Revolutions - 10.17- The Emancipation of Labor Group
Episode Date: October 7, 2019Everyone know Marxism isn't applicable to Russia. What my theory presupposes is...what if it did? sponsor: harrys.com/revolutions...
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and welcome to revolutions.
Episode 10.17, The Emancipation of Labor Group.
So I'm sure you have noticed by now that this week's episode sounds different than normal.
My microphone gave up the ghost on me, so I have had to improvise a temporary solution to get the job done for right now.
I am going back to the United States on Wednesday morning for the sound education conference,
and apparently buy a new microphone just got added to my list of things to do while I'm there.
So, this isn't ideal, I know, but I think we can all just bear with it together for the moment.
In our last episode, we introduced a whole bunch of new people and new ideas, and I hope you were able to keep them all straight.
We retraced the tumultuous 1870s and followed the shifts in revolutionary tactics.
First, they tried to slowly and peacefully educate the peasants towards mass social revolution, as per Piotr Lavrov.
then they switched to a quick and violent vanguard party political revolution as per Piotr Kachov.
But when people's will finally succeeded in killings are Alexander II in 1881,
they found that Jacobin terrorism had brought Russia no closer to socialist revolution
than Lavrov's patient schoolmaster strategy had.
So, where do we go from here? Where can we go from here?
Well, Georgi Pachanov, Pavel Axelrod, Vera, Zasulich, and Leif Deutsch believe they have the answer.
And while I'm here, I should say that I receive both praise and concern over my pronunciation of Deutsch.
Some people said, yeah, you nailed it.
Other people said in Russian it would be more properly dech.
But to be consistent, I'm just going to use Deutsch again, because he disappears after today anyway, and we won't have to worry about it.
So we left this little group in early 1881, having found their temporary life as expats in Switzerland,
becoming a permanent life as exiles in Switzerland, because the response to his father's assassination from new Emperor Alexander III,
the 26-year-old son of the now blown to bits Alexander II, was uncompromising repression.
His father, the Tsar Liberator, had embraced political and social reform, he had emancipated the serfs,
created the semi-democratic Zemstvah, built an entirely new progressive judicial system,
and for his trouble he had been targeted for death by ungrateful and probably psychopathic revolutionaries.
Almost as soon as the lump of flesh that had once been his father was cold,
Alexander III turned from reform to reaction.
Orthodoxy, autocracy, nationality, it was back and it was back with a vengeance.
There will be more to talk about on this front.
But of most pressing concern for us here today is the arrival of a new political police
to seek and destroy the underground enemies of orthodoxy, autocracy, and nationality.
Because remember, even before his eventual assassination, Alexander II had given up on the third
section. They had been okay at monitoring the upper classes, but they were impotent in the
face of underground terrorist groups like people's will. Russia needed a new political
police for this new era. And shortly before his death, Alexander II mostly dismantled the third
section and reassigned their powers to a new Department of State Police inside the Ministry of the Interior.
Now, what replaced the dismantled third section was the infamous Akrona, officially known as the
Department of Protecting Order and Public Peace. The Akrona started as a small St. Petersburg
office of 12 detectives that had been created back in 1866 after the first near-miss assassination
attempt on Alexander II. Well, after the successful did not miss assassination attempt of 1881,
Alexander III created two more offices in Moscow and Warsaw. To ensure nothing hindered the work
of this newly reorganized secret police apparatus, in August of 1881, the Tsar issued the statute
on measures to preserve order and public peace, which gave the police broad powers of surveillance,
arrest, prosecution, and punishment. The statute was meant to be a temporary measure in the emergency
wake of the Tsar Liberator's assassination, and it was drafted to expire after three years.
