels, educators,
street-fighters, people who are angry, people who are compassionate, and
nobody can be all these things all the time. So I have tried to
appreciate Bakuninâs strengths rather than harp on the weaknesses.
Q. Given that Bakunin was right about Marxism (predicting that social
democracy would become reformist and that the dictatorship of the
proletariat would become the dictatorship over the proletariat), why do
you think his ideas are not more accepted in radical circles?
I think his ideas are not more accepted precisely because he was right.
If patriotism is the last refuge of the scoundrel, pragmatism is the
first refuge of the scoundrel. Bakunin always shines a critical light on
the compromisers and those who insist that we have to settle for less.
Now, as I suggested above, sometimes compromise is all you can do, and a
little may be better than nothing, but Bakuninâs insistence that we must
always strive for more, even when we compromise, is a stinging rebuke to
those who say, âthis far, but no further.â
Q. There are lots of distortions and misrepresentations attached to
Bakunin. What do you think are the worse?
As you suggest, this would be a long list. Among the worst â the belief
that he believed in terror for the sake of terror. His arguments about
violence were much more sophisticated and complicated than that, but
they have been reduced to absurd notions by his critics and sometimes by
his supporters. His arguments about bandits as a revolutionary force
have often been misinterpreted â the social bandits of Russia that he
talked about were very different from, say, motorcycle gangs or criminal
gangs. Not every outlaw is an anarchist â some more closely resemble
fascists, whatever understanding we have for the fact that social forces
created them. Bakuninâs anti-Semitism has been greatly misunderstood. At
virtually every talk Iâve given on Bakunin, Iâm asked about it. Where it
exists, it is repellent, but it takes up about 5 pages of the thousands
of pages he wrote, was written in the heat of his battles with Marx,
where Bakunin was slandered viciously, and needs to be understood in the
context of the 19^(th) century.
Q. Bakunin is well known for his love of secret societies? How central
were they in his thought? Do we have any reliable information on how
they worked internally?
In my opinion, the secret societies have been greatly exaggerated. In
some cases, they didnât exist beyond Bakunin and a few friends, and so
functioned like affinity groups, not revolutionary cells; in other
cases, they had good reason for being secret, for open groups were an
invitation for arrest and imprisonment. The important point is that as
an anarchist, Bakunin did not believe in secret, conspiratorial coups
but in open action and propaganda. The idea that he believed the social
revolution would be accomplished by small sects is simply wrong.
Q. What is known of the process behind creating the early documents for
these groups? Documents like âThe Program of the Allianceâ are usually
published as authored by Bakunin, but where they collective statements
that he then finalised?
It varies â some pretty clearly seem to be his own work, while others
are clearly more collective statements. He wrote incessantly, and
re-wrote incessantly, not to say obsessively, working and re-working the
material over time, and he clearly incorporated the ideas of others as
he went. He didnât live in a closet or an ivory tower, and his ideas
evolved as he worked with other people.
Q. Can ideas which reflect the economic and political structures of the
nineteenth century be drawn upon to find new solutions to new problems?
I think that if Bakunin were dropped into our society today, he would be
impressed with the technological progress but dismayed by the lack of
social and political progress. Many of the same problems that existed in
his day are still here today, and in many ways, we have declined, not
progressed. The tsarâs prisons, for example, were regarded as the worst
in Europe, but in many ways, the treatment of prisoners such as Bakunin
was better than that found in US prisons today.
Q. What is the relationship of Bakunin to Proudhonâs anarchism?
Bakunin was undoubtedly influenced by Proudhonâs sense of justice and
liberty, and by his personality, but intellectually, the influence was
rather limited. Bakunin believed that Proudhon had not made the
intellectual breakthrough to a materialist understanding of the world.
For Bakunin, that understanding that ideas do not exist in some pure
form but come out of real, lived experience, opportunity, and
constraints was crucial. For good or ill, Bakunin was a sophisticated
intellectual, aware of contemporary trends and thought. Proudhon was
not, and so was less of an intellectual influence on Bakunin. But
anarchism is not just an intellectual position; it is also an ethical
one and a moral one. In that sense, Proudhonâs anarchism, what Bakunin
thought of as his âinstinctualâ understanding of anarchism, was
important.
Q. How instrumental was Bakunin in creating modern anarchism, given that
many French mutualists (like Eugene Varlin) had independently come to
similar conclusions?
At one level, of course, we are all anarchists at heart, and so it is
not surprising that people move in similar directions. And similar
social conditions impel people to act and think in similar ways.
