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There is a certain paradoxicality at the
heart of Marx’s whole enterprise. Sometimes
he understands freedom not as a value but
as a fact, not as something men ought to
pursue but as something they cannot avoid
— a synthetic a priori truth about human
action, a liberty to which (in Sartre’s phrase)
man is condemned. At other times, however,
he regards freedom as an achievement: a difficult
feat that is possible only after such “labour
of the negative”(Hegel) — a labour of liberating
oneself from the illusions of the particular
“illusory community” that surrounds one,
of getting out (as Wittgenstein put it) of
the fly-bottle one finds oneself inside.
When he describes capitalist society, Marx
is constantly making the point that everything
in it is under “illusions of the epoch,”
is dominated by “fetishism,” and hence is
unfree — except, of course, for the “fully
conscious” revolutionary group. “As in religion,
man is governed by the products of his own
brain, so in capitalist production, he is
governed by the products of his own hand”
(Capital, 681). The freedom Marx has given
with one hand he seems to be taking back
with the other: everywhere he looks, everyone
seems to be in chains. Yet if men are “free,”
how is it possible for them to have got into
such a state of “unfreedom” in the first
place? Or, alternately, if men are encased
in a fly-bottle, how will it be possible
for them to see things in any way but through
a glass, darkly? If their whole outlook on
life is “fetishistic,” how will it be possible
even to recognise that they are enslaved,
let alone make the effort to set themselves
free? The paradox here is the familiar paradox
of self-deception. Who, exactly, is supposed
to be doing the “deceiving”? if the subject
himself, in what sense is it meaningful to
say that he is actually “deceived”? If it
is meaningful, how, once having succeeded,
can he undo the job, and “undeceive” himself?
These are perennial problems for a therapist,
not to mention a philosopher; they are also
central to Marx’s analysis of capitalism
as an “infantile disease,” he might have
said, of man, who with its passing was “coming
into his own.”
We can find many passages in which the tendency
of the capitalist system to enslave everyone
is mentioned. in The Holy Family, for instance:
The slavery of civil society [bürgerlichen
Gesellschaft] is ostensibly the greatest
freedom, because it appears to leave the
individual perfectly independent. The individual
considers as his own freedom the movement
(no longer curbed or fettered by a common
tie or by man) of his alienated life-elements,
like property, industry, religion; in reality,
this movement is the perfection of his slavery.
...
Again, in Capital, the achievement of individual
freedom in modern times is seen, dialectically,
to have generated its antithesis:
... the same division of labour that turns
[men] into independent producers, also frees
the social process of production, and the
relation of individual producers to each
other within that process, from all dependence
on the will of those producers; and so ...
the seeming independence of individuals gives
rise to a system of universal and mutual
dependence through or by means of the products.
(Capital)
The exchange of commodities “develops a whole
network of social relations spontaneous in
their growth and entirely beyond the control
of the actors” (Capital). Freedom is here
only an “appearance” (Erscheinung), and appearances,
notoriously, deceive.
A Whig interpreter of history, however, in
the Victorian England in which Capital appeared,
might take Marx up on this. “Are Englishmen
in chains?” he might ask. “Suffrage and education,
after all, are virtually universal; religious
tests have been abolished; the feudal ties
that bound men to the land or town, class
or trade, have vanished long ago; protection
against arbitrary arrest, detention or hindrance
is enshrined in the English Constitution;
it is hard to see how the institutions of
any country at any time could be less obstructive,
or more conducive, to human freedom. True,
the lives of the majority may not be economically
secure; true again, the distribution of wealth
may not be just — we don’t pretend that our
social order is perfect (just yet), But in
what sense is it meaningful to say that it
isn’t free?”
