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Title: Historical Materialism Author: Eric Fleischmann Date: May 26th, 2022 Language: en Topics: historical materialism, dialectics, Karl Marx, marxism, left-libertarianism, mutualism, libertarian socialism, Soviet Union Source: Retrieved on 5/26/22 from https://c4ss.org/content/56745. Notes: This is an edited republication of the study, originally published June 23, 2020.
One of the most famous theories forwarded by Karl Marx is that of
historical materialismâalthough Marx himself apparently never used that
exact term in his work.[1] To put it succinctly, Merriam-Webster defines
historical materialism as âthe Marxist theory of history and society
that holds that ideas and social institutions develop only as the
superstructure of a material economic base.â[2] And for about a century
after Marx, this has been the defining basis of historical and social
analysis for many of those on the radical left. However, as David
McNally accounts, in his look back at the work of Edward Palmer Thomas,
historical materialism has fallen somewhat out of fashion; âin the name
of rejecting âeconomismâ and âclass reductionismâ, large numbers of
intellectuals have come to believe the idea that society pivots
principally around the âdiscoursesâ which organise the way we see the
world and act within it.â[3] Similarly, in The Utopia of Rules, David
Graeber accounts for the prominence of the ideas of Max Weber and Michel
Foucault in the social sciences of the postwar United States as being in
part because of âthe ease with which each could be adopted as a kind of
anti-Marx, their theories put forth (usually in crudely simplified form)
as ways of arguing that power is not simply or primarily a matter of the
control of production but rather a pervasive, multifaceted, and
unavoidable feature of any social life.â[4] But the goal of the present
piece is not to critique or refute this turn towards discourse theory
and non-Marxist analyses of powerâthey hold immense meritâbut rather to
make an overview of Marxâs conception of historical materialism and its
implications for radical politics and then, through the use of
dialecticsâa central component of historical materialism itselfâand the
work of various thinkers, to respond to and forward critiques of the
theory in a manner that lends itself toward a left-libertarian
reinterpretation.
Marxâs concept of historical materialism emerged as a reaction to German
philosophy both historically and during his lifetime. Previously, German
thinking had been dominated by idealists who focused largely on the
spiritual and theological characteristics of society and the
dissemination of ideas and values. This is particularly true of the
followers of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel who separated into the
conservative Old Hegelians and more progressive Young Hegelians. As Marx
explains, âSince the Young Hegelians consider conceptions, thoughts,
ideas, in fact all the products of consciousness, to which they
attribute an independent existence, as the real chains of men (just as
the Old Hegelians declared them the true bonds of human society) it is
evident that the Young Hegelians have to fight only against these
illusions of consciousness.â[5] However, Marxâalthough also a student of
Hegelâraises the question of where these conceptions, thoughts, and
ideas even come from in the first place. Unlike previous German thinkers
he begins his analysis of history not with the emergence of writing,
religion, governance, or other great cultural inventions but rather
delves into what those thinkers called prehistory.
For Marx, the dawn of history begins with the material world and
material needs. He points out that before any semblance of civilization
can emerge, human beings must first consider âeating and drinking, a
habitation, clothing and many other things.â[6] Therefore, the genesis
of the means of producing these necessities of life becomes the primary
differentiation that humans begin to make between themselves and
so-called lower animalsâas opposed to distinguishing âby consciousness,
by religion or anything else you like.â But as the basic necessities of
life are satisfied by this production, new needs are themselves produced
and require greater productive forces and therefore greater numbers of
people. So, what starts as simply a relationship to nature also becomes
a social relationship. And this socialized production is not neutral
upon the configuration of society. As Marx further puts it:
This mode of production must not be considered simply as being the
production of the physical existence of the individuals. Rather it is a
definite form of activity of these individuals, a definite form of
expressing their life, a definite mode of life on their part. As
individuals express their life, so they are. What they are, therefore,
coincides with their production, both with what they produce and with
how they produce. The nature of individuals thus depends on the material
conditions determining their production.[7]
What this means is that the production of lifeâs necessities is not
somehow separate from that life, but instead becomes an intrinsic part
of human social existence, so the characteristics of individuals and
their lives within any society are determined largely by the mode of
production. Or, as Marx writes, âThe sum total of these relations of
production constitutes the economic structure of societyâthe real
foundation, on which rise legal and political superstructures and to
which correspond definite forms of social consciousness.â[8] This leads
to the primary assumption of Marxâs analysis of history: if the mode of
production is what determines the form and content of societyâdown to
even individual livesâthen the progression of history is caused by
changes in the basic elements of the economic system.
Marx outlines this conception of historical development in The German
Ideology through the identification of three types of ownership found in
European history. The first is âtribal [Stammeigentum] ownership,â which
involves the earliest hunting, fishing, raising of animals, and early
agriculture and, because of the latter two activities, often
âpresupposes a great mass of uncultivated stretches of land.â The
division of labor required to maintain this is very minimal, so it
remains largely within the family and therefore the overall social
structures are extensions of the early familial structureâbased around
patriarchal chieftains and maintaining small numbers of slaves. The
second is âancient communal and State ownership,â which emerges when
several tribes combine together into cities through agreement or force,
pooling their slave populations and uniting into a âspontaneous derived
association over against their slaves.â In this type, the division of
labor is even greater, and the earliest cases of private property begin
to emerge but are âabnormalâ and âsubordinate to communal ownership.â[9]
Finally, the third type is âfeudal or estate propertyâ wherein the
heavily laboring division of society is no longer slaves, but serfs and
peasants. In feudalism, property consists âon the one hand of landed
property with serf labour chained to it, and on the other of the labour
of the individual with small capital commanding the labour of
journeymen.â[10]
But there is quite obviously a fourth type that is not from a previous
historical period, and that is the distribution of ownership present in
capitalism, and a key demonstration of historical materialism is the
transition from feudalism to the current system. In Capital (Vol. I),
Marx asserts that the movement towards capitalism was obviously due to
changes regarding the means of production, but more specifically it
necessitated the rending of the feudal peasant populations from their
means of subsistence. He explains:
The capitalist system presupposes the complete separation of the
labourers from all property in the means by which they can realize their
labour. As soon as capitalist production is once on its own legs, it not
only maintains this separation, but reproduces it on a continually
extending scale. The process, therefore, that clears the way for the
capitalist system, can be none other than the process which takes away
from the labourer the possession of his means of production; a process
that transforms, on the one hand, the social means of subsistence and of
production into capital, on the other, the immediate producers into wage
labourers.[11]
And this separation of immediate producers from the means of production
was accomplished through measures such as âthe forcible driving [by
feudal lords] of the peasantry from the land, to which the latter had
the same feudal right as the lord himself, and by the usurpation of the
common lands.â[12] The identification of this process, known as
primitive accumulation, further reveals the historically false premise
of a free and essentially equal market system that exists today.
It is important to note here that Marxâs co-thinker Friedrich Engels
attempts to step away from the violence of primitive accumulation as the
defining transitional element behind the emergence of capitalism. As
Kevin Carson writes, âEngels, to render the Marxian theory consistent
(and to deflect the strategic threat from the market socialists . . . ),
was forced to retreat on the role of force in primitive accumulation.
(And if we take his word on the importance of Marxâs input and approval
during his writing of Anti-DĂŒhring, Marx himself was guilty of similar
backpedalling). In Anti-DĂŒhring, Engels vehemently denied that force was
necessary at any stage of the process; indeed, that it did little even
to further the process significantly.â And Carson argues instead that
Engels . . . did not show that exploitation was inherent in a given
level of productive forces, without the use of coercion. He needed to
show, not that parasitism depends on the preexistence of a host organism
(duh!), but that it cannot be carried out without force. Every increase
in economic productivity has created opportunities for robbery through a
statist class system; but the same productive technology was always
usable in non-exploitative ways. The fact that a given kind of class
parasitism presupposes a certain form of productive technology, does not
alter the fact that that form of technology has potentially both
libertarian and exploitative applications, depending on the nature of
the society which adopts it.[13]
This point regarding violence having been made, it is important to
emphasize that this historical materialist view is not in arbitrary
combination with Marxâs communist politics, but rather informs and in
some ways justifies those goals. For one, it is an implicit component of
Marxâs work to demonstrate the contingency of any political and economic
arrangement. This is why Marx does not simply speak of a coming
revolution but emphasizes the importance of past social change. His
outline of the different historical forms of property allows him and
Friedrich Engels to make the point that â[a]ll property relations in the
past have continually been subject to historical change consequent upon
the change in historical conditions.â[14] And Marx not only demonstrates
the contingency of previous social systems, but also systematically
identifies the mechanism by which that contingency is brought to bear:
the productive forces surpass the relations of production, thereby
necessitating a new social system. This can be seen in his and Engelsâs
assessment of the transition from feudalism to capitalism whereâŠ
the means of production and of exchange, on whose foundation the
bourgeoisie built itself up, were generated in feudal society. At a
certain stage in the development of these means of production and of
exchange, the conditions under which feudal society produced and
exchanged, the feudal organisation of agriculture and manufacturing
industry, in one word, the feudal relations of property became no longer
compatible with the already developed productive forces; they became so
many fetters. They had to be burst asunder; they were burst asunder.
And furthermore, this historical account of the transition to capitalism
as being brought about by increased productive forces and as
necessitating the transformation of the peasantry into a wage-laboring
proletariat itself lays the specific groundwork for the end of
capitalism. As they further write, âThe weapons with which the
bourgeoisie felled feudalism to the ground are now turned against the
bourgeoisie itself. But not only has the bourgeoisie forged the weapons
that bring death to itself; it has also called into existence the men
who are to wield those weaponsâthe modern working-classâthe
proletarians.â[15]
This identification of the mechanism behind the historical contingency
of social institutions and particularly that contingency imminent in the
very basis of capitalism is particularly relevant for the communist
mission becauseâif this account of historical change is trueâit makes
Marxists the first group to be genuinely conscious of how past history
has unfolded and how the current era might come to an end. Although
there was certainly intention involved in certain efforts that moved
feudalism towards capitalism, these were not conceived of as means to
drive history but rather were the various efforts of self-interested
elite groups. In contrast, the essential Marxist claim is that since, as
Marx maintains, peopleâs âsocial existence determines their
consciousnessâ and the order of that social existence springs from the
manner in which the means of production is distributed, seizing the
means of production with this understanding would mean that, to put it
in Engelsâs own words, the many âextraneous objective forces that have
hitherto governed history, [will] pass under the control of man himself.
Only from that time will man himself, more and more consciously, make
his own history.â[16][17] If the Marxists are correct in their analysis
of history, they hold the key to reshaping all of societyâfrom the most
complex political structures to the manner in which people live and
think on a daily basis.