Anarchism in particular would seem to be a movement in which it would be
a mistake to attribute the creation or founding of a movement to a
single person. But I think anarchism is not just living without
authority; it is also a political theory, a set â or sets, sometimes in
conflict! â of ideas. In tracing the evolution of ideas, historians are
often limited to those who left records, either their own written work,
works written about them, records of organizations, and the like. That
is unfair, but it is the way the past works. So Bakuninâs influence, his
âcreditâ for creating modern anarchism, is in large part due to his
prominence as a writer and activist. He was very effective as a writer
and famous â infamous, perhaps, as an activist, and a powerful and
inspirational thinker. It is unfair to say he created modern anarchism,
but he did much to make it intelligible and accessible, and in that
sense, deserves some credit.
Q. Is the high esteem of Bakunin in anarchist circles an example of
radicals subscribing (unknowingly) to a âgreat menâ perspective on
history?
It depends on what you mean by âgreat man history.â Few of us would deny
that some people are inspirational, or have articulated our thoughts
more carefully than we have, or have taken on roles that we admire. In
that sense, I have no quarrel with âgreat person history.â But the more
usual meaning is to insist that history is only made by âgreat men and
women of power,â of kings and queens and magnates. That is a reactionary
notion of history that serves power, not people. No one would cast
Bakunin as that sort of âgreat man.â Many people know Bakuninâs aphorism
about authority â how he would absolutely acknowledge the authority of
the bookmaker on questions involving boots. But even then, Bakunin
insisted he would not bow down to that authority and would not do
whatever the bookmaker recommended. So too with Bakunin: we can choose
to listen to him and acknowledge his work as an anarchist thinker and
activist without conceding for a moment that we must bow to him as the
authority on anarchism. Having said, I do think that there is much of
interest and utility in his work, though others may disagree. And few
anarchists have ever treated Bakunin as an authority the way some
Marxists have consulted Marx for everything from understanding history
to fixing their faucets.
Q. I remember reading an article which argued, with some evidence, that
Bakunin was gay and his tolerance of Sergey Nechayev was down to lust.
Any comments?
It is always fun to speculate on why people do what they do, but without
facts, the speculation is meaningless. One of the points I wanted to
make in the book is that the psycho-history approach to Bakunin is
deeply flawed because the theories of psycho-history are very weak and
the evidence for the claims about Bakunin is simply non-existent. People
are complex, their motivations and reasons often unclear to themselves
and impossible for historians to understand completely. I have heard the
argument that Bakunin was gay, but have not seen any evidence. Without
evidence, any speculation is possible, but itâs also meaningless. I
would be happy to change my opinion if evidence were found, but to date,
I havenât seen any. There is no question that Bakunin tolerated some
nasty behaviour and ideas from Nechayev longer than he might have; but
more important, I think, is that he did repudiate Nechayevâs conception
of the revolutionary as an amoral agent and terrorist.
Q. Do you think that a merger of Bakunin and Marx is possible? What
would each give to such a synthesis? What would it be called?
In some ways, that synthesis has always been there. Alvin Gouldner
called Bakunin the first âpost-Marxist,â meaning someone who built on
Marxâs insights and focused on questions that Marx had not thought much
about or was mistaken about, such as the nature of the state, the
problems of vanguardism, and the ambiguous role of the ârevolutionary
intellectualsâ and their relationship to radical and working class
movements. Of course much of Marxâs insight was his own ability to
synthesize ideas from different fields, from philosophy, socialist
theory, and political economy, and Bakunin was in substantial agreement
with Marx on many issues. On some issues where they disagreed, they
misunderstood each other and in fact were more similar than they
allowed; on other issues, their personalities and dislike for each other
clouded the controversies. But I think it is fair to say that Marxism
becomes more palatable and inspiring the more it approaches anarchism,
while anarchism becomes more powerful as a way to view to world
critically the closer it approaches the best Marxist traditions.
Q. You have also written extensively on the IWW. Do you think
revolutionary unionism can grow in influence again?
If we change the question a little, to ask, will revolutionary workersâ
movements grow in influence again, I think the answer is, if they do
not, we are in grave danger. I doubt they will take the very same form
they did in the past, but workersâ movements have always risen,
declined, and risen again in new forms to meet new conditions. Clearly
the world can not continue as it has; the old choice, socialism or
barbarism, still faces us. Here I am using socialism in the old sense,
not as state socialism, Bolshevism, and the like. And no group can build
socialism â anarchism â other than the working class. Whether it will or
not is the question.
Q. Many anarchists at the time pointed to the obvious links between
revolutionary unionism with Bakuninâs anarchism, would you agree? Has
Bakunin anything to give for todayâs union activists?
