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The Joy of Revolution
Chapter 1: Some Facts of Life
Utopia or bust
Stalinist
“communism” and reformist “socialism” are merely variants of capitalism
Representative
democracy versus delegate democracy
Irrationalities of capitalism
Some exemplary modern revolts
Some common objections
Increasing dominance
of the spectacle
Chapter 1: Some Facts of Life
“We can comprehend this world only by contesting it as a
whole. . . . The root of the prevailing lack of imagination cannot
be grasped unless one is able to imagine what is lacking, that is,
what is missing, hidden, forbidden, and yet possible, in modern life.”
—Situationist International (1)
[Utopia or bust]
Never in history has there been such a glaring contrast between what
could be and what actually exists.
It’s hardly necessary to go into all the problems in the world today
— most of them are widely known, and to dwell on them usually does little
more than dull us to their reality. But even if we are “stoic enough to
endure the misfortunes of others,” the present social deterioration ultimately
impinges on us all. Those who don’t face direct physical repression still
have to face the mental repressions imposed by an increasingly mean, stressful,
ignorant and ugly world. Those who escape economic poverty cannot escape
the general impoverishment of life.
And even life at this pitiful level cannot continue for long. The ravaging
of the planet by the global development of capitalism has brought us to
the point where humanity may become extinct within a few decades.
Yet this same development has made it possible to abolish the system
of hierarchy and exploitation that was previously based on material scarcity
and to inaugurate a new, genuinely liberated form of society.
Plunging from one disaster to another on its way to mass insanity and
ecological apocalypse, this system has developed a momentum that is out
of control, even by its supposed masters. As we approach a world in which
we won’t be able to leave our fortified ghettoes without armed guards,
or even go outdoors without applying sunscreen lest we get skin cancer,
it’s hard to take seriously those who advise us to beg for a few reforms.
What is needed, I believe, is a worldwide participatory-democracy revolution
that would abolish both capitalism and the state. This is admittedly a
big order, but I’m afraid that nothing less can get to the root of our
problems. It may seem absurd to talk about revolution; but all the alternatives
assume the continuation of the present system, which is even more absurd.
* * *
[Stalinist
“communism” and reformist “socialism”
are merely variants of capitalism]
Before going into what this revolution would involve and responding
to some typical objections, it should be stressed that it has nothing to
do with the repugnant stereotypes that are usually evoked by the word (terrorism,
revenge, political coups, manipulative leaders preaching self-sacrifice,
zombie followers chanting politically correct slogans). In particular,
it should not be confused with the two principal failures of modern social
change, Stalinist “communism” and reformist “socialism.”
After decades in power, first in Russia and later in many other countries,
it has become obvious that Stalinism is the total opposite of a liberated
society. The origin of this grotesque phenomenon is less obvious. Trotskyists
and others have tried to distinguish Stalinism from the earlier Bolshevism
of Lenin and Trotsky. There are differences, but they are more of
degree than of kind. Lenin’s The State and Revolution, for example,
presents a more coherent critique of the state than can be found in most
anarchist writings; the problem is that the radical aspects of Lenin’s
thought merely ended up camouflaging the Bolsheviks’ actual authoritarian
practice. Placing itself above the masses it claimed to represent, and
with a corresponding internal hierarchy between party militants and their
leaders, the Bolshevik Party was already well on its way toward creating
the conditions for the development of Stalinism while Lenin and Trotsky
were still firmly in control.(2)
But we have to be clear about what failed if we are ever going to do
any better. If socialism means people’s full participation in the social
decisions that affect their own lives, it has existed neither in the Stalinist
regimes of the East nor in the welfare states of the West. The recent collapse
of Stalinism is neither a vindication of capitalism nor proof of the failure
of “Marxist communism.” Anyone who has ever bothered to read Marx (most
of his glib critics obviously have not) is aware that Leninism represents
a severe distortion of Marx’s thought and that Stalinism is a total parody
of it. Nor does government ownership have anything to do with communism
in its authentic sense of common, communal ownership; it is merely a different
type of capitalism in which state-bureaucratic ownership replaces (or merges
with) private-corporate ownership.