Anyone familiar with Marx and Marxism will no doubt have realized that
there has so far been no explicit mention of dialectics beyond the
introduction. The dialectical method, which Marx derived largely from
Hegel, plays a central role in all of his workâincluding the formulation
of his theory of historyâwith the most explicit being âdialectical
materialism:â an extensive theory of nature and science positing the
primacy of a constantly changing material reality independent of the
mind.[18] Although historical materialism is distinct from dialectical
materialism, the former can be seen as a specifically social and
historical application of the latter. But dialectics generally, as Chris
Matthew Sciabarra describes,
is the art of context-keeping. It counsels us to study the object of our
inquiry from a variety of perspectives and levels of generality so as to
gain a more comprehensive picture of it. That study often requires that
we grasp the object in terms of the larger system within which it is
situated, as well as its development across time.[19]
And instead of delving into dialectical materialism specifically, this
broader definition will be used alongside the work of several authors to
examine various critiques of historical materialism in order to move
towards a left-libertarian reinterpretation of the theory.
A common criticism of historical materialism is that it is materially
reductionist and/or economically deterministicârelated claims positing
that Marxists give too much import to material economic conditions to
the point of subsuming all other social factors and disregarding human
agency and subjectivity as a whole. An instance of this on the
libertarian left comes from Noam Chomsky who, in a clip apparently
featured on television in Greece, testifies that âitâs a tragedy and a
catastrophe that the left has accepted the idea of humans as historical
products, simply reflections of their environment, because what follows
from that, of course, is that thereâs no moral barrier to molding them
anyway you like. If humans have no inner nature, they donât have an
inner instinct for freedom.â[20] He does not specifically name Marx as
the originator of this perceived trend, but it seems obvious that this
is the case. There is also Murray Rothbard on the libertarian right who,
in the second volume of An Austrian Perspective on the History of
Economic Thought, asserts, âHow, then, do historical changes take place
in the Marxian schema? They can only take place in technological
methods, since everything else in society is determined by the state of
technology at any one time.â In Rothbardâs assessment, if T is the
âstate of technology,â S is âthe determined superstructure,â and n is
âany point of timeâ then the formula of society is deterministically
âT_(n) â S_(n)â with historical change only possible through change in
technology as represented by âT_(n)+1 â S_(n)+1â and by no other
means.[21]
If it were true that the Marxist analysis of history was only concerned
with strictly material factors and dismissed all other factors including
human agency and subjectivity, such a theory would be extremely
undialectical, as it would utilize no variance in perspective. However,
when delved into, Marxâs view reveals itself not as an oversimplifying
and deterministic materialism, but rather as a genuinely dialectical
integration of both objective and subjective considerations. Firstly,
Marx was not only reacting against the German idealists, but also
attempting to overcome previous materialist philosophies as well. As he
discusses in the first and third of his âTheses on Feuerbach,â âThe
chief defect of all hitherto existing materialismâthat of Feuerbach
includedâis that the thing, reality, sensuousness, is conceived only in
the form of the object or of contemplation, but not as human sensuous
activity, practice, not subjectively. Hence it happened that the active
side, in contradistinction to materialism, was developed by idealismâbut
only abstractly, since, of course, idealism does not know real, sensuous
activity as suchâ and â[t]he materialist doctrine that men are products
of circumstances and upbringing, and that, therefore, changed men are
products of other circumstances and changed upbringing, forgets that it
is men who change circumstances and that it is essential to educate the
educator himself.â[22] It is clear from these statements that Marx does
not disregard human subjectivity or agencyâand such an accusation would
be hard to square with his belief in the power of human beings to
consciously take control of social forces through the seizure of the
means of productionâbut rather attempts to integrate those very
components from idealism into a materialistic understanding of the
world.
Furthermore, Marx establishes in Theories of Surplus Value that,
[m]an himself is the basis of his material production, as of any other
production that he carries on. All circumstances, therefore, which
affect man, the subject of production, more or less modify all his
functions and activities, and therefore too his functions and activities
as the creator of material wealth, of commodities. In this respect it
can in fact be shown that all human relations and functions, however and
in whatever form they may appear, influence material production and have
a more or less decisive influence on it.[23]
This illustrates that historical materialism does not discount other
factors in the formulation and development of society, but rather
attempts to take into consideration all potential influences. The
Italian Marxist Antonio Gramsci can be seen as bolstering this expanded
dialectical view as he describes âa necessary reciprocity between
structure and superstructure, a reciprocity which is nothing other than
the real dialectical process.â[24] This thinking leads him to elaborate
upon the concept of superstructure, eventually arguing that revolution
is impossible solely through a âfrontal attackââdirect assault upon the
state and the seizure of the means of productionâand that there exists a
necessity for a âwar of positionâ whereby revolutionaries either
infiltrate cultural institutions and/or create new alternative ones to
subvert the bourgeois hegemony that reinforces the state and
capitalism.[25]
But this dialectical consistency in the theoretical realm does not
necessarily mean that the criticism of historical materialism as
materially reductionist and economically deterministic is completely
without merit. In âThe Crisis of Dialectical Materialism and Libertarian
Socialism,â Mario Cutajar recognizes that when it comes to the Marxist
analysis of society and historyâand reality in generalâthe word
âmaterialismâ is actually rather misleading, and that Marx attempts âto
go beyond idealism and materialismâ to recognize simultaneously âthe
creativity of the human subject and . . . the power of circumstances.â
However, he argues that,
starting with the later Engels (and to a smaller extent with Marx
himself) the fine balance between idealism and materialism, subjectivity
and objectivity, was upset. The original synthesis, delicate because it
was a purely theoretical concept, disintegrated when the attempt was
made to turn it into a practical, revolutionary doctrine. Whereas the
original balance meant that a distinction was made between economic
conditions and the meaning assigned to them by the human agent, the new
ideology reduced all human acts to their economic foundation.[26]
Cutajar asserts that this dialectical (or rather undialectical)
unbalancing can be best understood by applying a contextualâand
therefore itself dialecticalâunderstanding to Marx and Marxists
themselves. In previous eras, many hierarchies and authorities were
justified through the religious appeal to a divinely ordained social
order. But â[t]he new ruling class however had no place for a deity so
it replaced Him with nature, a secular God. The laws that govern
billiard balls were thus extended to cover relations between human
beings proving once again that things could not be other than they
were.â This bourgeois form of materialism is identified by both Edmund
Husserl and Jean-Paul Sartre as ânaturalism,â a worldview defined in the
Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy as âthe thesis that everything
belongs to the world of nature and can be studied by the methods
appropriate to studying that world (that is, the methods of the hard
sciences).â[27][28]This was an effective underpinning to the overthrow
of pre-capitalist regimes in Europe, and therefore Marxists believed
that through slight modification it could in turn be used against the
bourgeoisie themselves. The central issue is that this seed of bourgeois
ideology âled to the belief that human behaviour could be reduced to the
rigid and âexactâ laws of natureâ and âreplaced the âlife-worldâ (the
world of actual, human experience) with a lifeless, abstract world
composed of mathematical relationships.â[29]
Cutajar points to German Social Democracy and Leninism as illustrative
of the practical consequences of this naturalist tendency within
Marxism. In Western Europe, where capitalism was already broadly
developed, the former of these two movements âeventually reconciled
itself with the very society it had vowed to overthrowâ because âthis
Marxism had been nothing more than the most radical form of bourgeois
ideology.â Specifically, this entailed Social Democrats demanding only
piecemeal reformsâsuch as higher wagesâwhich, though beneficial to the
daily lives of workers, merely led to a greater equilibrium and
stability to the capitalist system. In Russia, where capitalism was
extremely underdeveloped, the Leninistsâfollowing the naturalist Marxist
fixation purely on economic conditionsâdeemed it necessary to attempt to
create the historical conditions from which socialism/communism is
supposed to emerge. This necessitated a kind of primitive accumulation
in its own right and both the â[s]uperexploitation of Russian labour and
autarchic economic developmentâ which ultimately ended in the creation
of âa distorted form [of] the Western milieu on which [Marxism] had been
originally reared.â[30]
But Cutajar maintains that just as these failures can be traced back to
the context in which Marxism originally emerged, so too can these
failures themselves provide the context to surpass them. A new and more
properly dialectical approach must start with Marxâs original
dialectical synthesis that attempted âto overcome the one-sidedness of
materialism while at the same time avoiding the perils of romantic
idealismâ and therefore does away with the naturalist tendencies within
classical Marxism. He points to libertarian socialism as the model this
should take as it âis defined first and foremost by the negation of
political authoritarianism and theoretical determinismâ that can be
found in Marxâs first thesis on Feuerbach. In this particular piece,
Cutajar provides no specific programmatic formulationâparticularly in
regard to alterations of the material base of societyâof what he sees
libertarian socialism as entailing, beyond the transcendence of the
overly materialistic tendencies in Marxismâand, as he briefly outlines,
the overly idealistic tendencies in anarchism.[31] Perhaps a libertarian
socialist approach to altering the economic base in a non-deterministic
manner that takes into account subjective factors would be some
combination of two distinctions drawn by opponents of private property:
private property versus possession (utilized largely by individualistic
libertarian socialists) and private property versus personal property
(utilized often by communistic libertarian socialists as well as many if
not most non-libertarian socialists and communists).
The former distinctionâderived largely from the work of Pierre-Joseph
Proudhonâis one most commonly associated with mutualists and North
American individualist anarchists such as Benjamin Tucker and Josiah
Warren, who argue against the absolute ownership of private property in
favor of the principle of occupancy and use. As Clarence Lee Swartz
clarifies, mutualistsâŠ
propose to recognize conditional titles to land, based on occupancy and
use by the owner; and they engage to defend such titles against all
comers, so long as the owner complies with those sole conditions of
occupying and using the land of which he claims the ownership. Under
these terms there can be no monopoly of land, and no one who desires
land for occupancy and use may go landless. Since no vacant land may
then be held out of use if anybody desires it, each person may, in the
order of the priority of his selection and according to his requirements
and occupation, have equality of opportunity in the selection of
land.[32]
Or as George Crowderâexpanding upon this principle beyond just
land-tenureâexplains,
The ownership [opposed] is basically that which is unearned . . .
including such things as interest on loans and income from rent. This is
contrasted with ownership rights in those goods either produced by the
work of the owner or necessary for that work, for example his
dwelling-house, land and tools. Proudhon initially refers to legitimate
rights of ownership of these goods as âpossession,â and although [in his
later work] he calls this âproperty,â the conceptual distinction remains
the same.[33]
In comparison, as Shawn P. Wilbur asserts, âthe distinction so
frequently made [by communists] between âpersonalâ and âprivate
propertyâ is not, as is so often claimed, the same as Proudhonâs
distinction between âsimple propertyâ and âsimple possession.â[34] In
most theories of communism, private property consists of capital and the
means of production (productive property) and personal property consists
of consumer and non-capital goods and services and the former is
rejected as exploitative in favor of social ownership of the means of
production. Carl Gustav Rosberg assesses the matter of inheritance in
the Soviet Union as such: âIt is true that accumulation of material
possessions from one generation to the next is somewhat minimized, since
it is difficult to accumulate personal property that is productive.