But the statute on measures to preserve order and public peace was perpetually renewed every
three years for an additional three years, and it would keep being renewed right up until
1917. So the Russian Empire was now, effectively, a police state. The effect of all this on the
People's Will organization was swift and devastating. The burgeoning Akrona rounded up anyone
who might have been even tangentially linked to People's Will, smashed their presses,
hanged anyone they thought a ringleader, and exiled the rest of Siberia. In the short term,
it meant that People's Will was finished as a viable revolutionary organization. Though, as we will see in a
moment, it took a while to figure that out, and there were still pockets remaining out there
more committed than ever to continuing the terrorist campaign, in their bitter and hopeless
desperation, latching onto violence practically for the sake of violence. The long-term effect
was that any new revolutionary organization in Russia was going to have to contend with the
wily Akrona apparatus, and they were creative about their tactics. They were not just about
surveillance and arrest. They planted long-term spies and agents. They planted long-term spies and
agents provocateur. They co-opted and misdirected and controlled left-wing movements with slush funds
and secret financing channels that duped would-be radicals into joining organizations that were actually
monitored and directed by the Akrona. We'll talk about that all later. So for the small cadre that
formed black repartition, they could only watch this unfold helplessly from their new base of
operations in Switzerland. And this was exactly the kind of thing they had feared from a
a movement built on aggressive terrorist violence, an apocalyptic state backlash. But by the time
they arrived in Switzerland, they were not only disagreeing with their estranged comrades over
revolutionary tactics, but also revolutionary theory. When they organized themselves in 1879,
they declared their ideological adherence to scientific socialism, which for them meant not
just Marx, but the whole array of Western socialist writers coming out of Germany and France.
in Britain. This distinguished them from people's will, who adhered to neurotic populism,
built partly on the idea that the Russian peasant was a unique and special entity on whose
behalf the revolution would be staged. So this means that we're starting to recapitulate the old
westernizer-slavophile debate that had raged in the 1830s and 1840s, and which really had been
an ongoing debate among educated Russians going all the way back to Peter the Great.
Should Russia look to, quote-unquote, more advanced Europe for answers, or were concepts like
backward and behind, meaningless, because Russia was its own unique thing, playing out its own
unique history? After they arrived in Switzerland in 1880, Plahanov buried himself in a three-year-long
intensive study of economics, history, philosophy, and political science to develop a new theory
that would guide Russia towards its revolutionary destiny,
from which he emerged convinced that the really hard work of synthesizing economics, history, philosophy,
and political science into a new revolutionary doctrine had already been done by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels,
and that the answer to all of Russia's problems was found in Marxism.
So Marx and Engels were already well known in the Russian intelligentsia,
both above-border intellectuals and underground radicals.
Most of their early work was banned, of course, but the weighty tome that was Capital was legally
published in Russia in March of 1872. The conclusion of the censors was that it was a doorstop
filled with boring statistical analysis that few would read and even fewer would understand.
And even if they did understand it, Capital was clearly an attack on Western-style industrial capitalism
and we've got none of that here, so it's not like any of this is even applicable to Russia.
So they let it be published.
And the Russian edition was the first foreign edition of Capital ever published.
Marx himself was very pleased when the initial print run of 3,000 copies sold out in a single year.
The reason Capital turned out to be so popular among the Russian intelligentsia was not because it described the situation in Russia,
but because it was an exquisitely detailed description of the horrors of the horrors of the Russian intelligentsia.
Western capitalism. And as I just mentioned, one of the driving ideas behind neurotism was the belief
that the existing communal spirit of the historic Russian village could be harnessed to bypass
all the horrors described so eloquently by Marx. So Capital became a cautionary tale. It's not
like anybody was reading Marx's as a blueprint for the Russian Revolution. Plouhanov, meanwhile,
read Marx and said, I have a blueprint for the Russian Revolution. And that's why Plahanov gets
to go down as the father of Russian Marxism. But as Plahanov and his friends turned towards Marxism
in the early 1880s, they engaged in a dialogue with their still kind of comrades in what was left of
people's will, to try to reform a unified revolutionary party. They had, after all, been together
and land in liberty right up until 1879. But neither side showed a burning desire to mend fences.
Plahanov was already developing an acid pen, and his treatment of the neurotic theories and tactics that had so obviously failed was dismissive and caustic.
For their part, the remaining at-large members of people's will dug in even harder on their Jacobin terrorism.