Now according to certain commentators, this
sinks Marx. Men are free, he is supposed
to have thought, only when they are “rational”;
communism alone, he is supposed to have thought,
is a rational form of life; hence, it is
deduced neatly, all actions and men under
non-communistic forms of life are unfree:
Q. E. D. (This is a crude caricature of the
reading which Isaiah Berlin cleverly and
subtly elaborates in his Karl Marx.) If Marx
were indeed saying this, he would be guilty
of what we today should call a “persuasive
definition”: he would be stealing the prestige
and good will that people attach to the word
freedom, which has a fairly clear and measurable
sense in daily life, and annexing it to a
notion of “rationality” that is far more
shadowy, ambiguous and hard to cash we might
say, appropriating surplus value. Having
once discovered his intentions, we would
realise that in alleging an absence of “freedom”
in bourgeois society Marx was not telling
us anything new about it, but merely trying
to inflame us against it in a devious way.
In fact, however, Marx uses the word freedom
in a way that is both more conventional and
more illuminating. In a highly compressed
passage on the fetishism of commodities,
Marx suggests what a non-fetishistic society
would be like:
The life-process of society, which is based
on the process of production, ... does not
strip off its mystical veil until it is treated
as production by freely associated men, and
is consciously regulated by them in accordance
with a settled plan. (Capital, 92; emphases
are mine)
To act freely here is to “consciously regulate”
one’s life “in accordance with a settled
plan.” Marx does not claim that the plan
must have any particular content — that it
must be communistic — for the planner to
be free. The concept of liberty he presupposes
is basically similar to the 1I negative”
one used in ordinary language: an absence
of restraint. He insists, however, that being
free necessarily entails the consciousness
that one is free. We can cash this behaviourally
as a “disposition” to assess possibilities,
investigate alternatives, weigh considerations,
choose what one will do. For an “average
individual,” someone whose thought is “fetishistic,”
however, no such “consciousness” exists,
no such disposition will be found. Now the
hypothetical Whig whom I introduced (he could
be any liberal democrat of the nineteenth
century, perhaps of the twentieth as well)
has described all sorts of possibilities
for life that supposedly exist in the England
of his day, and brought these forward as
evidence of an almost total freedom. Yet
if Marx could show that a significant portion
of people, perhaps even a majority, are simply
not aware of such prospects for choice, then
the paradox he has advanced that men who
are born free, and whose freedom has been
so stridently proclaimed since 1789, are
as firmly in chains as ever, would acquire
striking plausibility and power.
There is one especially striking observation
Marx makes, which runs like a red thread
through Capital, about the radical difference
between capitalists and all previous accumulators
of wealth. The ordinary “simple circulation
of commodities,” he writes, the act of “selling
in order to buy,” is “a means of carrying
out a purpose unconnected with circulation,
namely the appropriation of use-values, the
satisfaction of wants. The circulation of
money as capital, on the contrary, is an
end in itself, (Capital, 169). This endless
pursuit is the very touchstone of capitalist
activity:
It is only insofar as the appropriation of
ever more and more wealth in the abstract
becomes the sole motive of [a man’s] operations,
that he functions as a capitalist, that is,
as capital personified and endowed with consciousness
and a will. Use-values must never be looked
on as the real aim of the capitalist; neither
must profit on any single transaction. The
restless, never-ending pursuit of profit-making
alone is what he aims at. (Capital, 170)
Similar formulations abound. “Use-values
are produced by capitalists only because,
and insofar as, they are ... depositaries
of exchange-values” (207). “As capitalist,”
a man comes to have “one single life-impulse,
the tendency to create value and surplus-value,
to make ... the means of production absorb
the greatest possible amount of surplus-value”
(257). Marx compares the capital to “a conqueror
who sees in every country annexed only a
new boundary,” and the activity of accumulation
itself to the labour of Sisyphus (150). In
his monomania to accumulate, the capitalist
is like “an automaton ... endowed with intelligence
and will, animated by the longing to reduce
to a minimum the resistance offered by that
repellent yet elastic natural barrier, man.”
The social system he runs is an industrial
perpetuum mobile, which would go on producing
forever, did it not meet with certain natural
obstructions in the weak bodies and the strong
minds of its attendants” (440). His course,
like that of the lawyer Tulkinghorn in Dickens’s
Bleak House — another spirit of the bourgeois
age — is “straight on — over everything,
neither to the right nor to the left, regardless
of all considerations, treading everything
under foot” along the single track of his
life.
