Connecting the Dots: Anti-Bolshevik Communism
This discussion will give a brief overview of those traditions left of
Lenin that were denounced in his 1921 pamphlet “Left-Wing” Communism,
An Infantile Disorder. Also called ultra-left and left communist—or
anti-state communism, libertarian socialism, and also incorporating
class struggle anarchism—this tradition provides the most relevant
methodological tools for the revolutionary project today. It draws on
the uncompromising internationalism of Rosa Luxemburg, the theories of
organization contributed by the German/Dutch left (people like Anton
Pannekoek, Karl Korsch, Herman Gorter, Otto Ruehle, Paul Mattick Sr.),
many of whom participated in the revolutionary wave coming at the end
of WWI and continuing till 1921—later theorizing council communism—and
the lucid critique of political economy of the Italian left around the
theorist Amadeo Bordiga, best remembered as the last revolutionary to
tell Stalin to his face, in 1926, that he was the “gravedigger” of the
revolution and who lived to tell the tale.
The strengths and weaknesses of these group’s ideas and practice will
be presented, as well as those who followed after them, like the
European group Socialism or Barbarism around the theorist Cornelius
Castoriadis—who in turn had been influenced by inspiring Greek
revolutionary Aghis Stinis—and the North American group they
collaborated with around C.L.R. James, the Johnson-Forest tendency,
that broke with Trotskyism—as well as the concept of the vanguard
party—in the 1940s. Both groups had members working and organizing in
factories and documenting the wildcats they were participating in, as
well as theorizing the changes in the mode of production that were
going beyond the Fordist factory. They also articulated the
spontaneous, leaderless revolutionary potential of the working class
confirmed in the 1956 Hungarian Revolution where within 48 hours
workers’ councils took control of all production in the country, before
being brutally defeated by Soviet troops. Johnson-Forest broke into the
News & Letters faction around Raya Dunayevskaya and the Johsonite
faction carried on by Martin Glaberman in Detroit, and later
influencing 1960s groups like the League of Black Revolutionary Workers
through his participation their Marx study groups. Out of Social or
Barbarism came Guy Debord, who went on to help found the Situationist
International, whose ideas prefigured and whose members participated in
the 10 million strong wildcat general strike of May/June 1968 in
France. Jacques Camatte, at nearly the same time, continued the spirit
of Bordiga with the journal Invariance before fading away.
Today, writers that can be connected to this tradition include Gilles
Dauve in France, Loren Goldner in the U.S., and groups like the one
around the British journal Aufheben, Wildcat—and a spin off Kolinko—in
Germany, as well as the British Wildcat and Antagonism groups. In
France, the councilists around Henri Simon’s Echanges et Movement and
the French/Belgian group Mouvement Communiste. Here in North America
the ideas are carried on by Red & Black Notes in Canada,
Internationalist Perspectives in several places in the U.S. and Canada,
the U.S. Workers’ Voice here in LA and us, the INSANE DIALECTICAL
POSSE, in both LA and the Bay Area.
The presentation will segue to an open discussion of how we can use the
above ideas to reinvigorate the working class movement for communist
revolution, rejecting not only the mainstream There Is No Alternative
dogma, but also the dead-ends of leftism, which is often the barely
veiled continuation of the reformism of social democracy, as well as
the academic justifications for capital dressed up as post-modern
discourse.
No holds will be barred as we discuss dictatorship of the proletariat,
trade unions as the merchants of labor power, the working class for
itself—as opposed to in itself, race/nationalism/gender in relation to
class struggle, uses for Hegel, the relevance of the anti-globalization
movement, fictitious capital, and the moral militant activist vs. the
consciously dialectical revolutionary—and their theories and
practice—today.
Guy Ford for SF Bay IDP
Saturday May15 5:30 pm
Free University of Los Angeles
Flor y Canto
3706 N. Figueroa St.
Los Angeles, CA 90065
www.florycanto.org
IDP-LA