Children can inherit nonproductive personal property (money, houses) but
not productive property, the âmeans of productionâ (factories,
machines).â[35] But the mention of âpersonal property that is
productiveâ should raise some confusion considering the previously
established definition. This complication would seem to emerge from the
subjective uses of any kind of property and therefore the difficulty in
defining what is productive and what is nonproductive property. Caspar
Oldenburg arguesâŠ
[o]ne could . . . think of goods commonly seen as consumer goods
(personal property) that, to some clever person, would also be a factor
of production (private property). While many socialists consider a motor
vehicle to be personal property, to an entrepreneurial car-owner it may
be a production good, as he can use it to deliver pizzas to those who
value extra time spent on their couch or with their family over driving
to the pizzeria. If the entrepreneur bakes fabulous cakes that all the
neighbors love and are willing to trade some wealth to consume, his oven
is a factor of production to him, even if it is the same model found in
every other house in town. Even something as lowly and seemingly
insignificant as a broom is a production good to someone who can sweep
with twice the efficiency of the other members of society.[36]
And as William Gillis puts it (using the term âpossessionâ in place of
what is generally termed personal property): âThereâs a history of
semantic baggage around the term âpropertyâ and many communists prefer
to re-label things like personal toothbrushes âpossessionsâ instead. But
âpossessionâ is always a matter of degree and 1800s era distinctions
between for example things and things that help make other [things]
(commodities versus capital) seem very silly and arbitrary, a highly
contextual framework that is rapidly dissolving with modern
technological developments.â[37]
In practice too, specifically in the Soviet Union, this personal versus
private distinction proved extremely hard to draw and enforce. For
example, Hiroshi Kimura outlines how âevery collective farm [kolkhoz]
household . . . in addition to its basic income from the
collective-farm, is allowed to run a personal subsidiary enterprise, in
the form of a âprivate garden plotââ and âin order to farm the garden
plot[,] . . . the kolkhoz household needs to own such articles of
personal property as may be necessary to this purpose, including certain
of the means of production, such as agricultural implements, productive
livestock, etc.â Similarly, â[i]nhabitants of city peripheries are also
allowed to run a personal subsidiary enterprise on their private garden
plot and, consequently, to own the means of production necessary to farm
it.â[38] This proved deeply problematic to the distinction between
personal and private property, as the farm households and those on the
periphery of cities own productive property individually or familially.
A resolution of sorts can be found in the conclusion that the Soviet
definition of personal property being âsocial or socialist, and,
consumptive or non-exploitativeâ was derivedâŠ
from a âMarxist-orientedâ principle, namely, the abolition of sources of
unearned income. And this criterion of âunearned incomeâ seems to be
even more important than the distinction between the means of production
and the means of consumption. In the first place, the latter distinction
is only a relative criterion for the classification of property, in the
sense that one and the same item can be both a means of production and a
means of consumption, according to the given circumstances (recall the
example of the automobile) Furthermore, if the ultimate Marxist goal is
the elimination of the âexploitation of man by man,â then the question
of whether or not a certain item is used as a source of unearned income
is more important than the question whether it is a means of production
or a means of consumption.â[39]
What begins to appear in this analysis is that possession and personal
property are shown to be extremely similar in their opposition to the
social relation of private property whereby owners are able to extract
profit from that which they do not directly occupy or contribute toward.
And a fusion of these two theories opposing private property might be
ownership based on occupancy and use with a more quantitative instead of
qualitative distinction between personal and private property. That is:
individuals would be capable of occupying and using the initially
paradoxical personal property that is productive mentioned earlier until
that production reaches a certain scale where an âabsenteeâ owner begins
extracting rent, collecting interest, and/or accumulating surplus value
from the labor of those actually occupying and using that productive
property. This is a standard trifecta of unacceptable mechanisms of
wealth acquisition identified by individualist anarchists such as
Laurence Labadie and Dyer Lum who argue, respectively, that they are the
âthree main forms of usuryâ and âthe triple heads of the monster against
which modern civilization is waging war.â[40][41] Thus, when these
parasitic relationships emerge, the property around which they are based
would, from a left-libertarian moral perspective, become forfeit to the
conceptualization of collective property rights. Roderick Long describes
this attitude from a Lockean perspective of labor-mixing homesteading
through the example of a villageâs path to a lake:
Consider a village near a lake. It is common for the villagers to walk
down to the lake to go fishing. In the early days of the community itâs
hard to get to the lake because of all the bushes and fallen branches in
the way. But over time, the way is cleared and a path forms â not
through any centrally coordinated effort, but simply as a result of all
the individuals walking that way day after day. The cleared path is the
product of labor â not any individualâs labor, but all of them together.
If one villager decided to take advantage of the now-created path by
setting up a gate and charging tolls, he would be violating the
collective property right that the villagers together have earned.[42]
A non-Lockean variation on this logic can be drawn out as a collective
form of occupancy and use of productive property, resulting in something
akin to the âformalizingâ of the practice of âoccupying and recoveringâ
factoriesâwhere workers seize and place factories under workersâ
democratic controlâand the broadening of this strategy to all productive
property of a contextually appropriate upward scale. A real-world
example of this practice is the Zanon tile factory in the Neuquén
province of Argentina, now known as FaSinPatâshort for FĂĄbrica Sin
Patrones (Factory Without Bosses). As an interviewer from the German
communist group Wildcat accounts:
In 2000 the workers went on strike. The employer implemented a lock out
and the workers responded by occupying the factory. In October 2001, the
workers officially declared the factory to be âunder worker controlâ. By
March 2002, the factory fully returned to production. In April 2003, the
courts ordered the police to forcibly take the factory out of the hands
of the workers. In response the workers developed a broad based campaign
and as the police began to move in over 3000 citizens of Neuquén formed
a picket in front of the factory. During the period of worker control,
the number of employees has increased from 300 to 470, and wages have
risen by 100 pesos a month, and the level of production has increased.
And although the interviewer explains that at the time the âthe workers
of Zanon are currently demanding that the provincial and national
governments officially recognize the factory as a workers cooperative
under state ownership,â this appears to be largely a tactic of
necessity, asâŠ
occupiers are supposed to give themselves a legal framework, to act
according to the logic of economy and to recognize private property.
Because at the end of the day they are supposed to buy the company from
the owner once they [manage] to get it running. A lot of occupiers rely
on this form of legalisation, because thereby at least they can avoid
the pressure of eviction.[43]
Imagine the scale at which and varieties whereby this could be
accomplished without the intertwined forces of state regulation, police
authority, and the regime of private property. And this process even
follows natural resolution of thought problems left behind by mutualist
thinkers regarding land tenure rules. In response to Tuckerâs version of
land tenure, an anonymous writer going by Egoist asks, â...if production
is carried on in groups, as it now is, who is the legal occupier of the
land? The employer, the manager, or the ensemble of those engaged in the
co-operative work?â The answer from this perspective, as it is for
Egoist, is that âthe latterâ appears as âthe only rational answer.â[44]
This standardization of worker-owned enterprises within a market system
would, according to Phillip OâHara, constitute a form of social
ownership of the means of production. He writes in Vol. 2 of the
Encyclopedia of Political Economy: âIn order of increasing
decentralisation (at least) three forms of socialised ownership can be
distinguished: state-owned firms, employee-owned (or socially) owned
firms, and citizen ownership of equity.â[45] And so, essentially, by
taking into account the subjective elements of the material base, it
becomes possible to glimpse a libertarian socialism with a
polycentricâand therefore deeply non-deterministicâvariation on the
historical materialist opposition to private property and advocacy for
the social ownership of the means of production. And an approach such as
this is not without precedent in the Marxist canon. Marxian economist
Richard Wolff argues, through âsurplus analysis,â that the key element
of capitalism or any other economic system is ânot primarily how
productive resources are owned nor how resources and products are
distributed. Rather, the key definitional dimension is the organization
of production.â He therefore argues for worker-owned enterprises to
replaceâŠ
the current capitalist organization of production inside offices,
factories, stores, and other workplaces in modern societies. In short,
exploitationâthe production of a surplus appropriated and distributed by
those other than its producersâwould stop. Much as earlier forms of
class structure (lords exploiting serfs in feudalism and masters
exploiting slaves in slavery) have been abolished, the capitalist class
structure (employers exploiting wage laborers would have to be
abolished, as well.[46]
Marx himself, at least at certain points in his life, did speak
favorably of producer cooperatives. In âThe Civil War in France,â he
says, in reference to the Paris Commune of 1871, that â[i]f co-operative
production is not to remain a sham and a snare; if it is to supersede
the capitalist system; if united co-operative societies are to regulate
national production upon common plan, thus taking it under their own
control, and putting an end to the constant anarchy and periodical
convulsions which are the fatality of capitalist production â what else
. . . would it be but communism, âpossibleâ communism?â[47] And in
âInstructions for the Delegates of the Provisional General Council. The
Different Questions,â he acknowledges âthe co-operative movement as one
of the transforming forces of the present society based upon class
antagonism. Its great merit is to practically show, that the present
pauperising, and despotic system of the subordination of labour to
capital can be superseded by the republican and beneficent system of the
association of free and equal producers.â[48]
But, admittedly, the question then arises, what is to ensure such social
standards regarding property? In light of this question, Carson argues
that â[a]ny decentralized, post-state society, following the collapse of
central power, is likely to be panarchy characterized by a wide variety
of local property systems.â[49] And, in such a situation, Bill Orton
explains how...
for [a] dispute [between syndicalist workers and a dispossessed
capitalist], the property theories of the disputants are different, so
"who is the aggressor" is at issue. By the [occupancy and use] theory,
the returning capitalist is the aggressor; by the sticky theory the
syndicalist workers are the aggressors. There can be no internal
theoretical resolution.