And if this insistence on staying the course seemed crazy to the members of Black repartition,
just imagine how crazy Black repartitions claim that they should plot a nudgement.
new revolutionary course based on some old Germans' analysis of industrial capitalism seemed
to the members of people's will. The talks went nowhere. So the members of Black repartition
decided to cut their ties and boldly move in a new direction. In September of 1883,
Plihanov, Axelrod, Zasulich, and Deutsch got together in Geneva, and they formed a new society
they dubbed the Emancipation of Labor Group.
The emancipation of labor group would be an explicitly Marxist society.
Their principal objective would be to spread Marxist ideas into Russia,
to reorient the entire ideological underpinning of Russian Revolution
away from the failed utopianism of anarchism and neurotism,
and toward the advanced scientific socialism of Marx.
They specifically organize themselves as a propaganda,
operation, focused on disseminating and teaching Marxist theory. The plan was to translate the work
of Marx and angles into Russian, and then write new books and pamphlets, elaborating on their ideas
to make it intelligible and relevant to a Russian audience. This kind of education-based
revolution fit right in with Lavrov's theories, and they invited him to join the group, but he
declined. Lavrov was not a Marxist. The one other guy they did get to join was this kid named Bassir,
Seeley Ignatov, who was able to contribute some seed money to get the group off the ground.
Now, half the time, Ignatov is not even mentioned among the founders, since he contributed little
more than money, and then he died in 1885, but for the record, he was like the fifth beetle
of the Emancipation of Labor Group. By his own self-assertion and the agreement of his comrades,
Plihanov would serve as the intellectual leader of the new group, and he set to work laying out their
new Marxist program for Russia in three early works. First, the official statement of principles
that accompanied the formation of the new group, and also a pamphlet that was published around the same
time called Socialism and the Political Struggle, both of those were published in 1883. These
were followed by a longer book called Our Differences, published in 1885. In these early works,
Pachanov staked out their position relative to previous theorists and activists, like,
Gertzen, Bakunin, Chernoshevsky, and Kachov, and mostly attacking the unscientific utopian fantasies
of the neurotic and the anarchists. And indeed, the thing Pughanov probably found most exciting about
Marx was that Marx was offering a scientific theory of economics, society, and history.
Plyhanov believed Marx had done for social relations what Newton had done for physics and what Darwin was
doing for biology. The scientific nature of the theories is what made them so profoundly important.
The most important of these profoundly important scientific truths that Marx had discovered
was the theory of historical materialism.
Plihonov came to believe that the stages of history outlined by Marx were inevitable and inexorable,
which meant that when describing the transition from feudalism to capitalism,
Marx may have been talking about the past history of places like France and Britain,
but because Russia had not yet emerged from their medieval mode of production,
Marx was also describing a future for Russia yet to come.
He was like a fortune teller with a crystal ball.
Plahanov believed historical materialism had universal application.
So while the populace and the anarchists believed that Russia could avoid the horrors of Western industrial capitalism
thanks to their own unique culture and history.
Pughanov said no, that is impossible.
Marx has described a path of socioeconomic development that cannot be avoided.
You cannot skip from feudalism to socialism.
Because again, when Marx said that the revolutionary class and feudal society was the bourgeoisie
and that they were the only ones who could topple feudalism and further develop the forces of production,
Quahanaugh believed him.
And it was not until after the bourgeoisie had overthrown feudal aristocracy that the next revolutionary class, the urban proletariat, could rise up to fulfill their own historical destiny.
As a result of his belief in the scientific universal truth of historical materialism, Kahanov advanced the controversial doctrine of two revolutions.
Because to get to the socialist revolution they were all aiming at, there must first be a bourgeois democratic.
revolution, which meant the capitalist mode of production must come to Russia. Now, this theory is going
to be a tough sell to Russian radicals who have just spent the last few decades agreeing that the
industrial capitalist mode of production sounded really crappy, and it was to be avoided at all costs.
Remember, the basic premise of Kachov's now or never imperative was that the revolution had to be
carried out before capitalism arrived in Russia, otherwise it would be too late.
Prehanov reversed that position. Capitalism had to come to Russia before the socialist revolution could be carried out.
So socialists should join with the bourgeoisie in the historical materialist-approved overthrow of Tsarist autocracy.
Then, the socialist must endure a period of bourgeois capitalist rule in order to develop the forces of production to the point where the proletarian socialist could stage their own second revolution.
