This is
a session on ‘Social Critics’ and ‘Public Intellectuals’. But what do these
terms mean in the current context?
What ‘Society’? What
‘criticism’? What ‘Public’? What ‘intellectuals’?
I do not
accept the adequacy of these terms as a basis for discussing the public role of
sociologists. What sociologists practice as a rule is social control.
Sociologists need to be critiqued as ‘treacherous intellectuals’ as the
purveyors of bourgeois ideology to the ‘masses’ i.e. the workers. They only get away with this ideological
practice because true intellectual critique is almost dead.
Sociology has been debased from the mid
19th century when sociology was macro, critical and openly political.
Marx built a workers’ international, Durkheim designed hygienic communities,
Weber intervened with the General Staff to stop the First World War and
forestall socialist revolution in
Can we
say the same about today’s leading social thinkers hiding for cover behind
neo-liberal shibboleths of the individual, choice, risk, and worse, today’s chic radicals reclaiming Marx or
Lenin as ‘great men’ of history who can rescue society by personal acts of
self-sacrifice? Sociology is in
danger of flying up its own ass in search of the ‘unconscious’.
We can
capture this theme as the long 20th century retreat from
consciousness to unconsciousness.
What society?
I tell
my students that society is what you make of it. First you have to understand it
before you can critique it and change it. Take you pick, there are market
liberals who want society to disappear; common liberals who see society as a
harmonious unity of responsible citizens; radicals who want to overcome the deep
social divisions of race class and gender, and Marxists who are dead. Or are
they?
Sociology began as an antidote to Marxism
and attempted from the first to present Marx as the immature precursor of
Durkheim and Weber. Marx after a
perfunctory museum tour is usually dropped off the end of the list of founding
fathers. But Marxism hasn’t died and remains a constant provocation to the rest
who ignore it like universities, patronise it like the New York Times or try reverse takeovers
like Derrida and Zizek.
So
social criticism can come from all directions; to end society like Thatcher; to
sex-up the market like Giddens; to mobilise the masses like Chomsky; or to
replace capitalist society like the latter-day Lenin. Are of these critiques of ‘society’
equally valid?
One dead
end approach is to follow the lead of the sociology of knowledge and identify
sociologists as ‘intellectuals’ capable of standing above classes and taking a
relatively objective view of society.
But this view of sociology never was a starter. It didn’t survive the
debates over ‘functionalism’ in the 1960’s, or more important, the
This
doesn’t make each intellectual’s truth as good as another. That would be
relativism and postmodernism where there are as many truths as there are
critics. So how do we decide?
Facts? Evidence? Social reality?
Science overcoming ideology?
I prefer
to look back to see what role intellectuals played in the history of sociology,
the legacies of the clashes between
its ‘founding fathers’, and the more recent contretemps between post
Paris 1968 generation of left and right intellectuals. Here we can trace the
spiraling decline and fall of the intellect from consciousness into
unconsciousness.
When conscious becomes
unconscious
The
practice of early sociology was to work on consciousness. The new bourgeois mode
of regulation from Comte to Durkheim was designed to train workers in the new
expanding industry of capitalism.
Weber provided the moral and philosophical cover with his neo-Kantian
notion of ‘rationalisation’ rooted in the Protestant ethic i.e. good was
great. Meanwhile back in the
concrete jungle the socialists were challenging the new order. Ethical socialism
became scientific when Marx and Engels discovered that being preceded consciousness and that being was historical and determinate
–the capital-labour relation. Now we had the class truth. You were either for us or
against us as the intellectually challenged George Bush likes to
say.
In the
crisis period of the First World War, of Bolshevism versus fascism,
intellectuals were even more partisan. Revolution and counter-revolution blew
away the fence. The right became openly militaristic, and much of the left
peeled off and joined them. The Bernstein wing of socialism became warriors, the
centre behind Kautsky appealed to the common sense of all sides to make peace,
while the Bolsheviks called for the war to be turned into open class war. The minority came to power in
Antonio
Gramsci provided us with a critical analysis of why ‘traditional intellectuals’
who support the capitalist order are so successful in co-opting the left and
frustrating the rise of revolutionary ‘organic intellectuals’ (Prison Notebooks). Capitalism can pass itself off as
naturally just and equitable provided everyone accepts the rules of the game.