These vivid metaphors bring out the single-minded,
relentless character of capitalist accumulation:
yet for all that, the activity is not necessarily
unfree. Its fanaticism might well be “moral
fanaticism,” freely chosen and carried out;
after all, the great “world-historical figures”
of the past have been fanatics themselves.
indeed, in a sense every morality is “fanatic,”
in that it rests on an arbitrary, ultimately
unjustifiable choice of something as an end
in itself. The sceptical questioner who always
asked “But why is it good? What is it good
for?” could never get an answer that would
satisfy him. There is thus no reason why
capitalist accumulation should be any less
suitable “as an end in itself” than anything
else.
But Marx sees evidence that would disqualify
capitalism from the status of a morality,
and hence free action. Whatever else free
action may mean, it certainly entails that
the actor must be aware of alternative possibilities;
and we should not consider an action legitimately
moral if the actor could not even conceive
what it might be like to be immoral, where
his act involved no element of choice. if
we examine the ordinary language o f the
capitalists, however, it is precisely this
element of choice we find lacking. For example,
when the Children’s Employment Commission
suggests that twelve hours during the daytime
are about long enough for children to spend
in a factory, one E. E Sanderson, a steel
manufacturer, indignantly protests: “But
then there would be the loss from so much
expensive machinery lying idle half the time.
...” What is most intriguing about the Sandersons
is their naivete. It isn’t as if they shrugged
off the suffering of children as something
morally unimportant; rather, this suffering
seems to be something they simply don’t notice.
Every minute idle is a minute “lost”; it
does not occur to them that other points
of view are possible, from which twelve hours’
rest per day for growing boys and girls might
be a “gain.” Marx explains this insensitivity
by explicating the peculiar game the capitalists
are playing:
Messrs. Sanderson have something to make
besides steel. Steel-making is simply a pretext
for surplus-value-making. The smelting-furnaces,
the rolling-mills, the buildings, machinery,
iron, coal, etc., have something more to
do than transform themselves into steel.
They are there to absorb surplus-labour,
and naturally absorb more in twenty-four
hours than in twelve. (289)
Given these aims, it is only natural that
when a capitalist looks at a worker he should
see only one thing:
“What is a working-day?” ... Capital replies:
the working-day includes the full twenty-four
hours, with the deduction for the few hours
of repose without which labour-power absolutely
refuses its services again. Hence it is evident
that the labourer is nothing else, his whole
life through, than labour power, that therefore
all his disposable time is ... labour-time,
to be devoted to the self-expansion of capital.
(291; emphases mine)
“The world,” says Wittgenstein, “is all that
is the case.” Labour power, capital, commodities,
surplus-value: these Tatsachen encase the
world of the bourgeoisie. But there is something
odd about this world: its “atomic facts”
serve as its basic values as well. All possible
descriptions have prescriptions built in;
words themselves define the “proper” attitude
to be adopted toward all the things they
describe — and thus save men the trouble
of morally making up their minds. But if,
as we said above, freedom is logically bound
up with choice; and if the capitalist outlook
on the world tends to evade choice; and if,
as Marx wrote in 1842, “Morality rests on
the autonomy, religion on the heteronomy
of the spirit” — then it is clear that it
is as a religion, and not as a morality,
that capitalist fanaticism must be understood.
This is precisely the sort of explanation
Marx is attempting in his discussion of the
“fetishism of commodities”:
... we must have recourse to the mist-enveloped
regions of the religious world. In that world
the productions of the human brain appear
as independent beings endowed with life,
and entering into relation both with one
another and with the human race. So it is
in the world of commodities with the products
of men’s hands ... (Capital, 83)
The function of fetishism, and of religion
in general, is to relieve the believer of
responsibility for his actions. It is not
he who is acting, it is the God (or daemon)
who is acting in and through him; he cannot
criticise, modify or change the world; he,
like the world itself, is merely the vehicle
of an alien Will. Similarly, the capitalist
denies that it is in his power even to try
to alter the ruinous processes of the market:
it operates according to “eternal laws” to
which he and all men are helplessly subjected.