To avoid violence, some kind of moderation or arbitration is almost
certainly necessary. The disputants could agree upon a wise arbiter, one
without bias for or against either type of property system, to settle
the issue. E.g. Wolf De Voon, who has made it clear that he thinks
property amounts more or less to what the neighbors will allow. He would
probably judge based on local custom and expectations of the parties
involved. E.g. If the factory were located in an area where [private]
property dominates, where the capitalist had reasonable expectation of
sticky ownership, where the local people expect the same, and the
syndicalist workers came in from a 'foreign' culture expecting to pull a
fast one, then he'd probably judge in favor of the capitalist. OTOH If
the factory were located in an area where [occupancy and use] dominates,
and virtually all the locals expect and act in accordance with
[occupancy and use], and the capitalist, representing the 'foreign'
culture, was trying to pull a [private] property coup, then he would
probably rule in favor of the syndicalist workers.[50]
However, there are extenuating circumstances in a non-statist market
system that will encourage cooperatives and other non-capitalist
enterprises. Anna Morgenstern makes the points that âdue to the rising
cost of protecting property [without state intervention via policing and
military], there comes a threshold level, where accumulating more
capital becomes economically inefficient, simply in terms of guarding
the propertyâ and âwithout a state-protected banking/financial system,
accumulating endless high profits is well nigh impossible.â And
â[w]ithout concentration of capital, wage slavery is impossible.â[51]
According to Carson, Graeber holds a similar âskepticism that anything
like anarcho-capitalism could exist for very long on a significant
scale, with a large number of people willingly working as wage laborers
for a minority, so long as access to the means of production is
relatively easy and there are no cops to exclude people from vacant
land. After all, Robinson Crusoeâs âmasterâ relationship over Friday
depended on him having already âappropriatedâ the entire island and
having a gun.â[52] And, as Gary Elkin explains, without the
aforementioned monopolistic banking/financial system...
so-called Individualist anarchism is not only compatible with workers'
control but would in fact promote it. For if access to mutual credit
were to increase the bargaining power of workers to the extent that
[Tucker] claimed it would, they would then be able to (1) demand and get
workplace democracy, and (2) pool their credit buy and own companies
collectively. This would eliminate the top-down structure of the firm
and the ability of owners to pay themselves unfairly large salaries.[53]
And of course, a page can be taken from Gramsci in setting out on a
widespread counter-cultural and counter-institutional project to build
worker solidarity and ingrain the primacy of workers over capitalists in
contests of ownership; a movement helped along by the likelihood Carson
writes of where, â[i]n an economy of distributive property ownership[,]
. . . all consumption, present or future, would be beyond question the
result of labor.â[54]
Dialectics can also be used to scrutinize, to a briefer extent, another
issue in the Marxist formulation of historical materialism:
acontextuality. One form this problem takes is âutopianismâ which, in
Marx, Hayek, and Utopia, Sciabarra identifiesâthrough the work of
Friedrich Hayekâas entailing âproposals for a new society [that] are
constructed in an abstract manner, external to the sociohistorical
process. In attempting to bridge the gap between theory and practice, it
demands that all human actors adhere to a non-contextual, ahistorical
model.â[55] Marx and Engels are highly critical of utopianism among
socialistsâsuch as Henri de Saint-Simon, Robert Owen, and Charles
Fourierâwho, according to Engels, sought âto discover a new and more
perfect system of social order and to impose this upon society from
without by propaganda, and, wherever it was possible, by the example of
model experiments.â[56] This is a wholeheartedly undialectical project
as it attempts firstly to remove thinkers themselves from their context
like omniscient deities in order to reshape society and secondly because
it divorces all potential social change from any genuinely historical
process. Thus, historical materialism is so essential to Marxism because
it dialectically critiques the idea that human beings can be separated
from their historical circumstances and demonstrates the historical
trends and mechanisms from which a new society can emerge. For Marx,
[c]ommunism is . . . not a state of affairs which is to be established,
an ideal to which reality [will] have to adjust itself. We call
communism the real movement which abolishes the present state of things.
The conditions of this movement result from the premises now in
existence.[57]
However, he himself falls into an undialectical utopian trap in his
conception of how historical materialism can be consciously utilized in
the formulation of a new society.
Sciabarra acknowledges that âMarxâs vision does not pose as a
constructivist designâ and that he âviews communism as a spontaneous,
emergent product of historical development, immanent to the capitalist
system itself.â[58] But, in spite of this, âMarx argues that once people
have reached the highest stage of communism, the social process is
neither spontaneous nor the product of unintended consequences. It is
consciously directed by a highly efficacious collective humanity.â[59]
Sciabarra believes that this itself is a utopian failure within Marxâs
own work as it is an attempt to step outside of oneâs own context in
order to influence society. He contrasts this with what he sees as
Friedrich Hayekâs âmore general, dialectical approach,â which
ârecognizes the organic unity of an evolving, spontaneous orderâ but
âobjects to the illusory notion that people can rise above their society
to judge and control it.â[60] For Hayek, because individuals are bound
to the limited knowledge of their specific contexts, they are unable to
grasp the totality of the overarching order. This therefore necessitates
competition within a market system to generate price information that is
then dispersed and âutilised by many different individuals unknown to
one another, in a way that allows the different knowledge of millions to
form an exosomatic or material pattern. Every individual becomes a link
in many chains of transmission through which he receives signals
enabling him to adapt his plans to circumstances he does not know.â[61]
Markets and consequently prices are generally argued from a Marxist
point of view as being fundamentally alienating, conducive toward
monopoly, and drawn toward crisis. To attempt to respond to all of the
complex critiques of markets would go far beyond the scope of this
piece. There are, however, perspectives on markets using or responding
to a Marxist lens to conceptualize a situation that presents a very
different breed of market than what Marxists tend to critique. The
Soviet economists Nikolai Bukharin and Yevgeni Preobrazhensky
differentiate between markets and capitalism as such:
The mere existence of a commodity economy does not alone suffice to
constitute capitalism. A commodity economy can exist although there are
no capitalists; for instance, the economy in which the only producers
are independent artisans. They produce for the market, they sell their
products; thus these products are undoubtedly commodities, and the whole
production is commodity production. Nevertheless, this is not capitalist
production; it is nothing more than simple commodity production. In
order that a simple commodity economy can be transformed into capitalist
production, it is necessary, on the one hand, that the means of
production (tools, machinery, buildings, land, etc.) should become the
private property of a comparatively limited class of wealthy
capitalists; and, on the other, that there should ensue the ruin of most
of the independent artisans and peasants and their conversion into wage
workers.[62]
Not only is a situation such as this highly unlikely in a stateless
system for all the reasons in the above section, but, in response to
Marxist critiques of âa form of socialism centered on cooperatives and
non-capitalist markets,â Carson writes thatâŠ
in the flexible production model, is that thereâs no reason to have any
permanent losers. First of all, the overhead costs are so low that itâs
possible to ride out a slow period indefinitely. Second, in low-overhead
flexible production, in which the basic machinery for production is
widely affordable and can be easily reallocated to new products, thereâs
really no such thing as a âbusinessâ to go out of. The lower the
capitalization required for entering the market, and the lower the
overhead to be borne in periods of slow business, the more the labor
market takes on a networked, project-oriented characterâlike, e.g., peer
production of software. In free software, and in any other industry
where the average producer owns a full set of tools and production
centers mainly on self-managed projects, the situation is likely to be
characterized not so much by the entrance and exit of discrete âfirmsâ
as by a constantly shifting balance of projects, merging and forking,
and with free agents constantly shifting from one to another.[63]
More must be said about the establishment of such a type of economic
situation, but, having loosely established the basis of non-capitalist
markets, the topic can now change to empirical evidence of the
undialectical utopianism within Marxism. Sciabarra grants that âMarx
would have probably dismissed contemporary Communism as historically
prematureâ and goes on to use Hayekâs dialectical insights to critique
the theoretical plans for non-premature communism.[64] However, it is
important toâand Sciabarra doesâpoint out how this critical insight
applies to real-world attempts at implementing Marxâs ideasâin
particular the Soviet Union as the grandest failure of these. Consider
that, in Dialectical and Historical Materialism, Joseph Stalin claims
that âan instance in which the relations of production completely
correspond to the character of the productive forces is the socialist
national economy of the U.S.S.R., where the social ownership of the
means of production fully corresponds to the social character of the
process of production, and where, because of this, economic crises and
the destruction of productive forces are unknown.â[65] Stalin at least
rhetorically utilizes historical materialismâalthough it could perhaps
be argued this is disingenuous propagandaâto argue that the Soviet Union
had a greater conscious control over the forces that previously shaped
humans from without. But the historical falsehood of this claim must be
obvious, and Sciabarra points out that, due to a âstatic and arbitrary
price policy,â Soviet planners could not properly coordinate the economy
and instead âgenerated grotesque misallocations, inefficiencies, and
bureaucratization.â The very survival of the Soviet economy in this view
rested largely upon âa de facto market process of bribery, corruption,
under-the-counter-sales, hoarding, and black-market
entrepreneurship.â[66]
Another critique of acontextual Soviet planning can be found in James C.