When the rules are broken by some power hungry elite, or power hungry mass, then
everyone, workers included, must try to restore peace and prosperity. The
traditional intellectuals are therefore cast as the priests of common sense,
while the organic intellectuals are cast in the unfavourable light of having to
justify overthrowing society itself.
Unfavourable, that is, so long as the issue remains one fought out by
competing factions of the intelligentsia.
Once,
however, the class struggle throws up organic intellectuals, Marxists, who
organise a revolutionary party (Gramsci’s ‘Prince’) the fight is seen to be that
of one class against another. The traditionals have the advantage of the
fetishised social relations of capital to back up their obscurantism i.e.
Gramsci’s ‘common sense’. But once the organics had penetrated and exploded this
ideology, the superior class truth of the proletariat could confront bourgeoisie
hegemony head to head and win. Or course Gramsci’s spin on the fate of the
Russian revolution was that it was atypical and a war of maneuver in a fluid
backward state, as opposed to the war of position that must take place in Europe
were the bourgeoisie was entrenched in the state and could only be overthrown by
a ‘long seige’.
Lenin’s
prejoinder was that workers in
As well
as ‘isolating’ the Russian revolution (Bolshevism, Leninism etc) and
‘quarantining’ it, Western
traditional intellectuals (and their radical, Menshevik allies) looked for the
failure of the revolution to spread in the unconscious of the working
class. Either the working class was
co-opted by capitalism in which case talk of ‘false consciousness’ was utopian
until workers suffered more on the march of history. Then some petty bourgeois
public opinion expert would tell them when and how to revolt. Or some pre-social
barrier to revolution existed in the ‘unconscious’ motivations of individuals as
theorised by psychoanalysis. In any event Gramsci’s long seige now became a
process of protracted or traumatic psychic liberation.
Both of
these currents fused in the professors of the
This
betrayal of Marxism gave the traditionals a powerful weapon against the
marginalised organics. (Of course it presupposed the earlier retreats marked by
the Bernsteins, Kautskys and the process of Stalinisation going on in the
The
leading organics, Gramsci himself, jailed by fascists in 1926 and dead by 1937,
Lukacs trapped after 1924 by Stalinism, and Trotsky expelled from the
Fast forward to
Fascism
(as well as the war against fascism) was a defeat for workers. Though the Soviet
Union survived and new so-called ‘workers states’ arose, the
In May
’68 the students failed to get their revolt against the archaic public education
system taken up by workers. This was because workers were trapped in unions
dominated by Stalinists and socialists, but also because there was no party or
program that could link the two forces. Instead of drawing these conclusions
(how could they?) French left intellectuals took this to be a confirmation of
the collapse of consciousness into unconsciousness (Starr, Logics of Failed Revolt).
The
downward spiral took another twist. Freud who had been adapted by the
Thus we
come all the way down the spiral from class consciousness to individual
unconsciousness. But can the new social psychotic common sense prevail against
collective radical upsurges from below?
First it has to be dressed up as radical or even revolutionary. Lets look at some recent paternalist
attempts to do this?
Take
Derrida’s reclaiming of Marx from the grave. Marx is reborn as a social democrat
trying to complete the bourgeois revolution (Menshevism) for universal
citizenship, human rights etc by eschewing his ‘totalitarian’ theory of
communism. Derrida’s model for the new Marx is Max Stirner a narcissistic
egomaniac that Marx and Engels deride mercilessly in The German Ideology. Derrida’s ‘new
international’ is any approximation of individualistic struggles for bourgeois
rights. There is no recognition
that Marx posited a contradiction between use-values and exchange values that
means that the drive for profits must exclude the masses from democracy (e.g. in
Second
case: Hardt and Negri’s use of Marx to theorise Empire reconstitutes the proletariat as
the ‘multitude’ composed of all individuals who are in any way oppressed or
exploited by capitalism. At the authors’ exchange level of analysis this
definition includes anyone not paid the full price for their commodities, and so
unites the unemployed with the middle class. But the Argentinazo of 2001
disconfirms a shift to social movements away from class. (see my Lost in the Crowd: Hardt and Negri’s
Multitude in Argentina)
Last and
not least: Zizek’s reappropriation
of Lenin in Lenin’s Choice. He wants to repeat Lenin, but not the
historical Lenin. By seizing on the name of Lenin (which for Z signifies a great
man like St Paul or the Pope) as a man capable of standing above the historical
situation and in an act of genuine free will, break with the unconsciously
determined cycle of domination,
Zizek finds a new master that we can all follow.