Yes, Bakunin, or the ideas that he represented, were hugely influential
in building revolutionary unionism. In some ways, the IWW represented
that synthesis between Bakunin and Marx we talked about earlier. As for
todayâs union activists, that radical vision and tradition can be hugely
inspiring; the attempt to grapple with big ideas is essential; the
insistence on organizing from the periphery to the centre, not from the
centre out, is fundamental.
Q. Your second book, â Red Flags and Red Tape: The Making of a Labour
Bureaucracyâ,deals with the institutionalization of a non-revolutionary
labour movement. Do you think that this would affect even a
revolutionary union? Can it be avoided? If so, how?
I suspect any group of two or more people starts running into problems
of power and authority and decision-making! But youâre right, the
question is the institutionalization of power. One of the things I argue
in Red Flags and Red Tape is that people with some power â and the power
of these early labour bureaucrats was limited â often make the wrong
decision for the right reasons. That is, they were trying to build
working class militancy, trying to move workers to resistance, trying to
create a labor newspaper, trying to form new organizations â all worthy
aims. But precisely because they were not immediately accountable, they
made their decisions in a vacuum, without input and consensus from union
members. That separated them from the members and created a bureaucracy:
rule by office holders. The other thing I argue is that a union can be
militant and revolutionary without being democratic; alternatively,
though rare, a union could be conservative and democratic. So the
dangers of bureaucracy are always there. The way to avoid is to ensure
that institutions that let officials make important decisions by
themselves are not created in the first place.
Q. What areas of working class and anarchist history need investigating?
Is there anything you think budding anarcho-historians should be looking
into?
I have three answers here. The first is that there has been an explosion
of work in working class and anarchist history in recent years. A lot of
it has been published by university and academic presses, and that is
great, but we also need people to make that work more accessible and to
synthesize it. Second, there are huge areas of working class and
anarchist history that need investigating. The âethnicâ press of these
movements has not been adequately explored, at least not in North
America; the ways in which anarchism has sometimes retreated to
academia, but remained influential nonetheless is important to unearth;
the writers and activists who have pushed that synthesis of Marx and
Bakunin need to be explored. Here Iâm thinking of people such as Paul
Mattick, who never called himself an anarchist but was as
anti-authoritarian and anti-vanguard as Bakunin, and Erich Fromme as
just a few examples. And I am sure there are many, many other areas that
need exploration. But the third answer, and really, these are
observations and suggestions, not answers, is for anarchists to write
about every aspect of history from an anarchist perspective. That is,
there is no reason why anarchist history should only study anarchism. It
could study governments and capitalism and war and every other
historical topic from an anarchist perspective. That would be exciting
work.
Q. Richard Dawkins has provoked a lot of responses with his âThe God
Delusion, would Bakunin have approved? And is it not a strange omission
by Dawkins that Bakuninâs âGod and the Stateâ is missing from it?
Bakunin would likely have approved of Dawkinsâs atheism, but I suspect
he would think Dawkinsâs particular critique was a little naive. While
Bakunin was a ferocious atheist, he understood the appeal of religion to
the oppressed. If you want to âcureâ religion, he insisted, you had to
remove poverty and oppression. If religion were not a social
institution, a social power, but a matter of individual belief, then it
wouldnât much matter what people believed, for it would not intrude on
their lives. At the same time, they would soon realize that if they
wanted things to change, they could make those changes without appeal to
a non-existent power. If they wanted to understand the world, knowledge
would be available to them and while they could continue to believe in
anything they wanted, when they wanted to work in the world, they would
understand that science â real knowledge of whatever field â differs
from religion in that it has to deliver or it gets discarded. Take away
its social power, and religion is no longer an issue. Blaming people for
seeking some small solace isnât helpful.
Q. Finally, Bakunin had a pretty eventful life. Fighting on the
barricades in 1848, solitary confinement, escaping from Siberia,
fighting Marx in the International, taking part in insurrections in the
1870s. When you were writing your biography did you think it would make
a good film? And who would play Bakunin? Marx?
I often thought it would be a great film, or, at least, one Iâd like to
see. But Spielberg and Scorsese havenât returned my calls. Robbie
Coltrane would be my choice to play Bakunin, and he already has the
beard from the Harry Potter series. Marx is a little trickier; but
someone with the intensity of Robert De Niro could pull it off, though
that particular casting does boggle the mind. Personally, Iâd love to
see Jack Nicholson pull one of his famous hissy fits with a faceful of
yak hair glued on as he kicked and shouted about Bakuninâs ideas on the
communeâŠ..