Scottâs Seeing Like a State. Scott does not formulate his critique as
explicitly dialectical or necessarily pro-marketâhe is actually rather
skeptical of Hayekâs notion of the modern market as genuinely
spontaneousâbut instead focuses on an ideological tendency he calls
âhigh modernism.â[67] He defines this as âa strong, one might even say
muscle-bound, version of the self-confidence about scientific and
technical progress, the expansion of production, the growing
satisfaction of human needs, the mastery of nature (including human
nature), and, above all, the rational design of social order
commensurate with the scientific understanding of natural laws.â[68] For
Scott, the Soviet Unionâs approach to rural agriculture is a profound
case of its application. In the early 1930sâarguably as part of the
Soviet style of primitive accumulationâStalin worked to forcibly
collectivize Russian agriculture into sovkhoz (state farms) and kolkhoz
in order to maximize the production of grain and foodstuffs in general
for the industrializing workforce in urban centers. But Scott points out
that the Soviet officials âwere operating in relative ignorance of the
ecological, social, and economic arrangements that underwrote the rural
economy.â This lack of contextual knowledge led to the immense failure
of the entire project. The conscious alteration of the productive forces
and relations of production did not totally recreate social
organizationâspecifically the abolition of âcultural difference between
the country and the cityâânor did it create fundamentally ânew men and
women.â Instead, â[f]or the next half-century, the yields per hectare of
many crops were stagnant or actually inferior to the levels recorded in
the 1920s or the levels reached before the Revolution.â Thus, the
practical usage of the historical materialist analysis led to
catastrophe because it ignored the existing social, natural, and
economic context. In fact, Scott argues that the only great victory of
the Soviet agricultural project âwas to take a social and economic
terrain singularly unfavorable to appropriation and control and to
create institutional forms and production units better adapted to
monitoring, managing, appropriating, and controlling from above.â[69]
Whether it is the utopian problems inherent in Marxâs theories or the
command economy and high modernist tendencies of the Soviet Union, what
these examples demonstrate is that it might be necessary to abandon the
notion that a conscious understanding of reality through historical
materialism can lead to a totalizing control over history and society,
and that one should emphasizeâin a dialectical fashionâthe important
limitations of context. A good place to start might be in Scottâs
contrasting between Vladimir Leninâs authoritarian, high modernist
socialismâthe same project that eventually led to the failure of Russian
agricultureâand Rosa Luxembourgâs more bottom-up and open-ended
socialism, particularly as they envision the practice of revolution.[70]
According to Scott, âLenin proceeded as if the road to socialism was
already mapped out in detail and the task of the party [was] to use the
iron discipline of the party apparatus to make sure that the
revolutionary movement kept to that road.â This is perhaps an
unsurprising interpretation considering the manner in which dialectical
and historical materialism are often propagated as exact sciences. An
alternative vision is presented by Luxembourg, who recognizes the
importance of spontaneity, creativity, improvisation, and the direct
influence of the working class. As Scott accounts, for her, â[t]he
openness that characterized a socialist future was not a shortcoming but
rather a sign of its superiority, as a dialectical process, over the
cut-and-dried formulas of utopian socialismâ and therefore such a future
could not be administered wholly from above by a vanguard or small group
of intellectuals.[71] A distilled version of this Luxembourgian insight,
when applied specifically to historical materialism, might take the form
of a particular application of Alfred Korzybskiâs famous dictum, from
his book Science and Sanity, that â[a] map is not the territory it
represents, but, if correct, it has a similar structure to the
territory, which accounts for its usefulness.â[72] In practice, this
means realizing that the insights of historical materialism are
incredibly relevant to an understanding of the progress of history and
the shape of society and, even more pertinently, how one might influence
those things, but that it is at its core a model and not the actual
reality of the situation and should never be mistaken as such.
This would seem to be the attitude taken by Graeber regarding the
concept of revolutionâthe sort of events that Marx would attribute to
the productive forces surpassing the relations of production thereby
necessitating the end of a particular social system. For Graeber, the
concept of revolution, as it is usually formulated, assumes that all
radical change must take on the same form as scientific revolutions,
like the shift from a Newtonian universe to an Einsteinian one, where
there is a âclear break, a fundamental rupture in the nature of social
reality after which everything works differently, and previous
categories no longer apply.â But through this view â[h]uman history thus
becomes a series of revolutions: the Neolithic revolution, the
Industrial revolution, the Information revolution, etc., and the
political dream becomes to somehow take control of the process; to get
to the point where we can cause a rupture of this sort, a momentous
breakthrough that will not just happen but result directly from some
kind of collective will.â[73] From the assessment given earlier in this
piece, this would seem to apply quite well to Marxâs vision of
historical materialism as applied to European history and as it pertains
to the fate of the current era.[74] The problem with this vision though,
according to Graeber, is that these totalities are fundamentally
products of the human mind and the actual reality of things is
substantially messier and more complicated. This is not an argument that
one should abandon these imaginary totalities âeven assuming this were
possible, which it probably isnât, since they are probably a necessary
tool of human thought. It is an appeal to always bear in mind that they
are just that: tools of thought.â[75] If one applies Graeberâs insights
to historical materialismâmuch like when one does so with
Luxembourgâsâperhaps the conclusion is that, once again, it is
incredibly helpful for understanding social change, but should not be
mistaken for the actual reality of the world and do not therefore lead
to totalizing control, understanding, or a break in terms of history and
society.
Similar observations to these are not lost on Marxist thinkers, as is
demonstrated by the earlier assessment of Luxembourg. In On Practice,
Mao Zedong outlines a dialectical materialist concept of knowledge
gathering that emphasizes the primacy of reality over theoretical
formulations.[76] Although this expresses an extremely dialectical
re-emphasis on context and reality, the history of Maoâs revolution in
China must make obvious that this is not the same point that Graeber is
making. Instead, he points towards not thinking of a single revolution
but more generally of revolutionary actionâany collective effort that
rejects power or domination.[77] This approach aligns with Graeberâs
criticism of the concise Marxist outline of historical progression as
elucidated in Debt in which he critiques what he refers to as âmythic
communismâ or âepic communismâ which holds thatâŠ
[o]nce upon a time, humans held all things in commonâ[whether] in the
Garden of Eden, during the Golden Age of Saturn, or in Paleolithic
hunter-gatherer bands. Then came the Fall, as a result of which we are
now cursed with divisions of power and private property. The dream was
that someday, with the advance of technology and general prosperity,
with social revolution or the guidance of the Party, we would finally be
in a position to put things back, to restore common ownership and common
management of collective resources.
And while his argument that this means thinking of communism as not
having âanything to do with ownership of the means of productionâ is
obviously not the conclusion this piece is attempting to reach, a
left-libertarian perspective would agree that this vision âhas inspired
millions; but it has also done enormous damage to humanityâ and that it
should therefore be abandoned.[78]
This non-epochal vision of history can lead to looking at economic
aspects of large-scale initiatives like that of the Autonomous
Administration of North and East Syria (better known as Rojava) which,
among many other major social and economic accomplishments, has rejected
the Syrian regimeâs policies. The regime, Maksim Lebsky writes,
âdeliberately took steps to keep the local industry from developingâ
and, according to A Small Key Can Open a Large Door, the now autonomous
region is working to establish a âPeopleâs Economyâ based on the three
major concepts of âcommons, private property based on use, and
worker-administered businesses.â[79][80] These efforts are also deeply
contextual as Rojavaâs system emerged from pre-autonomy councils,
neighborhood assemblies, and meetings, in addition to numerous
pre-existing cultural practices.[81] And the Rojavan conceptualization
of âsocial economy,â as described by Ahmed Yousef, âis not a centrally
planned economyâ and âthe market is a main part of social economy, but
the use-value must be greater than the exchange-value, and there is no
stock market.â[82]
But this also means focusing on smaller-scale (at least currently)
economic restructurings like the incredible work of Cooperation Jackson,
which focuses on the long-term goal of developing a cooperative network
centered in Jackson, Mississippi. Their âbasic theory of change is
centered on the position that organizing and empowering the structurally
under and unemployed sectors of the working class, particularly from
Black and Latino communities, to build worker organized and owned
cooperatives will be a catalyst for the democratization of our economy
and society overall.â[83] Of particular interest from a historical
materialist perspective is their Community Production Initiative which
seeks âto turn Jackson into an innovative hub of sustainable
manufacturing and fabricationâ through âcommunity production.â They
define this as âindustrial manufacturing and fabrication based on a
combination of 3rd and 4th generation industrial technology, namely the
combination of digital technology and automated production with 3-D
printing and quantum computing, that is collectively owned and
democratically operated by members of geographically and/or
intentionally defined communities.â[84] Like Rojava, Cooperation
Jacksonâs efforts are acutely contextual, as they work to specially
address the unique socio-economic issues of communities in Mississippi
and draw from historical efforts in that region like the Freedom Farm
Cooperative and the Federation of Southern Cooperatives/Land Assistance
Fund.[85][86] And obviously all of this is contained within the larger
(but generally unfree and overtly capitalist) market economy of the
United States. Although, as Alex Aragona argues, â[u]ltimately, we live
within systems of state-capitalism with small pockets of free market
activity, rather than the reverse.â[87]
Both Rojava and Cooperation Jackson, being socialistic projects within
larger structures of state structures, constitute dual power projectsâa
concept originating in Marxist-Leninism. As Lenin describes the
situation in pre- to mid-revolutionary Russia, âAlongside the
Provisional Government, the government of bourgeoisie, another
government has arisen, so far weak and incipient, but undoubtedly a
government that actually exists and is growingâthe Soviets of Workersâ
and Soldiersâ Deputies.â But this âis an entirely different kind of
power from the one that generally exists in the parliamentary
bourgeois-democratic republics . . .
The fundamental characteristics of this [government] are: (1) the source
of power is not a law previously discussed and enacted by parliament,
but the direct initiative of the people from below, in their local
areasâdirect âseizureâ, to use a current expression; (2) the replacement
of the police and the army, which are institutions divorced from the
people and set against the people, by the direct arming of the whole
people; order in the state under such a power is maintained by the armed
workers and peasants themselves, by the armed people themselves; (3)
officialdom, the bureaucracy, are either similarly replaced by the
direct rule of the people themselves or at least placed under special
control.[88]
This process of establishing a bottom-up and popular alternatives to the
existing state has in turn been adopted by anarchists and other
libertarian socialists. As the Libertarian Socialist Caucus of the
Democratic Socialists of America describe, âDual power is a strategy
that builds liberated spaces and creates institutions grounded in direct
democracy. Together these spaces and institutions expand into the ever
widening formation of a new world âin the shell of the old.â
Specifically, thisâŠ
is comprised of two component parts: (1.) building counter-institutions
that serve as alternatives to the institutions currently governing
production, investment, and social life under capitalism, and (2.)
organizing through and confederating these institutions to build up a
base of grassroots counter-power which can eventually challenge the
existing power of capitalists and the State head-on. In the short term,
such a strategy helps win victories that improve working peopleâs
standard of living, helps us meet our needs that are currently left
unaddressed under capitalism, and gives us more of a say over our
day-to-day lives. But more excitingly, in the long run these methods
provide models for new ways of organizing our society based on
libertarian socialist principles. They create a path toward a
revolutionary transition from a capitalist mode of production.[89]
Thisâas with Rojavan economy and Cooperation Jacksonâoften takes the
form of attempting, as Wesley Morgan describes, âto create âdual powerâ
through the creation of cooperatives.â Morgan disapprovingly terms this
âmarket syndicalismâ and critiques it for simply creating âunits in a
market economyâ and still relying âupon access to the market.â[90]
However, this opinion does not take into account the unification of this
praxis within broader pushes for anti-statist autonomy such as
large-scale community self-defense that, like in Rojava, are creating
space for non-capitalist markets.[91] Such a method would not be
dissimilar to the call by Samuel Edward Konkin III for âagorist
protection and arbitration agenciesâ and âprotection company syndicatesâ
to defend market growing outside of the state capitalist economy and
contain âthe State by defending those who have signed up for
protection-insurance.â[92]
And the role of those examining these efforts from outside their
specific context should not be that of an authoritarian planner
dictating how they should work. Instead, an alternative can be found in
Graeberâs formulation of an anarchist social theory which rejects
vanguardism in favor of an approach that more resembles ethnographyâthe
practice defined by The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Anthropology as such:
Anthropology is an academic discipline that constructs its intellectual
imaginings upon empirical-based knowledge about human worlds.
