Relevance of Lenin Today
Relevance of Lenin Today
Relevance of Lenin Today
DEBATE
1848?
There is another date besides 1789
and 1917 that needs to be considered:
1848. This was the time of the
spring of the nations in Europe. But
these revolutions failed. This was
the moment of Marx and Engelss
Communist manifesto, published
in anticipation of the revolution,
just days before its outbreak. So the
question is not so much How was
Lenin a Jacobin?, but, rather,
How was Lenin a Marxist? This
is because 1848, the deining moment
of Marxism, tends to drop out of the
historical imagination of revolution
today, 7 whereas for Marxism in
Lenins time 1848 was the lodestar.
Marxism and
Leninism
In 2011, it seems, Time magazine,
among others, could only regard
revolution in terms of 1789. This is
quite unlike the period of most of
the 20th century prior to 1989 - the
centenary of the French Revolution
also marked the beginning of the
collapse of the Soviet Union - in
which 1789 could be recalled only
in terms of 1917. A historical link
was drawn between Bolshevism and
the Jacobins. In the collapse of 20th
century communism, not only the
demon of 1917, but also 1789, seemed
exorcised.
Did 1917 and 1789 share only
disappointing results, the terror and
totalitarianism, and an ultimately
conservative, oppressive outcome in Napoleon Bonapartes empire and
Stalins Soviet Union? 1917 seems
to have complicated and deepened
the problems of 1789, underscoring
Hegels caveats about the terror
of revolution. It would appear that
Napoleon stands in the same relation
to Robespierre as Stalin stands to
Lenin. But the problems of 1917 need
to be further speciied, by reference
to 1848 and, hence, to Marxism, as a
post-1848 historical phenomenon.10
The question concerning Lenin is the
question of Marxism.11
This is because there would be no
discussing Marxism today without the
role of the Bolsheviks in the October
revolution. The relevance of Marxism
is inevitably tied to Lenin. Marxism
continues to be relevant either because
of or despite Lenin.12 But what is the
signiicance of Lenin as a historical
figure from the point of view of
Marxism?
For Marx, history presented
new tasks in 1848, different from
those confronting earlier forms
of revolutionary politics, such as
Jacobinism. Marx thus distinguished
the revolution of the 19th century
from that of the 18th.13 But, where
the 18th century seemed to have
succeeded, the 19th century appeared
to have failed: history repeated itself,
according to Marx, the irst time as
tragedy, the second time as farce.14
Trying to escape this debacle,
Marxism expressed and sought to
specify the tasks of revolution in the
19th century. The question of Lenins
relevance is how well (or poorly)
Lenin, as a 20th century revolutionary,
expressed the tasks inherited from
19th century Marxism. How was
Lenin, as a Marxist, adequately (or
inadequately) conscious of the tasks
of history?
The recent (December 2011)
passing of Christopher Hitchens
(1949-2011) provides an occasion
for considering the fate of Marxism
Lenin as a Marxist
Lenins 1917 pamphlet, The state and
revolution, did not aspire to originality,
but was, rather, an attempted synthesis
of Engelss and Marxs various
writings that they themselves never
made: speciically, of the Communist
manifesto, The civil war in France
(on the Paris Commune) and Critique
of the Gotha programme. Moreover,
Lenin was writing against subsequent
Marxists treatments of the issue of the
state, especially Kautskys.
Why did Lenin take the time during
the crisis, not only of the collapse
of the tsarist Russian empire but of
World War I, to write on this topic?
The fact of the Russian Revolution is
not the only explanation. World War I
was a far more dramatic crisis than the
revolutions of 1848 had been, and a far
greater crisis than the Franco-Prussian
war that had ushered in the Paris
Commune. Socialism clearly seemed
more necessary in Lenins time. But
was it more possible? Prior to World
War I, Kautsky would have regarded
socialism as more possible, but after
World War I, Kautsky regarded it as
less so, and with less necessity of
priority. Rather, democracy seemed
to Kautsky more necessary than, and
a precondition for the possibility of,
socialism.
For Lenin, the crisis of bourgeois
society had matured. It had grown,
but had it advanced? For Lenin, the
preconditions of socialism had also
been eroded and not merely further
developed since Marxs time. Indeed
Kautsky, Lenins great Marxist
adversary in 1917, regarded World
War I as a setback and not as an
opportunity to struggle for socialism.
Lenins opponents considered him
Political and
social revolution
All of this seems very far removed
from the concerns of the present.
Today, we struggle not with the
problem of achieving socialism, but
rather have returned to the apparently
more basic issue of democracy.
This is seen in recent events, from
the financial crisis to the question
of sovereign debt; from the Arab
spring to Occupy Wall Street; from
the struggle for a uniied Europeanwide policy, to the elections in
Greece and Egypt that seem to have
threatened so much and promised so
little. The need to go beyond mere
protest has asserted itself. Political
revolution seems necessary - again.
Lenin was a figure of the
struggle for socialism - a man of a
very different era. 18 But his selfconception as a Jacobin raises the
issue of regarding Lenin as a radical
democrat. 19 Lenins identification
for this was revolutionary social
democrat - someone who would
uphold the need for revolution to
achieve democracy with adequate
social content. In this respect, what
Lenin aspired to might remain
our goal as well. The question
that remains for us is the relation
between democracy and capitalism.