The long spectacle of opposition between these two varieties of capitalism
hid their mutual reinforcement. Serious conflicts were confined to proxy
battles in the Third World (Vietnam, Angola, Afghanistan, etc.). Neither
side ever made any real attempt to overthrow the enemy in its own heartland.
(The French Communist Party sabotaged the May 1968 revolt; the Western
powers, which intervened massively in countries where they were not wanted,
refused to send so much as the few antitank weapons desperately needed
by the 1956 Hungarian insurgents.) Guy Debord noted in 1967 that Stalinist
state-capitalism had already revealed itself as merely a “poor cousin”
of classical Western capitalism, and that its decline was beginning to
deprive Western rulers of the pseudo-opposition that reinforced them by
seeming to represent the sole alternative to their system. “The bourgeoisie
is in the process of losing the adversary that objectively supported it
by providing an illusory unification of all opposition to the existing
order” (The Society of the Spectacle, §§110-111).
Although Western leaders pretended to welcome the recent Stalinist collapse
as a natural victory for their own system, none of them had seen it coming
and they now obviously have no idea what to do about all the problems it
poses except to cash in on the situation before it totally falls apart.
The monopolistic multinational corporations that proclaim “free enterprise”
as a panacea are quite aware that free-market capitalism would long ago
have exploded from its own contradictions had it not been saved despite
itself by a few New Deal-style pseudosocialist reforms.
Those reforms (public services, social insurance, the eight-hour day,
etc.) may have ameliorated some of the more glaring defects of the system,
but in no way have they led beyond it. In recent years they have not even
kept up with its accelerating crises. The most significant improvements
were in any case won only by long and often violent popular struggles that
eventually forced the hands of the bureaucrats: the leftist parties and
labor unions that pretended to lead those struggles have functioned primarily
as safety valves, coopting radical tendencies and greasing the wheels of
the social machine.
As the situationists have shown, the bureaucratization of radical movements,
which has degraded people into followers constantly “betrayed” by their
leaders, is linked to the increasing spectacularization of modern
capitalist society, which has degraded people into spectators of a world
over which they have no control — a development that has become increasingly
glaring, though it is usually only superficially understood.
Taken together, all these considerations point to the conclusion that
a liberated society can be created only by the active participation of
the people as a whole, not by hierarchical organizations supposedly acting
on their behalf. The point is not to choose more honest or “responsive”
leaders, but to avoid granting independent power to any leaders whatsoever.
Individuals or groups may initiate radical actions, but a substantial and
rapidly expanding portion of the population must take part if a movement
is to lead to a new society and not simply to a coup installing new rulers.
* * *
[Representative
democracy versus delegate democracy]
I won’t repeat all the classic socialist and anarchist critiques of
capitalism and the state; they are already widely known, or at least widely
accessible. But in order to cut through some of the confusions of traditional
political rhetoric, it may be helpful to summarize the basic types of social
organization. For the sake of clarity, I will start out by examining the
“political” and “economic” aspects separately, though they are obviously
interlinked. It is as futile to try to equalize people’s economic conditions
through a state bureaucracy as it is to try to democratize society while
the power of money enables the wealthy few to control the institutions
that determine people’s awareness of social realities. Since the system
functions as a whole it can be fundamentally changed only as a whole.
To begin with the political aspect, roughly speaking we can distinguish
five degrees of “government”:
(1) Unrestricted freedom
(2) Direct democracy
____ a) consensus
____ b) majority rule
(3) Delegate democracy
(4) Representative democracy
(5) Overt minority dictatorship
The present society oscillates between (4) and (5), i.e. between overt
minority rule and covert minority rule camouflaged by a façade of
token democracy. A liberated society would eliminate (4) and (5) and would
progressively reduce the need for (2) and (3).
I’ll discuss the two types of (2) later on. But the crucial distinction
is between (3) and (4).
In representative democracy people abdicate their power to elected officials.
The candidates’ stated policies are limited to a few vague generalities,
and once they are elected there is little control over their actual decisions
on hundreds of issues — apart from the feeble threat of changing one’s
vote, a few years later, to some equally uncontrollable rival politician.
Representatives are dependent on the wealthy for bribes and campaign contributions;
they are subordinate to the owners of the mass media, who decide which
issues get the publicity; and they are almost as ignorant and powerless
as the general public regarding many important matters that are determined
by unelected bureaucrats and independent secret agencies. Overt dictators
may sometimes be overthrown, but the real rulers in “democratic” regimes,
the tiny minority who own or control virtually everything, are never voted
in and never voted out. Most people don’t even know who they are.