Ethnography is the practice developed in order to bring about that
knowledge according to certain methodological principles, the most
important of which is participant-observation ethnographic
fieldwork.[93][94]
He therefore proposes that âradical intellectualsâ should âlook at those
who are creating viable alternatives, try to figure out what might be
the larger implications of what they are (already) doing, and then offer
those ideas back, not as prescriptions, but as contributions,
possibilitiesâas gifts.â[95][96] In this manner, the insights of
historical materialism in shaping society can be shared, but always with
an overt premise of context-keepingâa respect for the evolution of local
practices, market or market-like spontaneity, and overall unintended
consequences. This all may seem like an extremely watered-down version
of historical materialism which reduces the more absolutist implications
of Marxâs original formulation. But this shift should be appealing to
left-libertarians because a respect for local practices and a denial of
the possibility of totalizing control would seem to preclude the ability
for the method to be used in an authoritarian manner as it was in the
Soviet Union.
As must be obvious, this piece is only a cursory attempt at a
left-libertarian formulation of historical materialism, and the
critiques outlined are also certainly not exhaustive. From opposite
sides of the anti-statist spectrum, Graeber makes the point that the
very concept of modes of production is under-formulated, and Rothbard,
in a similar claim, holds that both the ideas of productive forces and
relations of productionâthe elements that make up the mode of
productionâare overly vague.[97] Bas Umali, an anarchist activist in
Manila, argues that the Marxist dialectical analysis of history is
fundamentally hierarchical, Eurocentric, and inapplicable to the types
of stateless communities of the Indigenous archipelago (today called the
Philippines).[98] These and many more insights must be taken into
account in formulating any, but in particular a left-libertarian,
reinterpretation of historical materialism. But the main point to keep
in mind is the rejection of (at least the hindering excesses of)
naturalism, utopianism, and high modernism, in favor of a historical
materialism that is truly dialectical in its balancing of objective and
subjective factors (particularly revolving around property), its
non-deterministic view of both individuals and societies as a whole, and
its commitment to recognizing the crucial limitations of context.
Finally, this piece would seem incomplete without some mention of two
well-known figures in the history of anarchism and libertarian
socialism: Mikhail Bakunin and Murray Bookchinâthe latter of which is a
significant influence on many of the efforts in Rojava, largely through
Abdullah Ăcalan, a founding member of the Kurdistan Workersâ Party (or
PKK).[99] Bakunin, a contemporary of Marx, is also a firm materialist,
writing in God and the State, âYes, facts are before ideas; yes, the
ideal, as Proudhon said, is but a flower, whose root lies in the
material conditions of existence. Yes, the whole history of humanity,
intellectual and moral, political and social, is but a reflection of its
economic history.â[100]But, again much like Marx, he is not a
reductionist by any means and is rather an eminently dialectical
thinker. Brian Morris attests, in Bakunin: The Philosophy of Freedom,
that despite his âstress on social and natural determinismâ he places
âan important emphasis on the individual as a creative agent, both
determining as well as being determined by natural and social
conditions.â Additionally, â[i]n Hegelian fashion, Bakunin sees human
history as a world process, as the progressive move towards greater
freedom, first with the development of life, then, with human culture
and consciousness, humans establish a degree of autonomy from the world
of nature, finally, with the potential establishment of a truly human
society, the freedom of the individual. Human freedom for Bakunin can
only be in nature and society, not something independent from the
world.â[101] Interestingly as well to this left-libertarian
reinterpretation is that Bakunin served as an inspiration to Tuckerâthe
grandfather of left-libertarianism.[102]
Bookchinâa more contemporary dialecticianâis, in his piece Listen,
Marxist!, contextually critical of the âhistorically limited, indeed
paralyzing, shacklesâ of Marxâs theories, but acknowledges the
importance of many of his ideas like â[t]he Marxian dialectic,â âthe
many seminal insights provided by historical materialism,â and âabove
all the notion that freedom has material preconditions.â But in his
assessment, âMarx was occupied above all with the preconditions of
freedom (technological development, national unification, material
abundance) rather than with the conditions of freedom (decentralization,
the formation of communities, the human scale, direct democracy).â[103]
He also articulates an ecological and anti-hierarchical philosophy of
âdialectical naturalism,â which seeks to overcome both âHegelâs
empyrean, basically antinaturalistic dialectical idealism and the
wooden, often scientistic dialectical materialism of orthodox Marxistsâ
and âdoes not terminate in a Hegelian Absolute at the end of a cosmic
developmental path, but rather advances the vision of an ever-increasing
wholeness, fullness, and richness of differentiation and
subjectivity.â[104] And just as Bakunin inspired Tucker, so too does
Bookchin inspire Carsonâone of the fountainheads of contemporary
left-libertarianism.[105] With all this in mind, perhaps Bakunin and
Bookchin can serve as counterposing figures to Marx in the elaboration
on and expansion of a left-libertarian version of historical
materialism.
[1] In Transcritique: On Kant and Marx (Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press,
2005), Kojin Karatani explains that apparently the Japanese philosopher
Wataru Hiromatsu, in his edited translation of The German Ideology,
âconducted an elaborate text critique . . . and showed that the text on
Feuerbach was mostly written by Engels; Marxâs participation was limited
to some crucial revisions here and there; and furthermore, comparing the
earlier writings of both, he proved that Engels had conceptualized
historical materialism firstâ (p. 323, 139). I cannot find an English
version of this nor can I read Japanese, so I cannot attest to this
claim, but it seems relevant to mention primarily for the possibility of
a more accurate identification of authorship and the origins of
historical materialism, but also because it does help lead Karatani to
the assertion that â[i]n order to take the capitalist economy into
account, one has to, once and for all, discard historical materialismâs
framework of infra/superstructuresâ (p. 140). However, that claim will
not be addressed in this piece.
[2] âHistorical materialism,â Merriam-Webster, accessed April 17, 2020,
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/historical%20materialism.
[3] David McNally, âE P Thompson: class struggle and historical
materialism,â International Socialism, no. 61 (Winter 1993), accessed
April 17, 2020,
http://pubs.socialistreviewindex.org.uk/isj61/mcnally.htm.
[4] David Graeber, The Utopia of Rules: On Technology, Stupidity, and
the Secret Joys of Bureaucracy (Brooklyn, NY: Melville House Publishing,
2015), 30, accessed May 13, 2020,
https://libcom.org/files/David_Graeber-The_Utopia_of_Rules_On_Technology_St.pdf.
[5] Karl Marx, The German Ideology, 1846, in The Marx-Engels Reader, by
Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, ed. Robert C. Tucker, 2nd ed. (New York,
NY: W. W. Norton & Company, 1978), 149.
[6] Marx, The German, in The Marx-Engels Reader, 156.
[7] Ibid., 150.
[8] Karl Marx, A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy,
trans. N.L. Stone (Chicago, IL: Charles H. Kerr & Company, 1904), 11,
https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.167007/mode/2up.
[9] Marx, The German, in The Marx-Engels Reader, 151.
[10] Ibid., 153.
[11] Karl Marx, Capital, Volume One, 1867, in The Marx-Engels Reader,
432. Graeber, in Debt: The First 5,000 Years, contests the
interpretation of Capital as being centrally a study of historical and
social reality and posits that it is rather a demonstration âthat even
if we do start from the economistsâ utopian vision, so long as we also
allow some people to control productive capital and . . . leave others
with nothing to sell but their brains and bodies, the result will be in
many ways barely distinguishable from slavery, and the whole system will
eventually destroy itself.â He holds that âMarx was well aware that
there were far more bootblacks, prostitutes, butlers, soldiers,
peddlers, chimneysweeps, flower girls, street musicians, convicts,
nannies, and cab drivers in the London of his day than there were
factory workers. He was never suggesting that thatâs what the world was
actually likeâ (p. 354). He argues that the image of âworkers who
dutifully punch the clock at 8:00 a.m. and receive regular remuneration
every Friday on the basis of a temporary contract that either party is
free to break off at any timeâ was actually, as said before, a âutopian
visionâ that âwas only gradually put into effect even in England and
North America, and has never, at any point, been the main way of
organizing production for the market, ever, anywhereâ (p. 353). On top
of this, he asserts that âall elements of financial apparatus that weâve
come to associate with capitalismâcentral banks, bond markets, short
selling, brokerage houses, speculative bubbles, [securitization],
annuitiesâcame into being not only before the science of economics . . .
but also before the rise of factories, and wage labor itself.â If
accurate, this all certainly complicates the historical materialist
analysis because, as Graeber writes, âWe like to think of the factories
and workshops as the âreal economy,â and the rest as superstructure,
constructed on top of it. But if this were really so, then how can it be
that the superstructure came first? Can the dreams of the system create
its body?â (p. 345).
[12] Marx, Capital, Volume, in The Marx-Engels Reader, 434.
[13] Kevin Carson, Studies in Mutualist Political Economy (BookSurge
Publishing, 2007), 83, 86, accessed November 27, 2021,
http://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/kevin-carson-studies-in-mutualist-political-economy.pdf.
[14] Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, Manifesto of the Communist Party,
1848, in The Marx-Engels Reader, 484.
[15] Ibid., 477-78.
[16] Marx, A Contribution, 11-12.
[17] Friedrich Engels, Socialism: Utopian and Scientific, 1876, in The
Marx-Engels Reader, 715-16.
[18] For a more extended outline of dialectical materialism see the
Marxist Student Federationâs âAn Introduction to Dialectical
Materialismâ.
[19] Chris Matthew Sciabarra, âDialectics and Liberty,â Foundation for
Economic Education, last modified September 1, 2005, accessed April 17,
2020, https://fee.org/articles/dialectics-and-liberty/. For an extensive
definition and history of dialectics see âPart One: Dialectics: History
and Meaningâ in Sciabarraâs Total Freedom: Toward a Dialectical
Libertarianism (University Park, PA: Pennsylvania University Press,
2000). For a defense of this definition of dialectics see Roger E.
Bissellâs response to critiques of Sciabarraâs Ayn Rand: The Russian
Radical in Volume 17, Number 2 of The Journal of Ayn Rand Studies from
The Pennsylvania State University Press.
[20] âNoam Chomsky â Bakuninâs Predictions,â video, 6:14, YouTube,
posted by Chomskyâs Philosophy, November 18, 2017, accessed April 17,
2020, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3gS6g41m_NU.