Capitalism is a source of severe
discontents - an undoubted problem
of our world - but seems intractable.
It is no longer the case, as it was in
the cold war period, that capitalism
is accepted as a necessary evil,
to preserve the autonomy of civil
society against the potentially
totalitarian state. Rather, in our time,
we accept capitalism in the much
more degraded sense of Margaret
Thatchers infamous expression,
There is no alternative! But the
recent crisis of neoliberalism means
that even this ideology, predominant
for a generation, has seemingly
worn thin. Social revolution seems
necessary - again.
But there is an unmistakable
shying away from such tasks on
the left today. Political party, never
mind revolution, seems undesirable
in the present. For political parties
are defined by their ability and
willingness to take power.20 Today, the
people - the demos - seem resigned to
their political powerlessness. Indeed,
Notes
1. On December 17 2011, I gave a presentation on
The relevance of Lenin today at the School of
the Art Institute of Chicago, broadcasting it live
on the internet. This essay - originally published
in The Platypus Review July-August 2012 - is an
abbreviated, edited and somewhat further elaborated version, especially in light of subsequent
events. Video and audio recordings of my original
presentation can be found online at http://chriscutrone.platypus1917.org/?p=1507.
2. Kurt Anderson, The protester Time Vol 175,
No28 (December 26 2011-January 2 2012): www.
time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,2101745_2102132,00.html.
3. Time Vol 175, No28, p74.
4. Time Vol 175, No28, p75.
5. T Jefferson The declaration of independence
and other writings (ed: Michael Hardt) London
2007, pp46-47. Also available online at http://
chnm.gmu.edu/revolution/d/592.
6. VI Lenin One step forward, two steps back
(1904): www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/
works/1904/onestep/q.htm.
7. See my Egypt, or historys invidious comparisons: 1979, 1789, and 1848 Platypus Review
No33, March 2011: http://platypus1917.
org/2011/03/01/egypt-or-history%E2%80%99sinvidious-comparisons-1979-1789-and-1848; and
The Marxist hypothesis: a response to Alain
Badious communist hypothesis Platypus
Review No29, November 2010: http://platypus1917.org/2010/11/06/the-marxist-hypothesisa-response-to-alain-badous-communist-hypothesis.
8. www.marxists.org/archive/luxemburg/1918/12/30.htm.
9. This is in the critique by Karl Kautsky of Karl
Korschs rumination on Luxemburg and Lenin in
Marxism and philosophy (1923). For Ben
Lewiss translation of Kautskys critique, A destroyer of vulgar Marxism (1924), see Platypus
Review No43, February 2012: http://platypus1917.org/2012/01/30/destroyer-of-vulgarmarxism.
10. See my 1873-1973, the century of Marxism:
the death of Marxism and the emergence of neoliberalism and neo-anarchism Platypus Review
No47, June 2012: http://platypus1917.
org/2012/06/07/1873-1973-the-century-of-marxism.
11. See T Krausz, Lenins legacy today Platypus
Review No39, September 2011: http://platypus1917.org/2011/08/31/lenin%E2%80%99s-legacy-today.
12. See my Lenins liberalism Platypus Review
No36, June 2011: http://platypus1917.
org/2011/06/01/lenin%E2%80%99s-liberalism;
and Lenins politics: a rejoinder to David Adam
on Lenins liberalism Platypus Review No40,
October 2011: http://platypus1917.
org/2011/09/25/lenins-politics.
13. See K Marx The 18th Brumaire of Louis
Bonaparte (1852): www.marxists.org/archive/
marx/works/1852/18th-brumaire.
14. Ibid.
15. See S Leonard, Going it alone: Christopher
Hitchens and the death of the left Platypus
Review No11, March 2009: http://platypus1917.
org/2009/03/15/going-it-alone-christopher-hitchens-and-the-death-of-the-left.
16. See T Cliff Lenin (four volumes: 1975, 1976,
1978 and 1979; volumes 1-2 available online at
www.marxists.org/archive/cliff/index.htm); however, see also the critique of Cliff by the
Spartacist League, Lenin and the vanguard party
(1978): www.bolshevik.org/Pamphlets/
LeninVanguard/LVP%200.htm.
17. See my The decline of the left in the 20th
century: toward a theory of historical regression 1917 Platypus Review No17, November 2009:
http://platypus1917.org/2009/11/18/the-declineof-the-left-in-the-20th-century-1917.
18. See my 1873-1973: the century of Marxism
Platypus Review No47, June 2012: http://platypus1917.org/2012/06/07/1873-1973-the-centuryof-marxism.
19. See B Lewis and T Riley, Lenin and the
Marxist left after Occupy Platypus Review No47,
June 2012: http://platypus1917.org/2012/06/07/
lenin-and-the-marxist-left-after-occupy.
20. See JP Nettl, The German Social Democratic
Party 1890-1914 as a political model Past and
Present No30, April 1965, pp65-95.
21. But Lenin is more than the symptom that, for
instance, Slavoj iek takes him to be. See The
Occupy movement, a renascent left and Marxism
today Platypus Review No42, December
2011-January 2012: http://platypus1917.
org/2011/12/01/occupy-movement-interviewwith-slavoj-zizek.