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Bookchin traces the growth of the movement, explaining the various forms through which the anarchistic "Idea" developed. He briefly explores the influences of Proudhon, Kropotkin, and Bakunin, and contrasts them with the bleak realities of the Spanish political situation. The Spanish anarchists were not an unruly mob of bomb hurling terrorists, they were "freedom fighters" in the best sense of the term. Many exemplified self-discipline:
"The more dedicated men, once having decided to embrace the "Idea," abjured smoking and drinking, avoided brothels, and purged their talk of "foul" language. They believed these traits to be "vices"--demeaning to free people and fostered deliberately by ruling classes to corrupt and enslave the workers spiritually." (p. 48)
"Anarchist-influenced unions gave higher priority to leisure and free time for self-development than to high wages and economic gains." (p. 50)
"A very compelling case, in fact, can be made for the argument that Spanish Anarchism refracted the spirit of Enlightenment Europe through an Iberian prism, breaking up its components and then reorganizing them to suit Spain's distinctive needs." (p. 51)
Bookchin threads his way through the maze of Spanish politics, explaining the labyrinthine changes of government and policy. At each step, whether liberal or more totalitarian, the poor kept on getting poorer and the rich kept on getting richer. At one point, a system known as Turnismo existed. "Liberal"and repressive regimes would regularly share the power back and forth. When capitalists and land-owners needed to reduce the power of unions, a "liberal" regime took power, and while promising land reform and better working conditions, repressed the unions. At other times the more totalitarian regimes ran things, at times easing a few restrictions to keep the populace content. (One can perhaps imagine a bit of "turnismo" in the Bush/Clinton/Bush administrations!)
Anarchism flourished in both the countryside and in the cities. Many pueblos had traditionally run themselves by ideals approaching anarchism. These folks accepted the "Idea" readily. syndicalist unions also found themselves attracted to anarchism.
Anarchists formed their own schools. Francisco Ferrer founded the Escuela Moderna, with "a curriculum based on the natural sciences and moral rationalism, freed of all religious dogma and political bias ... [there was to be] no atmosphere of competition, coercion, or humiliation. The classes were, in Ferrer's words, to be guided by the "principle of solidarity and equality ... Instruction was to rely exclusively on the spontaneous desire of students to acquire knowledge and permit them to learn at their own pace. The purpose of the school was ... to create solid minds, capable of forming their own rational convictions on every subject." (p. 117) This system was so successful that within a decade over 50 such schools existed in Spain. Eventually, however, Ferrer paid for his "radical" educational ideas with his life; the government executed him on October 13, 1909.
Bookchin traces the encounters between socialists and anarchists. He takes the time to establish the difference between the two groups (To oversimplify: socialists depended on central organization, while anarchists looked to the local "grupos de affinidad" (affinity groups) for decision making). These differences became crucial during the Spanish Civil War, when communists fought anarchists in the streets, rather than working with them to defeat Franco and his Fascist minions.
The book does a great job of explaining the world into which the Spanish Civil War burst in 1936. Bookchin, however, does not enter that conflict. He leaves that to other writers, and perhaps with good reason. The Civil War led to the total repression of Spanish Anarchism. Having the book stop while the Anarchism was still in the ascendancy and not yet being systematically destroyed, first by its "revolutionary" allies, and then by Fascism.
In his concluding remarks, Bookchin makes a bold claim: "Although Spanish Anarchism was virtually unknown to radicals abroad during the "heroic years" of its development, it could be argued in all earnestness that it marked the most magnificent flowering and , in the curious dialectic of such processes, the definitive end of the century-long history of proletarian Socialism." (p. 278)
"The genius of Spanish Anarchism stems from its ability to fuse the concerns of traditional proletarian socialism with broader, more contemporary aspirations." (p. 286) Bookchin concludes by showing how "The larger problems of abolishing hierarchy and domination, of achieving a spiritually nourishing daily life, of replacing mindless toil by meaningful work, of attaining the free time for the self-management of a truly solidarizing human community ... [all this can be sensed in] sectors of society that were never accorded serious consideration as forces for revolution within the economic framework of proletarian socialism."
This book is required reading for anybody who wishes to understand the causes of the Spanish Civil War. It also presents some of the greatest Anarchist accomplishments in recent history. Bookchin related the history well and held my attention. I strongly recommend this book to anybody interested in Anarchism, in the Spanish Civil War, or who has ever read Garcia y Vega's REVOLT OF THE MASSES. It also makes understanding Orwell's HOMAGE TO CATALONIA much easier.
Five stars for scholarship, five stars for making history accessible, five stars for explaining difficult situations and concepts.