[21] Murray N. Rothbard, Classical Economics, 2006 ed., vol. 2, An
Austrian Perspective on the History of Economic Thought (Edward Elgar
Publishing, 1995), 373, accessed April 17, 2020,
https://mises.org/library/austrian-perspective-history-economic-thought.
[22] Karl Marx, âTheses on Feuerbach,â 1845, in The Marx-Engels Reader,
143-44.
[23] Karl Marx, Theories of Surplus Value, trans. Emile Burns, ed. S.
Ryazanskaya (Moscow, USSR: Progress Publishers, 1963), 288, accessed
April 17, 2020, http://www.marx2mao.com/PDFs/TSV-Part%201.pdf.
[24] Antonio Gramsci, Selections from the Prison Notebooks, ed. Quintin
Hoare and Geoffrey Nowell Smith (London, UK: The Electronic Book
Company, 1999), 690-91, accessed April 17, 2020,
http://abahlali.org/files/gramsci.pdf.
[25] Ibid., 495-96.
[26] Mario Cutajar, âThe Crisis of Dialectical Materialism and
Libertarian Socialism,â Red Menace 2, no. 1 (Summer 1977), accessed
April 17, 2020,
https://libcom.org/library/crisis-dialectical-materialism-libertarian-socialism.
[27] Ibid.
[28] Marianne Sawicki, âEdmund Husserl (1859â1938),â Internet
Encyclopedia of Philosophy, accessed April 18, 2020,
https://www.iep.utm.edu/husserl/.
[29] Cutajar, âThe Crisis.â
[30] Ibid.
[31] Ibid. It should be noted that, elsewhere in the same issue of Red
Menace that Cutajarâs piece appears in, Ulli Diemer and Tom McLaughlin
do further outline the concept of libertarian socialism in their
respective pieces "What is Libertarian Socialism?" and "Libertarian
Socialism."
[32] Clarence Lee Swartz and The Mutualist Associates, âWhat Is
Mutualism?,â (1927), The Anarchist Library, last modified January 24,
2019, accessed March 25, 2021,
https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/clarence-lee-swartz-in-collaboration-with-the-mutualist-associates-what-is-mutualism.
For more information and thought on the principle of occupancy and use
see Center for a Stateless Societyâs November 2015 Mutual Exchange
Symposium Discourse on Occupancy and Use: Potential Applications and
Possible Shortcomings.
[33] George Crowder, Classical Anarchism: The Political Thought of
Godwin, Proudhon, Bakunin, and Kropotkin (Oxford, UK: Oxford University
Press, 1992), 85-86.
[34] Shawn P. Wilbur, âLimiting Conditions and Local Desires,â Center
for a Stateless Society, last modified November 10, 2015,
https://c4ss.org/content/41502.
[35] Carl Gustav Rosberg, African Socialism, ed. William H. Friedland
(Redwood City, CA: Stanford University Press, 1964), 25, accessed March
26, 2021, https://archive.org/details/africansocialism00frie.
[36] Caspar Oldenburg, âOn Socialist Distinctions Between Private and
Personal Property,â Mises Christ!, last modified April 18, 2014,
accessed March 26, 2021,
https://miseschrist.com/2014/04/18/socialist-distinctions-private-personal-property/.
[37] William Gillis, âThe Organic Emergence of Property From
Reputation,â Center for a Stateless Society, last modified November 29,
2015, accessed March 26, 2021, https://c4ss.org/content/41653.
[38] Hiroshi Kimura, âPersonal Property in the Soviet Union, with
Particular Emphasis on the Khrushchev Era : An Ideological, Political
and Economic Dilemma (II),â ăčă©ăŽç 究 (Slavic Studies) 14 (1970): 70,
accessed March 26, 2021,
https://eprints.lib.hokudai.ac.jp/dspace/bitstream/2115/5004/1/KJ00000112923.pdf.
[39] Ibid. 81.
[40] Laurance Labadie, âAnarchism Applied to Economics,â The Anarchist
Library, last modified September 22, 2019, accessed November 27, 2021,
https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/laurence-labadie-anarchism-applied-to-economics.
[41] Kevin Carson, âMay Day Thoughts: Individualist Anarchism and the
Labor Movement,â Mutualist Blog: Free Market Anti-Capitalism, last
modified April 29, 2005, accessed November 27, 2021,
http://mutualist.blogspot.com/2005/04/may-day-thoughts-individualist.html.
I cannot find the original source of this quote.
[42] Roderick T. Long, âIn Defense of Public Space,â (1996), Panarchy,
accessed March 26, 2021,
https://www.panarchy.org/rodericklong/publicspace.html. In his piece
âAre We All Mutualists?,â Kevin Carson points out that âin practice, the
fact that standards for constructive abandonment would be to a large
extent a matter of local convention, with a wide range of possible
thresholds for abandonment from the most liberal to the most stringent,
means that Lockeanism and occupancy-and-use really differ only in degree
rather than in kind. Or to put it another way, Lockeanism is
occupancy-and-use, but with somewhat more lenient occupancy requirements
for maintaining ownership than most explicit occupancy-and-use advocates
call for.â Thus, Lockean homesteading based on labor-mixing and
mutualist possession based on occupancy and use are different almost
entirely in the âstickinessâ of their theories of land-tenure. However,
a note in favor of the primary logic of the latter theory is Proudhonâs
comment from What is Property?: An Inquiry into the Principle of Right
and of Government that â[n]early all the modern writers on
jurisprudence, taking their cue from the economists, have abandoned the
theory of first occupancy as a too dangerous one, and have adopted that
which regards property as born of labor. In this they are deluded; they
reason in a circle. To labor it is necessary to occupy, says M. Cousinâ
(p. 65).
[43] Steven, âZanon factory occupation â interview with workers,â
Libcom, last modified November 10, 2006, accessed March 26, 2021,
https://libcom.org/library/zanon-factory-occupation-interview-with-workers.
It should be noted, as the folks at Libcom have, that although this
piece is âa bit old, it still contains unique insights into the
situation, hopes, difficulties and dynamics of the occupation process
and many personal interviews.â
[44] Benjamin Tucker, âThe Distribution of Rent.,â Instead Of A Book, By
A Man Too Busy To Write One (1893/1897), accessed November 27, 2021,
http://fair-use.org/benjamin-tucker/instead-of-a-book/the-distribution-of-rent.
[45] Phillip O'Hara, *Encyclopedia of Political Economy( (London, UK:
Routledge, 1999), 2:71, accessed November 27, 2021,
https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofpo02ohar.
[46] Richard Wolff, Democracy at Work: A Cure for Capitalism (Chicago,
IL: Haymarket Books, 2012), 90, 12.
[47] Karl Marx, âThe Civil War in Franceâ (1871), 27, accessed November
27, 2021,
https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/download/pdf/civil_war_france.pdf.
(from Marxist Internet Archive). See David L. Prychitkoâs Marxism and
Workersâ Self-Management (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1991) for an
in-depth consideration of Marxism and cooperatives.
[48] The International Workingmen's Association and Karl Marx,
âInstructions for the Delegates of the Provisional General Council. The
Different Questions.,â Marxists Internet Archive, accessed November 28,
2021,
https://www.marxists.org/history/international/iwma/documents/1866/instructions.htm.
[49] Carson, Studies in Mutualist, 182.
[50] Bill Orton, âRe: On the Question of Private Property,â
Anti-State.Com Forum, August 30, 2003. anti-state.com Captured April 30,
2004. Reproduced in Carsonâs Studies in Mutualist Political Economy (p.
151-52). The original quote used the terms âusufructâ and âpropertyâ
instead of âoccupancy and useâ and âprivate propertyâ but have been
changed for clarity.
[51] Anna Morgenstern, "Anarcho-'Capitalism' is Impossible," Center for
a Stateless Society, last modified September 19, 2010, accessed November
27, 2021, https://c4ss.org/content/4043.
[52] Kevin Carson, âAnarchism Without Adjectives,â Center for a
Stateless Society, last modified February 2, 2015, accessed November 27,
2021, https://c4ss.org/content/35425.
[53] Gary Elkin, âBenjamin Tucker â Anarchist or capitalist?,â The
Anarchist Library, accessed November 27, 2021,
https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/gary-elkin-benjamin-tucker-anarchist-or-capitalist.
[54] Carson, Studies in Mutualist, 74.
[55] Chris Matthew Sciabarra, Marx, Hayek, and Utopia, SUNY Series in
the Philosophy of the Social Sciences (Albany, NY: State University of
New York Press, 1995), 48.
[56] Engels, Socialism: Utopian, in The Marx-Engels Reader, 687.
[57] Marx, Capital, Volume, in The Marx-Engels Reader, 434.
[58] Sciabarra, Marx, Hayek, 89, 85.
[59] Ibid., 90.
[60] Ibid., 96.
[61] Friedrich August Hayek, The Fatal Conceit: The Errors of Socialism,
ed. W. W. Bartlry, III, The Collected Works of F. A. Hayek 1 (London,
UK: Routledge, 1988), 84, accessed April 19, 2020,
https://mises.at/static/literatur/Buch/hayek-the-fatal-conceit.pdf. See
also: Sciabarra, Marx, Hayek, 93.
[62] Nikolai Bukharin and Evgenii Preobrazhensky, The ABC of Communism
(London, UK: Penguin Books, 1969), 27-8, accessed December 15, 2021,
https://www.marxists.org/archive/bukharin/works/1920/abc/ABC-of-Communism.pdf.
[63] Kevin Carson, The Homebrew Industrial Revolution: A Low-Overhead
Manifesto (BookSurge Publishing, 2010), 202-03, accessed December 15,
2021,
https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/kevin-carson-the-homebrew-industrial-revolution.pdf.
[64] Sciabarra, Marx, Hayek, 96.
[65] Joseph V. Stalin, Dialectical and Historical Materialism, transcr.
M. (1938), accessed April 19, 2020,
https://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/stalin/works/1938/09.htm
(from Marxist Internet Archive).
[66] Sciabarra, Marx, Hayek, 95.
[67] James C. Scott, Seeing Like a State: How Certain Schemes to Improve
the Human Condition Have Failed, Yale Agrarian Studies Series (New
Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1998), 388. In the endnotes of Seeing
Like a State, Scott accounts that âKarl Polanyi has convincingly shownâ
that âthe market in the modern sense is not synonymous with âspontaneous
social order,â but rather had to be imposed by a coercive state in the
nineteenth centuryâ (p. 388). The general premise of the market being
originally a product of the state does not, however, overtly preclude
the goals of the anti-statist pro-market left who primarily distinguish
their ideal version of markets from capitalism by the respective absence
and presence of interference by the state. As Graeber writes in Debt,
âStates require markets. Markets require states. Neither could continue
without the other, at least, in anything like the forms we would
recognize today [emphasis added]â and âmarkets, when allowed to drift
free from their violent origins, invariably grow into something
different, into networks of honor, trust, and mutual connectednessâ (pp.