If this all sounds familiar, it's because this is what young Marx was arguing during the early days of the Revolution of 1848.
We talked about this in episode 10.2, but the workers must join with the liberal Democrats to overthrow the monarchies of Germany before the next revolution, the Workers' Revolution, could be staged.
And it was a theory Marx himself grew disenchanted with by 1849.
One of the other big things that drew Prehanov to Marx
was that Marx positively savage the ideological fixation
on the revolutionary potential of the peasants.
Personal experience had turned Prehanov into a convinced skeptic
of the revolutionary potential of the peasants,
and he founded Marx the theoretical justification for this conclusion.
So Prehanov fundamentally disagreed with Lavrov about this,
He believed there was no hope in trying to educate the peasants to revolution. It can't be done.
And more importantly, it didn't need to be done. Because according to historical materialism,
what was going to happen was that the centralizing forces of capitalism were going to draw the peasants
from their rural villages into the cities where they would be turned into the urban proletariat
and thus become the future revolutionary class. Because unlike the hopeless sack of potatoes that was the peasantry,
you could cultivate the revolutionary class consciousness of the urban proletariat.
Thus, the anarchists claim that the Russian peasant villages were the future of Russia was all wrong.
Those villages were in fact an archaic relic of the past that had to be destroyed.
Now, as we saw last week, this disenchantment with the peasants was shared by Piotr Kachov.
But Plihanov and Kachov drew different tactical conclusions.
As we talked about last week, Kachof said the peasants are hopeless. That's why we need a vanguard party of hyper-disciplined revolutionaries to do the work of toppling the Tsar. Puganov blasted this, because, first of all, it tried to do an end run around historical materialism. A small group of terrorists could not initiate a socialist revolution by blowing up the Tsar. Feudalism could only be toppled by the historical forces of bourgeois capitalism. That was how the first revolution had.
had to go. And even when it came time for the second socialist revolution of the proletariat,
that had to be carried out as a mass movement of workers once they had become the largest
class of bourgeois capitalist society. The dictatorship of the proletariat was not a dictatorship
in the sense that Blanke or Kachoth used the term, a tiny all-powerful revolutionary committee.
but it was instead a true democratic majority capturing control of the state from the minority bourgeois capitalists.
So in the debate between mass movement versus small vanguard party,
the emancipation of labor group were firmly in the mass movement camp.
So all of these beliefs and positions we've just talked about mean that the emancipation of labor group
is mostly in alignment with German social democrats.
Now, the definition of Social Democrat and Social Democracy has changed a bit over the years,
but in the terminology of the 1870s and 1880s, it meant socialists who were willing to engage in parliamentary politics,
to build so-called labor parties, to stand for election, to advocate democratic civil rights,
like freedom of speech, freedom of the press, and freedom of association.
They also agitated for practical labor reforms, safer conditions,
higher wages the eight-hour day.
This kind of activity was scorned by more radical socialists and especially the anarchists
who thought this kind of political work granted legitimacy to the bourgeois state
and that supporting labor reforms would sap the necessary revolutionary energy of the working
classes without actually emancipating them.
Social Democrats, the emancipation of labor group among them,
believe that the state could and should be engaged with,
especially as a necessary step in the doctrine of two revolutions. So in the initial proclamation
of principles for the Emancipation of Labor Group, they said that the first goal would be establishing
a democratic constitution for the state. This was also important not just as a step in historical
materialism, but also because the Emancipation of Labor Group held democratic principles. They did
not advocate small dictatorial committees. Again, when they advocated for the dictatorship
of the proletariat, they meant majority rule democracy. The emancipation of labor group was
conscious of the disdain held by radical Russian revolutionaries of this watered-down German
social democracy, and it's partly why they called themselves the emancipation of labor group,
and not the more obvious and more accurate Russian social Democrats. Not that it really mattered.
It is safe to say that initially this all landed somewhere between a thud and a wind
mostly it just didn't land at all. Those revolutionaries still left in Russia were all still
with people's will, whether out of stubbornness or true belief, and the scathing attacks from
Prahanov were not going to coax anyone towards his new ideas. Even without the Aserbic language,
he was still advocating literary study and propagandizing not direct revolutionary action.
