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Title: Cornelius Castoriadis
Author: NW
Date: 1997
Language: en
Topics: biography,libertarian socialists,Obituary,critical Marxists
Source: Scanned from Freedom (London) February 7, 1998, page 4
Notes: Pseudonyms used by Cornelius Castoriadis: Pierre Chaulieu, Paul Cardan

NW

Cornelius Castoriadis

Cornelius Castoriadis, who has died at the age of 75, was one of the

most impressive and influentual intellectuals on the French left,

travelling over half a century from Stalinism through Trotskyism and

Leninism and finally past Marxism itself, away from prevailing forms of

socialism towards a more autonomous and libertarian approach to politics

altogether. He was best known to English-speaking anarchists as the

ideological inspiration of the Solidarity group during the 1960s and

1970s.

Kornelios Kastoriades was born on 11th March 1922 to a francophile Greek

family in Istanbul which soon moved to Greece, and he grew up in Athens

where he studied law, economics and philosophy. He was drawn to

left-wing politics as a boy and joined the Young Communists in 1937 and

the Communist Party in 1941, but he soon turned against the party line

and joined an extreme Trotskyist fraction in 1942. He was also involved

in the resistance movement against the German occupation of Greece. He

ran into personal danger from enemies on either side, and in 1945 he

made his way to France, where he spent the rest of his life.

By profession he was a statistical economist, and from 1948 he worked as

a senior official at the OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation

and Development) in Paris. But by vocation he was a revolutionary

propagandist, and during the same period he wrote prolifically for

left-wing publications and held regular meetings in Paris. In 1946 he

joined the French section of the Trotskyist Fourth International, the

Parti Communiste Internationaliste, but he formed a dissident fraction

which left it in 1948. He became a founding editor of the paper

Socialisme ou Barbarie, which from 1949 acted as the focus of one of the

most active groupuscules of the New Left, campaigning against all

actually existing forms of socialism, whether reformist or

revolutionary, and for a new form of socialism which would bring real

liberty, equality and fraternity. As 'Pierre Chaulieu' or 'Paul Cardan'

or lean-Marc Coudray', he produced a series of essays which appeared as

articles and then as pamphlets, were translated into several languages,

and reached small but active groups in other countries.

In this country his influence was exerted through the Solidarity group,

founded in 1960, which attempted to play a similar part in the British

left (and whose main leader coincidentally came from a Greek family and

used various pseudonyms). During a period of more than twenty years,

conscientious translations of the writings of 'Paul Cardan' (often

improved versions of the originals) appeared as articles in Solidarity

magazine or as Solidarity pamphlets or books, and introduced his ideas

to the English-speaking world—and beyond, since they were widely read

not only in Britain and America but in many parts of both Western and

Eastern Europe. Revolutionary and libertarian socialists of all kinds in

all places were impressed by such texts as Socialism Reaffirmed,

Socialism or Barbarism, The Meaning of Socialism, The Crisis of Modern

Society, Modern Capitalism and Revolution, History and Revolution,

Redefining Revolution, History as Creation, and were stimulated to

rethink their ideas.

His key doctrines were that class society is divided not according to

the ownership or control of property but according to the possession or

exertion of power (essentially between order-givers or directors and

executants or order-takers), that the various attempts at political and

social revolution (especially by Communist Parties) have succeeded only

in replacing the old bureaucracies by new ones, that Marxist analysis

itself shows that all the varieties of Marxism (including that of Marx

himself) cannot succeed, and that other ways must be found for

individuals to take power over their own lives, based on the principles

of autogestion—self-management—and autonomy.

His influence was most obvious in the 'events' of 1968 in France, many

of whose leaders especially Daniel Cohn-Bendit—were impressed by his

critical approach to all old politics, though as it happened the

Socialisme ou Barbarie paper and group had ceased a couple of years

earlier. In particular his concept of autogestion had a wide appeal for

the rebels outside the established political parties. Eventually he

abandoned not only Marxism but socialism, and by the end of the 1970s he

adopted the term 'autonomous society' instead. His line clearly

converged with that of anarchism, but although he made occasional

references to the anarchists, like many former Marxists he had little

respect for them, and in return anarchists took little notice of him.

This was probably a mistake, since many of his positive as well as

negative ideas are highly relevant to the work facing the anarchist

movement in the contemporary world.

In 1970 he retired from the OECD and became a French citizen. He turned

to psychology and became a psychoanalyst in 1974, associated with the

'Fourth Group' of dissident Lacanians. He began to achieve recognition

as a leading intellectual, was an editor of two leading

magazines—Textures (1971-1975) and Libre (1976-1980)—and in 1980 he

became a director of studies at Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences

Sociales at the University of Paris. He conducted an ambitious programme

of work and, at last able to write freely under his own name, he

produced a score of books. A series of cheap collections of his early

writings appeared from 1973 to 1979, accompanied by L'Institution

imaginaire de la societe in 1975, and followed by a series of

collections of later writings under the general title Carrefours dans la

labyrinthe from 1978 to 1997.

At the same time he became better known in the English-speaking world

with the appearance of American translations of some of his

writings—Crossroads in the Labyrinth (1984), The Imaginary Institution

of Society (1987), a three-volume collection of Political and Social

Writings (1988-1993), an anthology of Philosophy, Politics, Autonomy

(1991), World in Fragments (1997)—and another anthology, The Castoriadis

Reader (1997), just before his death. But he was still virtually ignored

by the political and intellectual establishments in the English-speaking

world.

Towards the end of his life he turned increasingly to linguistics and

mathematics, ancient history and pure philosophy. He developed an

idiosyncratic humanist position which emphasised the part played by

individual imagination and creative culture in human affairs and which

included a remarkable 'ethic of mortality', arguing that the absence of

any kind of divinity above humanity and of any kind of existence after

death made it all the more important to accept a tragic sense of both

private and public life and to concentrate on the development of

autonomous individuals in an autonomous society here and now. He always

opposed all kinds of intellectual obscurantism, though he never escaped

the obscurity of modern discourse in French, and his style became

increasingly esoteric and neologistic. At his worst he might be arrogant

and abstract, but at his best he could be inspiring and realistic. He

always had a wide circle of friends, to whom he was known as 'Corneille'

and with whom he enjoyed furious arguments, and he also earned

increasing respect from a larger public. He will probably be remembered

for his negative work, which helped to destroy some of the most harmful

myths of our time, rather than for his positive work, which tried to

construct a new world in their place; yet now that the former task is

completed, the latter task becomes increasingly urgent. "Whatever

happens", he said at the end of his life, "I shall remain first and

foremost a revolutionary". Other revolutionaries still have much to

learn from him.

Cornelius Castoriadis died in Paris following a heart operation on 26th

December 1997, and was the subject of long obituaries in the French

press. Obituaries appeared in this country in The Guardian and The Times

(the latter being an abridged and expurgated version of the present

article).