In delegate democracy, delegates are elected for specific purposes with
very specific limitations. They may be strictly mandated (ordered to vote
in a certain way on a certain issue) or the mandate may be left open (delegates
being free to vote as they think best) with the people who have elected
them reserving the right to confirm or reject any decision thus taken.
Delegates are generally elected for very short periods and are subject
to recall at any time.
In the context of radical struggles, delegate assemblies have usually
been termed “councils.” The council form was invented by striking workers
during the 1905 Russian revolution (soviet is the Russian word for
council). When soviets reappeared in 1917, they were successively supported,
manipulated, dominated and coopted by the Bolsheviks, who soon succeeded
in transforming them into parodies of themselves: rubber stamps of the
“Soviet State” (the last surviving independent soviet, that of the Kronstadt
sailors, was crushed in 1921). Councils have nevertheless continued to
reappear spontaneously at the most radical moments in subsequent history,
in Germany, Italy, Spain, Hungary and elsewhere, because they represent
the obvious solution to the need for a practical form of nonhierarchical
popular self-organization. And they continue to be opposed by all hierarchical
organizations, because they threaten the rule of specialized elites by
pointing to the possibility of a society of generalized self-management:
not self-management of a few details of the present setup, but self-management
extended to all regions of the globe and all aspects of life.
But as noted above, the question of democratic forms cannot be separated
from their economic context.
* * *
[Irrationalities of
capitalism]
Economic organization can be looked at from the angle of work:
(1) Totally voluntary
(2) Cooperative (collective self-management)
(3) Forced and exploitive
____ a) overt (slave labor)
____ b) disguised (wage labor)
And from the angle of distribution:
(1) True communism (totally free accessibility)
(2) True socialism (collective ownership and regulation)
(3) Capitalism (private and/or state ownership)
Though it’s possible for goods or services produced by wage labor to be
given away, or for those produced by volunteer or cooperative labor to
be turned into commodities for sale, for the most part these levels of
work and distribution tend to correspond with each other. The present society
is predominately (3): the forced production and consumption of commodities.
A liberated society would eliminate (3) and as far as possible reduce (2)
in favor of (1).
Capitalism is based on commodity production (production of goods for
profit) and wage labor (labor power itself bought and sold as a commodity).
As Marx pointed out, there is less difference between the slave and the
“free” worker than appears. Slaves, though they seem to be paid nothing,
are provided with the means of their survival and reproduction, for which
workers (who become temporary slaves during their hours of labor) are compelled
to pay most of their wages. The fact that some jobs are less unpleasant
than others, and that individual workers have the nominal right to switch
jobs, start their own business, buy stocks or win a lottery, disguises
the fact that the vast majority of people are collectively enslaved.
How did we get in this absurd position? If we go back far enough, we
find that at some point people were forcibly dispossessed: driven off the
land and otherwise deprived of the means for producing the goods necessary
for life. (The famous chapters on “primitive accumulation” in Capital
vividly describe this process in England.) As long as people accept this
dispossession as legitimate, they are forced into unequal bargains with
the “owners” (those who have robbed them, or who have subsequently obtained
titles of “ownership” from the original robbers) in which they exchange
their labor for a fraction of what it actually produces, the surplus being
retained by the owners. This surplus (capital) can then be reinvested in
order to generate continually greater surpluses in the same way.
As for distribution, a public water fountain is a simple example of
true communism (unlimited accessibility). A public library is an example
of true socialism (free but regulated accessibility).
In a rational society, accessibility would depend on abundance. During
a drought, water might have to be rationed. Conversely, once libraries
are put entirely online they could become totally communistic: anyone could
have free instant access to any number of texts with no more need to bother
with checking out and returning, security against theft, etc.
But this rational relation is impeded by the persistence of separate
economic interests. To take the latter example, it will soon be technically
possible to create a global “library” in which every book ever written,
every film ever made and every musical performance ever recorded could
be put online, potentially enabling anyone to freely tap in and obtain
a copy (no more need for stores, sales, advertising, packaging, shipping,
etc.). But since this would also eliminate the profits from present-day
publishing, recording and film businesses, far more energy is spent concocting
complicated methods to prevent or charge for copying (while others devote
corresponding energy devising ways to get around such methods) than on
developing a technology that could potentially benefit everyone.