(If you'd like to dialogue about this book or review, please click on the "about me" link above and drop me an email. Thanks!)
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Read this book if you dare. But don't say I didn't warn you.
Resistance, to Bookchin, means first turning to history, to recover the 'legacy of freedom'of popular revolutionary movements since the English Revolution which sought radical forms of political and economic democracy and the free time for ordinary people to become active citizens (see the historical trilogy, The Third Revolution). A long-term revolutionary, Bookchin advocates the formation of Left study groups to "rebuild radical consciousness" and eventually act as agitators for direct, face-to-face democracy within their own communities.
The book also contains fascinating (and sometimes quite funny) reflections on the Left in the 1930s and '60s from someone who lived through both eras and a sympathetic reassessment of the contribution of Karl Marx to revolutionary thought.
The book's tone is rather too negative, overall. Now that the epithet 'anti-capitalist' is being claimed by more and more people, there is surely more hope for radical movements than Bookchin seems prepared to admit. Are things really so grim?
If you've been interested in possible means of alternative social organization, and get the feeling that there's something outside of the narrow definitions of the mainstream (where someone like James Carville could be labeled as a "radical leftist" with a straight face) this is an excellent place to start. If anything, this should be required reading for all young "radicals" who might get bored with Anarchism after age 20 or so. This also serves as an excellent introduction to the current debate between 'mystical' Anarchism and a more empirical, scientific approach to social organization theory - something that Bookchin tirelessly promotes and that (in my opinion) will be absolutely necessary to garner support for Anarchism as a popular movement.
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The essay on market economy vs. moral economy is the compilation's strongest. Generally, Bookchin's skillful rhetoric manages to vividly contrast the misanthropy of market economy with the humanism of moral economy, laying bare the ultimate cost of placing greed before need. However - and this is an important reservation - the author's framework of commercial transaction within moral economy fails to penetrate beyond the medieval emphasis on honest dealing. Replacing market gouging with honest dealing is thin gruel indeed after some four centuries of failure. The problem with Bookchin's analysis is not his enemies. It's the recourses he offers. The dehumanizing cash nexus of market economy is a problem indeed, but the author's retreat into moral admonition represents little more than wishful thinking. Reliance on honest, profitable dealings constitutes a step backward, not forward, and likely represents the absence of genuine alternatives to planned economy and the real possibilities of modern technology which Bookchin too often appears to equate with its corrosive capitalist offspring, viz. mass marketing.
Bookchin represents much that is both creative and restrictive among the contemporary social left.
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If you must read this book, please do yourself afavor and read some of Bookchins work also. ...
In recent years, Bookchin has increasingly reverted to his original Marxism, including its mystical metaphysics, dialectics. Part I of this book deals with the arbitrariness and obscurantism of the way he divines, by some occult faculty, the "directionality" of nature, and its inherent ethical content. It is pointed out that these intuitions are without emperical grounding and seem to be denied to everybody else (except, I should say, the Catholic theologian Teilhard de Chardin -- but Teilhard, like Hegel, could assign the purposefulness of the Universe to God, wheeras Bookchin is an atheist).
Part II addresses the most glaring contradictions in Bookchin's social philosophy. The founder of social ecology is at the same time a strident advocate of "municipal socialism" and high technology. Even aside from the absurdity of sovereign city-states in the 21st century, obviously the city has always had a more or less adverse impact on the environment, and this is still more obvious with respect to technology. It's amazing that someone who, as does Bookchin, exhibits hatred for nature not under human control -- for wilderness (which, inconsistently, he sometimes says does not exist) -- can refer to himself as any kind of an ecologist.
In Part III, several contributors explore the ways in which Bookchin has used and abused anthropology and history. Bookchin insists that in essence, the city tends toward widely-based direct democracy. In fact, every self-governing city in history -- including Bookchin's beloved Athens -- was an oligarchy, and change is invariably in the direction of smaller, tighter oligarchy. As for ethnography, Bookchin uses these materials both carelessly and tendentiously to bolster curious theses (such as gerontocracy as the origin of social stratification)the contributors reasonably consider to be not only unproven but irrelevant to social ecology.
The contributors combine politeness reflecting their former adherence to Bookchin with an implicit impatience to go forward with what they consider to be still viable in his social ecology. Certainly, after reading this book no one would have any reason to waste his time reading Bookchin himself, at least not the Bookchin of the last 20 years.