The fiction of Natural Law — which plays
on all the ambiguities of both “nature” and
“law,” and through which descriptive and
normative discourse are fused — is immensely
powerful in keeping men riveted to their
roles. “The laws of commerce,” Marx quotes
Burke as saying, “are the Laws of Nature,
and therefore the laws of God.” A profitable
confusion indeed: “No wonder,” Marx comments
caustically, “that, true to the laws of God
and Nature, he always sold himself in the
best market” (834). But it is vital for the
stability of the system that the workers
too should be enthralled by this sort of
myth, lest they get inflamed by rebellious
discontent. “It’s not enough that conditions
of labour are concentrated in a mass, in
the shape of capital, while at the other
are grouped masses of men who have nothing
to sell but their labour-power. Nor is it
enough that they are compelled to sell it
voluntarily.” if the locomotive of capitalist
production is to advance at full steam, the
workers must be reconciled to consuming themselves
as its fuel: it must develop “a working-class
which, by education, tradition, habit, looks
upon the conditions of this mode of production
as self-evident laws of nature” (809). The
fetishism of commodities is a deterministic
myth, designed to conserve the existing order
by convincing the people in that they can
do no other. By picturing themselves as unfree,
men make themselves unfree: their prophecy
of powerlessness is self-fulfilling.
How can this paralysing picture be shattered,
this confusion dispelled? Sometimes Marx
places his hope in a sort of therapy-by-history.
He tries to show that the relationships which
the bourgeois “laws of the market” describe
are far from being eternal and necessary,
that in fact they are only recent innovations,
the outcome of specific historical events.
Now it is true that any system of definitions
can be stretched to cover all possible situations.
Still, it is empirically possible to point
out counter-examples which would necessitate
stretching the definitions so far that even
their adherents will see the absurdity and
give them up. In contrasting bourgeois with
ancient and feudal economic relationships,
this is what Marx is seeking to do. To sum
up:
One thing is clear — Nature does not produce
on the one hand owners of money or commodities,
and on the other hand men producing nothing
but their labour-power. This relationship
has no natural basis, neither is its social
basis one common to all historical periods.
It is clearly the result of a past historical
development, the product of many economic
revolutions, of the extinction of a whole
series of older forms of social production.
(188)
Relationships and values which seemed as
inexorable as space and time are shown by
historical analysis to be contingent, determinate:
their “sacred” character, as pillars of a
world-order, is profaned:
The categories of bourgeois economics ...
are forms of thought expressing ... the conditions
of a definite, historically determinate [bestimmten]
mode of production — the production of commodities.
The whole mystery of commodities, all the
magic and necromancy that surround the products
of labour as long as they take this form,
vanish as soon as we come to other modes
of production. (87)
In examining these different modes of production,
we discover the one thing that persists amidst
them all: “living labour,” human will and
energy, “the force that creates value”
(340). Thus,
the existence of things qua commodities,
and the value relation between the products
of things that stamps them as commodities,
have absolutely no connection with their
physical properties and the material relationships
arising therefrom. It is a specific social
relation, between men, which takes on for
them the fantastic form of a relation between
things ... (83; emphases mine)
Standards of value have “absolutely no connection”
— no necessary connection, Marx means to
say — with the structure of the world, but
are “social relations between men” and can
be changed if men so desire. In pointing
this out, Marx is continuing a program he
outlined twenty years before, in his Critique
of Hegel’s Philosophy of Right:
The basis of irreligious criticism is this:
man makes religion, religion does not make
man. ... it is the task of history, once
the world beyond the truth has disappeared,
to establish the truth of this world. The
immediate task of philosophy, which is in
the service of history, is to unmask human
self-alienation in its profane form now that
it has been unmasked in its holy form. Thus
the criticism of heaven is transformed into
a criticism of earth, the criticism of religion
into a criticism of law and right, the criticism
of theology into a criticism of politics.