One of Marx’s merits was to have cut through the hollowness of political
discourses based on abstract philosophical or ethical principles (“human
nature” is such and such, all people have a “natural right” to this or
that) by showing how social possibilities and social awareness are to a
great degree limited and shaped by material conditions. Freedom in the
abstract means little if almost everybody has to work all the time simply
to assure their survival. It’s unrealistic to expect people to be generous
and cooperative when there is barely enough to go around (leaving aside
the drastically different conditions under which “primitive communism”
flourished). But a sufficiently large surplus opens up wider possibilities.
The hope of Marx and other revolutionaries of his time was based on the
fact that the technological potentials developed by the Industrial Revolution
had finally provided an adequate material basis for a classless society.
It was no longer a matter of declaring that things “should” be different,
but of pointing out that they could be different; that class domination
was not only unjust, it was now unnecessary.
Was it ever really necessary? Was Marx right in seeing the development
of capitalism and the state as inevitable stages, or might a liberated
society have been possible without this painful detour? Fortunately, we
no longer have to worry about this question. Whatever possibilities there
may or may not have been in the past, present material conditions are more
than sufficient to sustain a global classless society.
The most serious drawback of capitalism is not its quantitative unfairness
— the mere fact that wealth is unequally distributed, that workers are
not paid the full “value” of their labor. The problem is that this margin
of exploitation (even if relatively small) makes possible the private accumulation
of capital, which eventually reorients everything to its own ends, dominating
and warping all aspects of life.
The more alienation the system produces, the more social energy must
be diverted just to keep it going — more advertising to sell superfluous
commodities, more ideologies to keep people bamboozled, more spectacles
to keep them pacified, more police and more prisons to repress crime and
rebellion, more arms to compete with rival states — all of which produces
more frustrations and antagonisms, which must be repressed by more spectacles,
more prisons, etc. As this vicious circle continues, real human needs are
fulfilled only incidentally, if at all, while virtually all labor is channeled
into absurd, redundant or destructive projects that serve no purpose except
to maintain the system.
If this system were abolished and modern technological potentials were
appropriately transformed and redirected, the labor necessary to meet real
human needs would be reduced to such a trivial level that it could easily
be taken care of voluntarily and cooperatively, without requiring economic
incentives or state enforcement.
It’s not too hard to grasp the idea of superseding overt hierarchical
power. Self-management can be seen as the fulfillment of the freedom and
democracy that are the official values of Western societies. Despite people’s
submissive conditioning, everyone has had moments when they rejected domination
and began speaking or acting for themselves.
It’s much harder to grasp the idea of superseding the economic system.
The domination of capital is more subtle and self-regulating. Questions
of work, production, goods, services, exchange and coordination in the
modern world seem so complicated that most people take for granted the
necessity of money as a universal mediation, finding it difficult to imagine
any change beyond apportioning money in some more equitable way.
For this reason I will postpone more extensive discussion of the economic
aspects till later in this text, when it will be possible to go into more
detail.
* * *
[Some exemplary modern
revolts]
Is such a revolution likely? The odds are probably against it. The main
problem is that there is not much time. In previous eras it was possible
to imagine that, despite all humanity’s follies and disasters, we would
somehow muddle through and perhaps eventually learn from past mistakes.
But now that social policies and technological developments have irrevocable
global ecological ramifications, blundering trial and error is not enough.
We have only a few decades to turn things around. And as time passes, the
task becomes more difficult: the fact that basic social problems are scarcely
even faced, much less resolved, encourages increasingly desperate and delirious
tendencies toward war, fascism, ethnic antagonism, religious fanaticism
and other forms of mass irrationality, deflecting those who might potentially
work toward a new society into merely defensive and ultimately futile holding
actions.
But most revolutions have been preceded by periods when everyone scoffed
at the idea that things could ever change. Despite the many discouraging
trends in the world, there are also some encouraging signs, not least of
which is the widespread disillusionment with previous false alternatives.