One old Bakunanist veteran scoff that they weren't even revolutionaries anymore. They were sociologists.
Old Lavrov, meanwhile, was livid at their activities because he believed that in these difficult post-assassination years, that the remaining revolutionaries had to focus on maintaining a broad platform of unity that kept everybody together. The emancipation of labor group seemed to focus on sharpening and exacerbating internal divisions.
Meanwhile, those who got past all of that still couldn't quite grasp how Marxist doctrine was ever going to work in Russia.
Or this argument about how we have to embrace the horrors of Western capitalism?
I mean, dude, I'm a revolutionary because that's what I'm opposed to,
not because I want to invite it into my backyard.
Striking out at home, the Emancipation of Labor Group also got very little love
from Western socialists in Germany and France and Britain,
who were equally frustrated that they were focused on the wrong things.
From the perspective of Western Socialists,
Russian Zardom meant only one thing.
It was the war chest, arsenal, and bunker of last resort for reactionary conservatism everywhere in Europe.
The Tsar had agents in every capital.
Money was paid to Western politicians to oppose socialism and anarchism and even liberalism.
Marx personally hated the Tsar so much that he believed every single conspiracy theory about malevolent Russian interference no matter how far-fetched.
Not that Russian diplomacy wasn't heavy on supporting reactionary politics in the West, it was.
It's just that it wasn't all true.
I mean, Marx openly believed that William Gladstone had been on the Tsar's payroll.
So what the Western Socialists wanted revolutionaries in Russia to do was topple the Tsar.
That's it. That's all they really cared about.
Peasants, workers, mass movements, small vanguard parties, we don't care.
Just get it done.
So they were happy to support a movement like,
people's hand, which had a singular focus on toppling the Tsar. They didn't want to hear about the
slow process of historical materialism needing to play out in Russia, especially not from the
emancipation of labor group, whose attacks on their former comrades threatened the unity
of the Russian Revolutionary Underground. Arguably, the most disheartening thing of all, though,
was the attitude of Marx and Engels themselves. They're still alive and kicking out there.
various points in the late 1870s and early 1880s, Vera Zasulich exchanged letters with both men,
and their replies were not exactly encouraging. For one thing, Marx and Engels were among those
Western socialists who just wanted the hated Tsar to fall by any means necessary. For the good
of humanity, that and that alone needed to be the focus of the revolutionaries in Russia.
But on top of that, Marx and Engels also tended to believe that
Russia was not on the same historical materialist path as Western Europe,
and they considered the kind of arguments Prahanov would be making in the 1880s and 1890s
a misuse of their work. And they said so.
Marx warns Asulich not to mix Western theory with Russian culture and history.
Russia was not even in the feudal mode of production at the moment.
Politically and economically, feudal culture is a transactional arrangement between
autonomous families and a land-owning aristocracy. Russia had never had never had these kinds of
transactional arrangements. Russia had always been the Tsar's property. Everyone else just lived there.
What Marx and Ingalls believed was that Russia was off on this dead end of evolutionary historical
development called the Asiatic mode of production. And I mentioned this mode very briefly in episode 10.4
when I was introducing the stages of historical materialism, and I'll just quote myself here to remind you,
There are slightly modified versions that involve an Asiatic mode and a Barbarian mode that existed in the area between tribal and ancient, but I'll set those aside for now.
Well, the time has come to pick them up, at least the Asiatic mode.
Marx and Engels only discussed the Asiatic mode of production in a few scant and not very deep passages.
But they dubbed it Asiatic because they were trying to describe certain civilizations that grew up on the Asian.
continent after the Neolithic Revolution, in Egypt, Mesopotamia, Persia, the Indus Valley, and China.
Politically, the Asiatic mode was defined by a ruler presented as the the theocratic incarnation of the gods on earth.
Economically, this god king owned all the land, and was able to marshal huge workforces to build large
capital cities, huge monuments, and infrastructure projects, most especially, large,
and complex irrigation systems to make the land more productive.