In Capital, Marx is pointing out simply that
man makes economics too, that modes of production
are by no means beyond the reach of human
direction and control. This may seem obvious
today. But if we consider how much thought
and action were frozen into rigid forms by
the many fatalistic myths of the nineteenth
century, we might wish that Marx had expended
even more labour-power in the attempt to
jar men loose — and indeed, that he had not
occasionally damaged the cause himself by
falling into just the sort of “fetishism”
he knew how to expose so well.
Conceptual analysis, Marx believed, might
play an important part in shattering false,
fetishistic pictures of human experience,
and restoring to men the freedom they seem
to want to escape. But while this sort of
strategy may be quite effective in shaking
an exploited class out of apathy and showing
it that it really can change the world, it
is not likely to go over very well with a
class on top. A ruling class is “comfortable
in its self-alienation”; it “finds in this
self-alienation its confirmation and its
good” (Holy Family); it has a very powerful
interest in remaining deceived by the myths
it propagates. Humankind cannot bear very
much reality, even in the best of times;
when the reality is embarrassing or grim,
it is all the more difficult to face. A social
group under stress is just as apt as is an
individual in therapy to construct mechanisms
of defence: to exhibit the most elaborate
strategies of “resistance” (Freud), to put
on the thickest, most impermeable “character
armour”- one can find (Reich), to avoid coming
to grips with disconcerting facts. The patient
may “not listen” when the most telling arguments
are advanced, or may repeatedly, conveniently
“forget,” or may just shout out abuse very
loud in an effort to drown out any upsetting
thoughts that happen to bob up. In such a
case, rational argument is unlikely to be
of much avail.
But Marx felt that he had a more formidable
ally in his campaign: time. The capitalist
social system itself, he saw, was evolving
toward a situation in which the drives and
illusions that sustained it in its youth
would somehow wither away, and the men in
it would once again come to regard themselves
as free — without, however, necessarily changing
its capitalist base. In Chapter 24 of the
first volume of Capital, Marx very suggestively
sketches out a typology of stages in the
life of capitalism: a “classical” phase,
whose features Capital vividly (and luridly)
describes, and a “modernised” phase, which
Marx felt was just beginning to appear on
the scene. These stages are embodied in two
ideal personality types archetypal men, “average
individuals,” who crystallise the changing
aspirations of the bourgeois “illusory community,”
represent everything its members want to
be. Without going into the very difficult
problem — in part psychological, in part
sociological, in part conceptual — of precisely
what leads men to stop playing one role,
and start playing another, to discard one
stereotyped “average individuality” in favour
of another, I want briefly to examine the
two types Marx develops and make clear the
contrasting forms of life which they are
intended to bring out.
The keynote of the first, “classical” phase
of capitalism is production and accumulation
(here Marx conflates the two) as an end in
itself.. “Accumulation for accumulation’s
sake, production for production’s sake! By
this formula, political economy expressed
the historic mission of the bourgeoisie.”
The bourgeoisie pursue it with a missionary
zeal: “Accumulate! Accumulate! That is Moses
and the prophets. ...” (Capital) Marx’s images
and allusions should always be taken seriously:
the typical capitalist in this phase is as
fervid and relentless in producing and accumulating
as the religious fanatic is in fulfilling
God’s Will on earth — and his mind is just
as much of a closed circle, just as impervious
to doubt and debate. Marx is suggesting here
a deeper connection between religion and
capitalism than even Weber conceived: the
religious and the capitalistic zealot share
the same “fetishistic” frame of mind, in
which the distinction between fact and value
is blurred, and in which they “can do no
other” because their system of descriptions
blinds them to even the possibility of choice.
And it is no accident that both these types
of fetishist should be ascetic. “So far as
[a man’s] actions are a mere function of
capital,” so long as he plays the capitalist
role, “his own private consumption is a robbery.
... a sin against his function” (Capital).
The fetishist feels that he exists only to
fulfil a function; the slightest deviation
from his role brings his very “being” into
question, evokes a guilt that shakes him
to his quick.
After a time, however, a new ideal type comes
to grip men’s minds. “But Original Sin is
at work everywhere. As capitalist production,
accumulation and wealth become developed,
the capitalist ceases to be the mere incarnation
of capital. He gets a fellow-feeling for
his own Adam.