Many popular revolts in this century have already moved spontaneously in
the right direction. I am not referring to the “successful” revolutions,
which are without exception frauds, but to less known, more radical efforts.
Some of the most notable examples are Russia 1905, Germany 1918-19, Italy
1920, Asturias 1934, Spain 1936-37, Hungary 1956, France 1968, Czechoslovakia
1968, Portugal 1974-75 and Poland 1980-81; many other movements, from the
Mexican revolution of 1910 to the recent anti-apartheid struggle in South
Africa, have also contained exemplary moments of popular experimentation
before they were brought under bureaucratic control.
No one is in any position to dismiss the prospect of revolution who
has not carefully examined these movements. To ignore them because of their
“failure” is missing the point.(3) Modern
revolution is all or nothing: individual revolts are bound to fail until
an international chain reaction is triggered that spreads faster than repression
can close in. It’s hardly surprising that these revolts did not go farther;
what is inspiring is that they went as far as they did. A new revolutionary
movement will undoubtedly take new and unpredictable forms; but these earlier
efforts remain full of examples of what can be done, as well as of what
must be avoided.
* * *
[Some common objections]
It’s often said that a stateless society might work if everyone were
angels, but due to the perversity of human nature some hierarchy is necessary
to keep people in line. It would be truer to say that if everyone were
angels the present system might work tolerably well (bureaucrats
would function honestly, capitalists would refrain from socially harmful
ventures even if they were profitable). It is precisely because people
are not angels that it’s necessary to eliminate the setup that enables
some of them to become very efficient devils. Lock a hundred people in
a small room with only one air hole and they will claw each other to death
to get to it. Let them out and they may manifest a rather different nature.
As one of the May 1968 graffiti put it, “Man is neither Rousseau’s noble
savage nor the Church’s depraved sinner. He is violent when oppressed,
gentle when free.”
Others contend that, whatever the ultimate causes may be, people are
now so screwed up that they need to be psychologically or spiritually healed
before they can even conceive of creating a liberated society. In his later
years Wilhelm Reich came to feel that an “emotional plague” was so firmly
embedded in the population that it would take generations of healthily
raised children before people would become capable of a libertarian social
transformation; and that meanwhile one should avoid confronting the system
head-on since this would stir up a hornet’s nest of ignorant popular reaction.
Irrational popular tendencies do sometimes call for discretion. But
powerful though they may be, they are not irresistible forces. They contain
their own contradictions. Clinging to some absolute authority is not necessarily
a sign of faith in authority; it may be a desperate attempt to overcome
one’s increasing doubts (the convulsive tightening of a slipping grip).
People who join gangs or reactionary groups, or who get caught up in religious
cults or patriotic hysteria, are also seeking a sense of liberation, connection,
purpose, participation, empowerment. As Reich himself showed, fascism gives
a particularly vigorous and dramatic expression to these basic aspirations,
which is why it often has a deeper appeal than the vacillations, compromises
and hypocrisies of liberalism and leftism.
In the long run the only way to defeat reaction is to present more forthright
expressions of these aspirations, and more authentic opportunities to fulfill
them. When basic issues are forced into the open, irrationalities that
flourished under the cover of psychological repression tend to be weakened,
like disease germs exposed to sunlight and fresh air. In any case, even
if we don’t prevail, there is at least some satisfaction in fighting for
what we really believe, rather than being defeated in a posture of hesitancy
and hypocrisy.
There are limits on how far one can liberate oneself (or raise liberated
children) within a sick society. But if Reich was right to note that psychologically
repressed people are less capable of envisioning social liberation, he
failed to realize how much the process of social revolt can be psychologically
liberating. (French psychiatrists are said to have complained about a significant
drop in the number of their customers in the aftermath of May 1968!)
The notion of total democracy raises the specter of a “tyranny of the
majority.” Majorities can be ignorant and bigoted, there’s no getting
around it. The only real solution is to confront and attempt to overcome
that ignorance and bigotry. Keeping the masses in the dark (relying on
liberal judges to protect civil liberties or liberal legislators to sneak
through progressive reforms) only leads to popular backlashes when sensitive
issues eventually do come to the surface.
Examined more closely, however, most instances of majority oppression
of minorities turn out to be due not to majority rule, but to disguised
minority rule in which the ruling elite plays on whatever racial or cultural
antagonisms there may be in order to turn the exploited masses’ frustrations
against each other. When people get real power over their own lives they
will have more interesting things to do than to persecute minorities.