Technological and cultural progress would have given these
Asiatic civilizations writing, mathematics, record-keeping, calendars,
and sophisticated engineering, all of which would be utilized by a central bureaucracy
that rule the population mostly confined to small communities
that knew only their own timeless little village
and whose only political role was total obedience to the God Kings.
This sense of eternal timelessness pervaded this alleged Asiatic mode of production,
and lacking the willingness or the desire to further develop the forces of production,
which, remember, for Marx, is the motor force of history,
the Asiatic civilizations eventually decay and pass away,
even if it takes thousands of years.
Now, I'm not endorsing any of this as a theory,
I'm just saying this was an idea Marx and Engels had been kicking around since the 1850s.
And so, when Marx and Engels looked at Russian Zardom, they saw the Asiatic mode of production.
Isolated timeless communities acting as obedient slaves to a god king who exercises power through a central bureaucracy and a society with no strong concept of private property.
They were very skeptical of guys like Bakunin, who argued that the timeless Russian commune could be the basis of future socialist society,
because Marx and Engels believed those communes were part of the foundational essence of a dead-end,
Asiatic civilization. And they were skeptical of anyone who argued a robust bourgeois class could emerge
out of this environment. The pieces just weren't there, culturally, economically, or psychologically.
Now, Marx and Engels did provide a preface to a new Russian translation of the Communist Manifesto,
Plahanov drafted in 1882, and they said that toppling the Tsar through,
violent insurrection was possible and might hopefully serve as a, quote, signal for a proletarian
revolution in the West. And if it did, then it was possible that the effects of that proletarian
revolution in the West would rebound back to Russia and allow the economic forces underlying
their historical commune to develop and serve as the basis of Russian communist society.
But there is no hint that they thought Russia was itself on some inexorable road to proletarian
revolution. Now, Marx died in March of 1883, just before the Emancipation of Labor Group was
officially formed, but Engels kept right on living, and throughout the 1880s, this very first
Russian Marxist society did not exactly earn his hearty approval or endorsement. So it was rough
going in the early years. The Emancipation of Labor Group had no real allies. They had no
contacts in Russia to spread their work. They were all dirt poor and struggling to feed themselves
and their families. But they kept at it. Zasulich translated Marx's own works to make sure the primary
source material was available. Puganoff wrote his pamphlets and books, explaining why they were right
and everyone else was wrong. Axelrod studied Western labor movements and developed personal
working relationships with German social democrats like Edward Bernstein and Karl Kautzky.
And finally, Leif Deutsch was the logistical organizer, fundraiser, and chief smuggler.
But the results were discouraging.
Deutsch returned from one trip to Russia,
saying that there were less than 10 people in the whole empire
who cared about what they were doing.
Then in 1884, the group was dealt a serious setback
when Deutsch was arrested in Germany on a smuggling run.
It was general policy not to extradite political targets back to Russia,
but Deutsch still had an attempted murder charge on his head,
making him little more than a common criminal.
extradited back to Russia, he was tried and sentenced. But surprisingly, he wasn't hanged. He was sent
into perpetual exile in Siberia. His devastated comrades in Switzerland assumed they would never
see him again. Though, spoiler alert, he would later write a memoir called 16 years in Siberia,
in case you're wondering exactly how long his perpetual exile wound up lasting.
But really, for the rest of the 1880s, it was down to just the three of them.
Plahanov, Zasulich, and Axelrod.
Now, they were not totally friendless.
Younger Russian students studying in Switzerland were interested in their ideas.
But it's fair to say that by the dawn of 1890,
the emancipation of labor group had zero influence on socialist politics at home or abroad.
But much to everyone's shock, the forces of history turned in their favor.
Plahanov suddenly appeared to be a mad prophet who had predicted,
at a great flood and who everyone had laughed at, and then the flood suddenly came. And next week,
we're going to talk about that flood, because while the industrial capitalist mode of production was
going to have trouble coming around on its own, if it was spurred by, say, an energetic finance
minister who was tasked with modernizing Russia so it can compete with Western rivals economically
and politically, if that happened, then the resulting industrial boom might look exactly like the
historical materialist transformation Prahanov had been talking about, and many up-and-coming radicals
would look around and agree that the growing urban proletariat, not the dying rural peasantry,
was the revolutionary future of Russia.