71, 386). These comments would seem to open up the possibility for
understandings of markets wholly divorced from their formulation in
relation to the state. The beginnings of such an idea might be found in
his descriptions of the âfree-market ideologyâ of medieval Islamic
society in which, summarizing the views of the Persian thinker Tusi, the
market âis simply one manifestation of this more general principle of
mutual aid, of the matching of abilities (supply) and needs (demand)â
and âis itself an extension of the kind of baseline communism on which
any society must ultimately restâ (pp. 278, 280). A more modern
conception can be seen in Charles W. Johnsonâs essay âMarkets Freed from
Capitalismâ from the anthology Markets Not Capitalism in which he argues
that âa fully freed marketâ should not be understood solely as a cash
nexus or even fundamentally as a sphere of exchange but rather as âthe
space of maximal consensually-sustained social experimentationâ (pp.
61-62). Such considerations are obviously beyond the scope of this piece
but are worth mentioning because the history of markets is essential to
understanding their context and the relationship betweenâand possibility
of separation ofâmarket and state is itself an issue of dialectical
consideration, as it is treated in Johnsonâs essay âLiberty, Equality,
Solidarity: Toward a Dialectical Anarchismâ and âPart Two: Libertarian
Crossroads: The Case of Murray Rothbardâ from Sciabarraâs Total Freedom.
[68] Scott, Seeing Like, 4.
[69] Ibid., 202-03.
[70] Ibid., 204.
[71] Ibid., 175.
[72] Alfred Korzybski, Science and Sanity: An Introduction to
Non-Aristotelian Systems and General Semantics, 5th ed. (Brooklyn, NY:
Institute of General Semantics, 1994), 58, accessed April 22, 2020,
https://ilam3d.files.wordpress.com/2010/12/alfred-korzybksi-science-and-sanity.pdf.
[73] David Graeber, Fragments of an Anarchist Anthropology, Paradigm 14
(Chicago, IL: Prickly Paradigm Press, 2004), 43-4.
[74] This piece foregoes discussion of the underdeveloped Marxist
concept of the âAsiatic mode of production.â
[75] Graeber, Fragments of an Anarchist, 44.
[76] Mao Zedong, On Practice, On the Relation Between Knowledge and
Practice, Between Knowing and Doing (1937), accessed April 25, 2020,
https://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/mao/selected-works/volume-1/mswv1_16.htm.
[77] Graeber, Fragments of an Anarchist, 45.
[78] David Graeber, Debt: The First 5,000 Years (Brooklyn, NY: Melville
House Publishing, 2012), 92, accessed December 15, 2021,
https://libcom.org/files/__Debt__The_First_5_000_Years.pdf.
[79] Maksim Lebsky, âThe Economy of Rojava,â Co-operation in
Mesopotamia, last modified March 17, 2016, accessed April 25, 2020,
https://mesopotamia.coop/the-economy-of-rojava/.
[80] Strangers in a Tangled Wilderness, A Small Key Can Open A Large
Door: The Rojava Revolution (Strangers in a Tangled Wilderness, 2016),
25.
[81] Lebsky, âThe Economy,â Co-operation in Mesopotamia.
[82] Ahmed Yousef, âThe Social Economy in Rojava,â Co-operation in
Mesopotamia, last modified May 26, 2016, accessed May 14, 2020,
https://mesopotamia.coop/the-social-economy-in-rojava/. Perhaps an
anti-statist and non-capitalist stock market system could be conceived
of through a libertarian interpretation of the coupon-based market
socialism found in John E. Roemerâs A Future for Socialism (Cambridge,
MA: Harvard University Press, 1994).
[83] âWho We Are,â Cooperation Jackson, accessed April 25, 2020,
https://cooperationjackson.org/intro.
[84] âThe Community Production Initiative,â Cooperation Jackson,
accessed May 10, 2020,
https://cooperationjackson.org/the-community-production-initiative.
[85] âOverview: Why Cooperatives? Why Jackson, Mississippi?,â
Cooperation Jackson, accessed April 28, 2020,
https://cooperationjackson.org/overview.
[86] âThe Story of Cooperation Jackson,â Cooperation Jackson, accessed
April 28, 2020, https://cooperationjackson.org/story.
[87] Alex Aragona, âImagining State-Capitalism,â Center for a Stateless
Society, last modified June 21, 2021, accessed November 29, 2021,
https://c4ss.org/content/54977.
[88] Vladimir Lenin, "The Dual Power," trans. Isaacs Bernard, 1917, in
Lenin Collected Works (Moscow, USSR: Progress Publishers, 1917), 24.
accessed December 12, 2021,
https://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1917/apr/09.htm (from
Marxist Internet Archive).
[89] "Dual Power: A Strategy To Build Socialism In Our Time," DSA
Libertarian Socialist Caucus, last modified December 21, 2018, accessed
December 14, 2021,
https://dsa-lsc.org/2018/12/31/dual-power-a-strategy-to-build-socialism-in-our-time/.
[90] Wesley Morgan, "Building Dual Power: Where They Retreat, We Must
Advance," Black Rose Anarchist Federation, last modified May 10, 2018,
accessed December 14, 2021,
https://blackrosefed.org/retreat-advance-dual-power/.
[91] For more information on large-scale community self-defense in
Rojava see Nazan ĂstĂŒndaÄâs âSelf-Defense as a Revolutionary Practice in
Rojava, or How to Unmake the State.
[92] Samuel Edward Konkin, III, New Libertarian Manifesto, 4th ed.
(Huntington Beach, CA: KoPubCo, 2006), 30, 18, accessed February 14,
2022,
https://usa.anarchistlibraries.net/library/samuel-edward-konkin-iii-new-libertarian-manifesto#toc10.
[93] Graeber, Fragments of an Anarchist, 12.
[94] Signe Howell, âEthnography,â The Cambridge Encyclopedia of
Anthropology, last modified February 18, 2018, accessed March 27, 2021,
https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/ethnography. It feels important
to at the very least briefly note the deeply rooted problems in
ethnography and the field of anthropology as a whole, especially
stemming from their entanglement with imperialism and colonialism. As
Joseph G. Jorgensen and Eric R. Wolf write in their 1970 piece âA
Special Supplement: Anthropology on the Warpath in Thailand,â the issue
that âhas dogged anthropologists from the inception of the disciplineâ
is that âEuropean conquest and colonialism . . . provided the field for
anthropologyâs operations and, especially in the nineteenth century, its
intellectual ethic of âscientific objectivity.â But âscientific
objectivity,â. . . implies the estrangement of the anthropologist from
the people among whom he works.â But they recognize that anthropology is
still a ârevolutionary disciplineâ as it âradically [questions] the
pretensions to superiority of Western civilization, while seeking
alternative visions of man.â They ultimately believe that it must
disengage itself from its connection with colonial aims or it will
become intellectually trivial. The future of anthropology, its
credibility, depends upon sustaining the dialectic between knowledge and
experience. Anthropologists must be willing to testify [on] behalf of
the oppressed peoples of the world, including those whom we
professionally define as primitives and peasants.â But even this is
deeply problematic as such things as âtestifying on behalf of othersâ
and âprofessionallyâ defining anyone as âprimitiveâ still present
immense barriers in making anthropology a genuinely liberatory
discipline. Two areas to look toward with this goal in mind are
Indigenous archaeology (see Fiona Cohenâs article âThe Ins and Outs of
Indigenous Archaeologyâ) and activist ethnography (see the California
Institute for Integral Studiesâ program in Anthropology and Social
Change).
[95] Graeber, Fragments of an Anarchist, 12.
[96] David Graeber, âTurning Modes of Production Inside Out: Or, Why
Capitalism is a Transformation of Slavery,â Critique of Anthropology 26,
no. 1 (March 2006): 62-64, accessed April 28, 2020,
http://www.faculty.fairfield.edu/dcrawford/graeber_2006a.pdf.
[97] Rothbard, Classical Economics, 372, 375.
[98] Bas Umali, âDialectical Historical Materialism: An Effective Tool
for Authoritarian Politics, Dominance and Control in the Archipelago,â
Etniko Bandido Infoshop, last modified January 22, 2018, accessed April
28, 2020,
https://etnikobandidoinfoshop.wordpress.com/2018/01/22/dialectical-historical-materialism-an-effective-tool-for-authoritarian-politics-dominance-and-control-in-the-archipelago/.
[99] Joris Leverink, âMurray Bookchin and the Kurdish resistance,â ROAR,
last modified August 9, 2015, accessed May 13, 2020,
https://roarmag.org/essays/bookchin-kurdish-struggle-ocalan-rojava/.
[100] Mikhail Bakunin, God and the State (New York, NY: Dover
Publications, 1970), 9, accessed April 28, 2020,
https://libcom.org/files/Bakunin%20-%20God%20and%20the%20State.pdf.
[101] Brian Morris, Bakunin: The Philosophy of Freedom (Montréal,
Quebec: Black Rose Books, 1993), 80-82.
[102] Shawn P. Wilbur, ed., "Benjamin R. Tucker on Bakunin (1881)," The
Libertarian Labyrinth, last modified April 11, 2015, accessed February
16, 2022,
https://www.libertarian-labyrinth.org/bakunin-library/benjamin-r-tucker-on-bakunin-1881/.
Tucker also helped translate Bakuninâs God and the State into English.
[103] Murray Bookchin, Listen, Marxist!, transcr. Jonas Holmgren
(Anarchos, 1969), accessed May 13, 2020,
https://www.marxists.org/archive/bookchin/1969/listen-marxist.htm (from
Marxist Internet Archive).
[104] Murray Bookchin, The Philosophy of Social Ecology: Essays on
Dialectical Naturalism, 2nd ed. (Montréal, Quebec: Black Rose Books,
1996), 15, 20, accessed May 13, 2020,
https://libcom.org/files/ThePhilosophyofSocialEcology.pdf. A critical
examination of Bookchinâs thought in relation to marketsâa thoroughly
dialectical matter as it has been presented in this pieceâcan be found
in Prychitkosâs âExpanding the Anarchist Range: a critical reappraisal
of Rothbardâs contribution to the contemporary theory of anarchism.â
[105] Kevin Carson, "Libertarian Municipalism: Networked Cities as
Resilient Platforms for Post-Capitalist Transition," Center for a
Stateless Society, last modified January 20, 2018, accessed February 16,
2022, https://c4ss.org/content/50407.