So many potential abuses or disasters are evoked at any suggestion of
a nonhierarchical society that it would be impossible to answer them all.
People who resignedly accept a system that condemns millions of their fellow
human beings to death every year in wars and famines, and millions of others
to prison and torture, suddenly let their imagination and their indignation
run wild at the thought that in a self-managed society there might be some
abuses, some violence or coercion or injustice, or even merely some temporary
inconvenience. They forget that it is not up to a new social system to
solve all our problems; it merely has to deal with them better than the
present
system does — not a very big order.
If history followed the complacent opinions of official commentators,
there would never have been any revolutions. In any given situation there
are always plenty of ideologists ready to declare that no radical change
is possible. If the economy is functioning well, they will claim that revolution
depends on economic crises; if there is an economic crisis, others will
just as confidently declare that revolution is impossible because people
are too busy worrying about making ends meet. The former types, surprised
by the May 1968 revolt, tried to retrospectively uncover the invisible
crisis that their ideology insists must have been there. The latter contend
that the situationist perspective has been refuted by the worsened economic
conditions since that time.
Actually, the situationists simply noted that the widespread achievement
of capitalist abundance had demonstrated that guaranteed survival was no
substitute for real life. The periodic ups and downs of the economy have
no bearing on that conclusion. The fact that a few people at the top have
recently managed to siphon off a yet larger portion of the social wealth,
driving increasing numbers of people into the streets and terrorizing the
rest of the population lest they succumb to the same fate, makes the feasibility
of a postscarcity society less evident; but the material prerequisites
are still present.
The economic crises held up as evidence that we need to “lower our expectations”
are actually caused by over-production and lack of work.
The ultimate absurdity of the present system is that unemployment is seen
as a problem, with potentially labor-saving technologies being directed
toward creating new jobs to replace the old ones they render unnecessary.
The problem is not that so many people don’t have jobs, but that so many
people still do. We need to raise our expectations, not lower them.(4)
[Increasing dominance
of the spectacle]
Far more serious than this spectacle of our supposed powerlessness in
the face of the economy is the greatly increased power of the spectacle
itself, which in recent years has developed to the point of repressing
virtually any awareness of pre-spectacle history or anti-spectacle possibilities.
Debord’s Comments on the Society of the Spectacle (1988) goes into
this new development in detail:
In all that has happened over the last twenty years, the most
important change lies in the very continuity of the spectacle. What is
significant is not the refinements of the spectacle’s media instrumentation,
which had already attained a highly advanced stage of development; it is
quite simply that spectacular domination has succeeded in raising an entire
generation molded to its laws. . . . Spectacular domination’s first priority
was to eradicate historical knowledge in general, beginning with virtually
all information and rational commentary on the most recent past. . . .
The spectacle makes sure that people are unaware of what is happening,
or at least that they quickly forget whatever they may have become aware
of. The more important something is, the more it is hidden. Nothing in
the last twenty years has been so thoroughly shrouded with official lies
as May 1968. . . . The flow of images carries everything before it, and
it is always someone else who controls this simplified digest of the perceptible
world, who decides where the flow will lead, who programs the rhythm of
what is shown into an endless series of arbitrary surprises that leaves
no time for reflection . . . . isolating whatever is presented from its
context, its past, its intentions and its consequences. . . . It is thus
hardly surprising that children are now starting their education with an
enthusiastic introduction to the Absolute Knowledge of computer language
while becoming increasingly incapable of reading. Because reading requires
making judgments at every line; and since conversation is almost dead (as
will soon be most of those who knew how to converse) reading is the only
remaining gateway to the vast realms of pre-spectacle human experience.
In the present text I have tried to recapitulate some basic points that
have been buried under this intensive spectacular repression. If these
matters seem banal to some or obscure to others, they may at least serve
to recall what once was possible, in those primitive times a few decades
ago when people had the quaint, old-fashioned notion that they could understand
and affect their own history.
While there is no question that things have changed considerably since
the sixties (mostly for the worse), our situation may not be quite as hopeless
as it seems to those who swallow whatever the spectacle feeds them. Sometimes
it only takes a little jolt to break through the stupor.