Once again Marx’s use of Christian imagery
is crucial here. The classical capitalist
lives on only to fulfil a function, to incarnate
an ideal type; all his intentions follow
logically from a principle — “Accumulate!”
— and can be rigorously deduced in advance;
his role, we might say, plays him. This systematic,
Methodist perfection typifies a recurrent
Christian ideal: to be free of the burden
of spontaneity, of unpredictable impulse
and uncontrollable desire. To be all principle
and no passion: this is the status which
Christian theology reserves for angels (and
indeed for devils of the more dangerous sort),
but from which men, immersed in weakness
and imperfection, are inexorably debarred.
In this sense, it is illuminating to speak
of the post-classical capitalist as getting
infected with “Original Sin” and developing
“a feeling for his own Adam”: his spontaneous
impulses and the “irrational” play of his
desires come to matter to him, he no longer
sees his accumulating function as the only
thing in life. After his prodigies of production,
he begins to see the pursuit of pleasure,
the consumer’s life, as equally appealing.
This new outlook, plus a certain degree of
education (gained through “practical-critical
activity,” perhaps), “gradually enables him
to” smile at this rage for asceticism, as
a mere prejudice of the old-fashioned miser.
While the capitalist of the classical type
brands individual consumption as a sin against
his function, as a distraction from accumulating,
the modernised capitalist is capable of looking
on accumulation as a distraction from pleasure.
The anguish and anomie which the modern capitalist
must undergo are well expressed in Faust’s
lines, which Marx quotes: “Two souls are
living in my breast.”
Marx goes on to say, “At the historical dawn
of capitalist accumulation and every capitalist
upstart must go through this historical phase
avarice, and the desire to get rich, are
the ruling passions.” (Here Marx makes the
curious nineteenth-century assumption, found
in every great thinker from Hegel through
Freud, that each individual must re-enact
in his own life the entire previous life
of the species.) These passions never pass
away. But later on, “when a certain stage
of development has been reached, ... there
is at the same time developed in his breast
a Faustian conflict between the passion for
accumulation and the desire for enjoyment”
(650-51). In this “consumer” period the capitalist
becomes like other men: he regards himself
as a free agent, able to step back from his
role as producer and accumulator, even to
give it up entirely for the sake of pleasure
or happiness; for the first time he sees
his life as an open book, as something to
be shaped according to his choice. Fetishism,
then, infuses the youthful exuberance of
capitalism with a religious zeal — and a
religious naivete; disenchantment comes with
a fullness of years, and may slacken the
pace, but leaves a new freedom in its wake.
Men no longer feel compelled to fulfil the
infinite demands of an alien Will; they are
free at last to think of themselves.
As capitalists in an age of consumption become
free, one would think, and pursue their own
happiness instead of the aims of a relentless
alien Power, they must inevitably become
less fervid and blindly compulsive, more
mellow, pliable and humane — more “humane”
if only because more human, less like angels
or machines. Now of course, Marx felt, this
might well happen in some cases; but there
were very good reasons not to be too optimistic.
Fetishism, he saw, might prove so powerful
as to make a fetish of the very desire that
would dissolve it. The capitalist system
then would simply devour and assimilate this
nascent desire for happiness, and turn it
to its own advantage. Thus “a conventional
degree of prodigality, which is also an exhibition
of wealth, and consequently a source of credit,
becomes a business necessity ... Luxury becomes
part of capital’s overhead.” Marx is anticipating
Veblen’s analysis of “conspicuous consumption”;
but he sees that conspicuous consumption
need not retard accumulation, and indeed
might even drive it more furiously on. “Therefore,
the prodigality of the capitalist never possesses
the bona fide character of the open-handed
feudal lord’s prodigality, but, on the contrary,
has always lurking behind it the most sordid
avarice and the most anxious calculation
...” (65 1). Where pleasure becomes a business,
it must acquire up-to-date business methods
— that is, must duplicate all the compulsive
calculation, all the cutthroat competition,
all the frenzied self-alienation it was meant
to allay. David Riesman, William H. Whyte
and others have shown (without acknowledgment
— though probably without knowledge either)
how far Marx’s prediction has come true:
how much leisure today has become a business
affair, a realm of “antagonistic co-operation”
(Riesman) in which all the obsessions of
the bourgeois working-day rage on and get
re-enacted beneath a facade of idyllic calm.