But
Zizek ignores the real history of 1917 that shows Lenin (and Trotsky) to be a
man of the class and the party and not a ‘great man’. Why did the Bolsheviks try
to stop the July uprising if after April Lenin was engaged in his supreme
‘Act’? Surely he could have brought
the revolution forward by a sheer act of will? Why would Lenin go into hiding after the
July Days dressed as a woman if he was the new father? Why does Trotsky in his
sublime book The History of the Russian
Revolution, refer to himself so few times and always in the third person,
when he actually played a leading role in the revolution? This is hardly the symptomatology of the
‘new man’ leaping into the abyss. Zizek’s repo of Lenin vindicates all the right
wing rubbish about Lenin as a great man who not only substituted the party for
the working class but then usurped the party and installed himself as dictator.
(see my Rebels without a cause: post-Marxism from Althusser to
Zizek).
The
‘post’ intellectuals of the ’68 generation would rather see a bewildered old
Marx and a manic Lenin roaming loose than a fully fledged and armed soviet of
the people on their doorstep – especially one led by women workers (long live
1917)! The retreat of intellectual life into the unconscious is but a symptom of
the failure to understand the social reproduction of patriarchy in the heart of
advanced imperialist capitalism. It is a retreat to the ideology produced by the
class struggle over the first form of private property, women’s unpaid
labour-time (on this see my ‘Abort,
Ignore, Retry: On the Domestic Mode of Production’).
More
importantly, the unconscious serves as an index of the extreme degeneracy of
very late bourgeois ideology. As Lukacs pointed out in the Destruction of Reason reliance on
pre-bourgeois fascist ideology to legitimate capitalism is a sign of
desperation. The bourgeoisie enlists the petty bourgeois patriarchs of theory to
dredge the historic shit of ages to paste over the masses consciousness. Today
when bourgeois class hegemony has to rely on a deeply entrenched patriarchal
unconscious in digitalised multimedia displays to keep the lid on the
proletariat, bourgeois society has truly exhausted its historic potential. Time
to lift the lid on all the old shit!
Of
course the answer to positing the unconscious before being is to theorise the unconscious as
the effect of being. An interesting contemporary Spanish
Marxist intellectual who has developed a theory of the history and method of
ideology production is Juan Carlos Rodriguez. I understand from the translator
of his book the Theory and History of
Ideological Production, Malcolm
Read, that Rodriguez is working on
a book on Freud. Watch out Lacan
and Zizek the Marxists are coming to get you!
Note: my
articles referred to above can be found on my website
http://www.geocities.com/davebedggood/articles
Other
references cited above are:
Adorno,
T et al (1969) The Authoritarian Personality. W.W.
Norton and Co,
Brennan,
Teresa (1993) History after Lacan. Routledge,
Callinicos, Alex (1999) Social Theory: An Historical
Introduction. Polity Press,
Gramsci,
Antonio (1971) Selections from the Prison Notebooks.
Edited and translated by Quintin Hoare and Geoffrey Nowell Smith. International Publishers,
Lenin,
V.I. (1981)
The Proletarian Revolution and
the Renegade Kautsky.
Collected Works. Volume 28,
227-319. Progress Publishers.
Lukacs,
Georg (1980) The Destruction of Reason. The Merlin Press,
Marcuse,
Herbert (1966) One Dimensional
Marx,
Karl and Fred Engels (1976) The German Ideology. Progress
Publishers,
Rodriguez, Juan Carlos (2002) Theory and History of Ideological
Production: The First Bourgeois Literatures (the 16th Century).
Translated by Malcolm K. Read,
Starr,
Peter (1995) Logics of Failed Revolt: French Theory after
May ’68.
Zizek, Slavoj (2002) ed. ‘Afterword: Lenin’s Choice’ in V.I.
Lenin Revolution at the Gates: Selected Writings
of Lenin from 1917. Verso,