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Bookchin is an ex-Stalinist, ex-Trotskyist, ex-Marxist ecological radical who has never learned how to drop the Stalinist-style denunciations of those with whom he disagrees. In this case he's invented a whole nonsense category of evil "lifestyle" anarchists who are conspiring to ruin the radical movement by talking about living individuals and their desires for community and the end of social alienation. According to Bookchin, such talk denigrates the really important task of dedicating one's efforts to the greater glory of Bookchin's own Social Ecology Thought, or at least to that of the social democratic Left. For Bookchin individuals are bad and only the Social is good. Forget that for over a hundred years anarchists have been trying to harmonize individuality and community. Bookchin says they can't co-exist. And true to his Stalinist heritage, he chooses to privilege the Social absolutely over the potentially free individual.
This is a sad text. A once-rational and coherent mind given over to petty battles with ghosts of his own invention, or, at best, to ridiculous rantings condemning a disparate group of people who have little in common except that Bookchin doesn't like what they say.
With this book Bookchin has dug the grave of his own potential influence over future generations. Nobody with any sense will take him seriously from now on.
"Anarchists have formed neither a coherent program nor a revolutionary organization to provide a direction for the mass discontent that contemporary society is creating. Instead, this discontent is being abosrbed by political reactionaries and channeled into hostility toward ethnic minorities, immigrants, and the poor and marinal, such as single mothers, the homeless, the elderly, and even environmentalists, who are being depicted as the principal sources of contemporary social problems ... Thousands of self-styled anarchists have slowly surrendered the social core of anarchist ideas to the all-pervasive Yuppie and New Age personalism that marks this decadent, bourgeosified era." (p. 1)
He goes on to point out that:
"The various oppressions that [capitalism] inflicts upon society have been grossly imputed to the impact of 'technology,' not the underlying social relationships between capital and labor, structured around an all-pervasive marketplace economy that has penetrated into every sphere of life, from culture to friendships and family." (p. 2)
Looking back to the roots of anarchism (Emma Goldman, the Wobblies), he decries:
"They demanded a revolution -- a _social_ revolution -- without which these aesthetic and psychological goals could not be achieved for humanity as a whole ... regrettably, this revolutionary endeavor, indeed the high-minded idealism and class consciousness on which it rests, is central to fewer and fewer of the self-styled anarchists I encounter today." (p 3)
Bookchin then launches into his first essay, dedicating 52 pages to attacking what he calls Lifestyle Anarchism and then five pages to Social Anarchism. This annoys me more than anything else. I would much rather have seen a balanced treatment, spending another 50 some pages to outline his vision of Social Anarchism. The heart of his polemics seems to be attacking the substitution of an egoistic, undisciplined, do-your-own-thing mentality for solidarity and revolutionary commitment. He takes issue with those who promote an "individualism" unconnected with community, noting that the individual arises out of, is nurtured by, and co-creates with community. He assails those who promote anarchism as mere chaos. Similarly, he goes after those who would take refuge in mysticism at the expense of social analysis and concrete revolutionary commitment. He refutes those who see "technology" as THE problem, demonstrating that neo-ludditism is no substitute for a rational anarchy. (Had he read Rianne Eisler's The Chalice and the Blade, he might have picked up some even more powerful arguments here.)
He concludes that:
"A bourgeois reality whose economic harshness grows starker and crasser with every passing day is shrewdly mutated by lifestyle anarchism into constellations of self-indulgence, inchoateness, indiscipline, and incoherence." (p. 51)
"To malign civilization without due recognition of its enormous potentialities for _self-conscious_ freedom -- a freedom conferred by reason as well as emotion, by insight as well as desire, by prose as well as poetry -- is to retreat back into the shadowy world of brutishness, when thought was dim and intellecuation was only an evolutionary promise." (p. 56)
In the next five pages he briefly sketches out his ideas of a Democratic Communalism. He yearns for a sharing of power in face-to-face collective meetings, for an anarchism that stays connected to its Enlightenment roots. He wants an anarchism that: "is committed to rationality, while opposing the rationalization of experience; to technology, while opposing the 'megamachine;' to social institutionalization, while opposing class rule and hierarchy; to a genuine politics based on the confederal coordination of municipalities or communes" (p. 57) and warns that "if a left-libertarian vision is not to disappear ... it must offer a resolution to social problems, not flit arrogantly from slogan to slogan, shielding itself from rationality with bad poetry and vulgar graphics." (p. 57)
His second essay (about 20 pages), The Left that Was, offers a nice primer on the "traditional" Left from an anarchist perspective. This essay alone was worth the price of the book. He makes a final appeal: "What this society usually does should not deter leftists from probing the logic of events from a rational standpoint or from calling for what society _should_ do. Any attempt to adapt the rational 'should' to the irrational 'is' vacates that space on the political spectrum that should be occupied by a Left premised on reason, freedom, and ecological humanism." (p. 86)
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