Even if we have no guarantee of ultimate victory, such breakthroughs
are already a pleasure. Is there any greater game around?
[FOOTNOTES]
1. Ken Knabb (ed. and trans.), Situationist International
Anthology (Bureau of Public Secrets, 1981), p. 81 [Geopolitics
of Hibernation]. Here and elsewhere I have sometimes slightly modified
my original SI Anthology translations.
2. See Maurice Brinton’s The Bolsheviks and Workers’
Control: 1917-1921, Voline’s The Unknown Revolution, Ida Mett’s
The
Kronstadt Uprising, Paul Avrich’s Kronstadt 1921, Peter Arshinov’s
History
of the Makhnovist Movement, and Guy Debord’s
The
Society of the Spectacle §§98-113. (These and most of
the other texts cited in this book can be obtained through the distributors
listed at the end of the Situationist
Bibliography.)
3. “The journalists’ and governments’ superficial
references to the ‘success’ or ‘failure’ of a revolution mean nothing for
the simple reason that since the bourgeois revolutions no revolution
has yet succeeded: not one has abolished classes. Proletarian revolution
has not yet been victorious anywhere, but the practical process through
which its project manifests itself has already created at least ten revolutionary
moments of historic importance that can appropriately be termed revolutions.
In none of these moments was the total content of proletarian revolution
fully developed, but in each case there was a fundamental interruption
of the ruling socioeconomic order and the appearance of new forms and conceptions
of real life — variegated phenomena that can be understood and evaluated
only in their overall significance, including their potential future significance.
. . . The revolution of 1905 did not bring down the Czarist regime, it
only obtained a few temporary concessions from it. The Spanish revolution
of 1936 did not formally suppress the existing political power: it arose,
in fact, out of a proletarian uprising initiated in order to defend the
Republic against Franco. And the Hungarian revolution of 1956 did not abolish
Nagy’s liberal-bureaucratic government. Among other regrettable limitations,
the Hungarian movement had many aspects of a national uprising against
foreign domination; and this national-resistance aspect also played a certain,
though less important, role in the origin of the Paris Commune. The Commune
supplanted Thiers’s power only within the limits of Paris. And the St.
Petersburg Soviet of 1905 never even took control of the capital. All the
crises mentioned here as examples, though deficient in their practical
achievements and even in their perspectives, nevertheless produced enough
radical innovations and put their societies severely enough in check to
be legitimately termed revolutions.” (SI Anthology, pp. 235-236
[Beginning of an Era].)
4. “We’re not interested in hearing about the
exploiters’ economic problems. If the capitalist economy is not capable
of fulfilling workers’ demands, that is simply one more reason to struggle
for a new society, one in which we ourselves have the decisionmaking power
over the whole economy and all social life.” (Portuguese airline workers,
27 October 1974.)
End of Chapter 1 of “The Joy of Revolution,” from Public Secrets:
Collected Skirmishes of Ken Knabb (1997).
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Chapter 2: Foreplay
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Personal breakthroughs. Critical interventions Theory versus ideology Avoiding
false choices and elucidating real ones. The insurrectionary style. Radical
film. Oppressionism versus playfulness. The Strasbourg scandal. The poverty
of electoral politics. Reforms and alternative institutions. Political
correctness, or equal opportunity alienation. Drawbacks of moralism and
simplistic extremism. Advantages of boldness. Advantages and limits of
nonviolence.
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Chapter 3: Climaxes
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Causes of social breakthroughs. Postwar upheavals. Effervescence of radical
situations. Popular self-organization. The FSM. The situationists in May
1968. Workerism is obsolete, but workers’ position remains pivotal. Wildcats
and sitdowns. Consumer strikes. What could have happened in May 1968. Methods
of confusion and cooption. Terrorism reinforces the state. The ultimate
showdown. Internationalism.
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Chapter 4: Rebirth
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Utopians fail to envision postrevolutionary diversity. Decentralization
and coordination. Safeguards against abuses. Consensus, majority rule and
unavoidable hierarchies. Eliminating the roots of war and crime. Abolishing
money. Absurdity of most present-day labor. Transforming work into play.
Technophobic objections. Ecological issues. The blossoming of free communities.
More interesting problems.
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