Still, Marx said, despite all this, “the
desire for enjoyment” in its pure form, once
ignited, could never be stamped out; hence
men would never let their freedom entirely
go again, and the “Faustian conflict” would
persist and modify capitalism as long as
it lasted.
Marx does not say how he thinks the transformation
of capitalists into free men will affect
the class struggle. But based on the interpretations
I have made up to now, we might try an educated
guess. Men who are animated by “fetishism,”
be it religious, political or economic, will
charge blindly ahead like locomotives at
full speed on a single track; if they collide
and destroy each other they can’t help it,
there is nothing to be done. For free men,
however, there is at least a possibility
of averting disaster. To understand what
freedom means — that I am not compelled to
live according to any a priori rules, but
may prescribe my own rules and shape my life
as I choose — is to recognise that other
men are free agents themselves. To affirm
myself and recognise others as free, in this
sense, is to realise that orientations other
than my own, and no less “true,” are possible,
that many different moral points of view
may be sincerely held. This does not mean
hedging on my own ultimate values if I am
a capitalist, it does not entail that I should
stop accumulating; but it psychologically
may (not logically must) mean that when ultimate
values collide I will be willing to compromise,
to step slightly back, to give a bit of ground
without destroying the ground of my self-respect.
I have tried to throw into clear relief Marx’s
picture of the individual in history: in
particular, his conception of individual
freedom. Now no one saw more vividly than
Marx the powerful pull which “illusory communities”
of class interest could exert on men: stereotyping
their thought into clichés; freezing the
flow of their emotions into rigid, inflexible
human forms; transforming human action into
“acting out,” into stale replayings of prefabricated
roles; in short, reducing men to “average
individuals,” reproductions of ideal types
which embody all the traits and qualities
the “illusory community, needs. But such
a reduction, Marx felt, could never be complete:
no matter how hard men tried to dissolve
themselves in roles, there would always be
something left-over; human freedom might
constrict, but would never disappear. It
would always be open to every individual
to “assert himself as an individual” over
against the “illusory community” that constricts
and constrains him. Marx’s formula for free
action is “practical-critical activity”:
the activity of forming projects and plans
for one’s life, modifying them in the light
of experience, and striving to put them into
effect. In a society that would dissolve
all individual identity and press all men
into moulds — such as the bourgeois society
of Marx’s day — “practical-critical activity”
must take the form of “revolutionary activity,”
for only through conscious resistance to
such a society can individuality survive.
But it was vital for the community of revolutionaries
to avoid degenerating into just another “illusory
community” themselves; and Marx felt that
personal independence could be protected
only in a moral community, in which individuals
act not primarily for their own benefit,
or for that of the group as such, but for
the sake of all mankind. Only a “world-historical
class,” one whose interests and ideals are
fused, is capable of decisively enlarging
the scope of freedom for all. Marx saw the
proletariat as the only group in his society
that had any chance of becoming “world-historical,”
and he did all he could to guide it in that
direction. In his historical works, he made
it his own vocation to keep the revolutionary
vision sharp and clear: to stress the distinction
between ideal and real, to protect the proletariat
from deterministic myths, and to emphasise
that the revolutionary project was voluntary
and free. With the advent of communist society,
however, men will no longer have to revolt
in order to be free: they will be able to
work out their projects and designs, to develop
themselves, in the everyday round of life,
during their working-day, through the medium
of labour. In a society of abundance and
planned production, work can be made interesting
and related to individual inclinations, so
that the presently accepted dualism of “material”
necessity and “spiritual” freedom, of maintaining
one’s life and enjoying it, will wither away.
Such, then, is Marx’s vision of individual
freedom and his program for extending its
scope — one quite different from that which
is usually ascribed to him.
Adventures in Marxism, publ. Verso, 1999.
Just one of 13 articles reproduced.
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