Against the Current, No. 161, November/December 2012
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The Next Four Years
— The Editors -
Final Blow to Affirmative Action?
— Malik Miah -
Chicago Teachers Strike Back
— Rob Bartlett -
A Marxist Ecological Vision
— Nicholas Davenport -
Murfreesboro Islamic Center Opens
— Jase Short -
A BDS Movement That Works
— Barbara Harvey -
Letter to the Editors
— Chris Wegemer - International Struggles
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South Africa After Marikana
— Suzi Weissman interviews Leonard Gentle -
Political Developments in South Africa
— excerpt from Amandla! -
When Will We See Tanks in Barcelona?
— Esther Vivas -
The Struggle in Balochistan
— Adaner Usmani -
Against Fundamentalism and Imperialism
— Adaner Usmani -
Venezuelan Elections: Latest Step in the Long Road
— Jeffery R. Webber -
Toward Revolution and Collective Leadership
— an interview with Andrés Antillano -
Resistance in China Today
— Au Loong Yu and Bai Ruixue - Reviews
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Subversive Viewing/Viewing Subversives
— Paula Rabinowitz -
Their "Recovery" and Ours
— Zoltan Zigedy -
The Russian Revolution Revisited
— Loren Goldner - In Memoriam
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Flint Sitdowner: Olen Ham (1917-2012)
— Dianne Feeley -
Eric Hobsbawm: 1917-2012
— Radical Socialist
Radical Socialist
“I, who belong to a people of refugees whose experience has been such as to make me still vaguely uneasy if I don’t possess a valid passport and enough cash to transport me to the nearest suitable country at short notice, can understand the situation of the Kenyan Asians and feel horrified by British immigration officials in a more profound and visceral way than those from whom the question is primarily one of equal rights and civil liberty in general.” —Eric Hobsbawm, 1969
ERIC JOHN ERNEST Hobsbawm, one of the most read Marxist historians of the 20th century, passed away at the age of 95. While in no sense an adequate survey of his works and ideas, Radical Socialist presents a short view of his life and politics.
Born of a father of Polish-Jewish descent who was a British official, and an Austrian Jewish mother, Hobsbawm spent his early years in Austria. After his parents’ death, he and his sister were taken care of by relatives, and he studied in Berlin till 1933, the year Hitler took power. His family then moved to Britain. Hobsbawm did his Ph.D from Cambridge University and worked for a long time at Birkbeck College. During World War II he served in the Royal Engineers. Living to the age of 95, and fighting leukemia, he died on 1 October 2012.
Hobsbawm had been attracted to Communist politics while in Berlin, as a youth. He joined the Communist Party of Great Britain in 1936, and became part of its famous Marxist Historians’ Group. Unlike others, such as Christopher Hill or E. P. Thompson who, disgusted by the revelations about Stalinism and the brutal suppression of the Hungarian Revolution, left the CPGB, Hobsbawm remained a party member, and a subtle defender of Stalinism.
[ATC editors’ note: The historic Communist Party of Great Britain formally dissolved in 1991. The name was subsequently taken by a revolutionary group that publishes the Weekly Worker newspaper.]
This does not mean that Hobsbawm was a lesser historian. Indeed, he was one of the finest historians of the 20th century. He was concerned about the dual revolution that created capitalist modernity in Europe — the French Revolution and the Industrial Revolution.
His books on these subjects — The Age of Revolution, The Age of Capital, The Age of Empire, and Industry and Empire, have become, despite customary warnings by teachers of right-wing bent that these were written by a Marxist, standard text books at least wherever English is used in higher education. He was also one of the initiators of Past and Present, one of the most the most influential historical journals, in which Marxists and non-Marxists cooperated.
Hobsbawm was also one of the seminal figures involved in developing the “invention of tradition” concept. His writings also show a serious attention to social history, for example in his study of Social Banditry.
Hobsbawm’s weakness was his “take” on the 20th century and the Russian revolution and Stalinism. He tended to present an objectivist apologia, arguing in essence that even if someone less ruthless than Stalin had been in power, the circumstances would have resulted in similar mass scale violence in the interests of socialist construction.
This involves, first of all, an assessment that the European revolutions were bound to fail. Secondly, it means looking at Stalinism not as a system of bureaucratic rule, a domination by a bureaucratic social layer that had usurped power, but as certain personality traits of Stalin. In the name of avoiding counterfactuals, Hobsbawm avoids looking at alternative programs and policies seriously.
Why do we object to this? After all, Trotskyists have also argued that Stalinism was not an inevitable outgrowth of Marxism, but the result of objective developments — the isolation of the Russian revolution in a backward country, the failure of the German revolution, the historic backwardness of Russia, etc. The difference lies in Hobsbawm denying much role (one could even say, at times any role) of subjective forces, of parties, programs and politics.
Supporter of “Popular Front”
Hobsbawm, however, disliked the ultraleft lurches as well as brutalities of Stalinism. Coming into the international communist movement during the rise of fascism, what motivated him, and many like him, was anti-fascist popular frontism. His late writings show him an unrepentant supporter of popular frontism.
At the same time, the Spanish Civil War [of the 1930s — ed.] was for him headed for defeat because people did not accept the necessary centralization. He claimed that the POUM (dissident Marxists, accused of being Trotskyists though in fact they were formed by the fusion of one group splitting from the Trotskyist ranks and another group that was never Trotskyist) were small and irrelevant, but fails to try explaining why the party of his friend Santiago Carrillo murdered so many POUM-ists and anarchists.
It is a measure of Hobsbawm’s dilemma — that he knew the problems of being an official pro-Moscow communist and writing truthful accounts of the 20th century — that he avoided it for a long time. His writings about the 1956 Hungarian Revolution show an awareness that it was a workers’ revolution, not a counter-revolution as pretended by Moscow and its acolytes. But his letter published in the CP newspaper had said that he approved, though with a heavy heart, the Soviet invasion of Hungary.
In British politics, Hobsbawm had become part of the Eurocommunist wing of the CPGB. In his famous Marx Memorial Lecture, “The Forward March of Labour Halted?” he related the fortunes of the working class with the fates of electoral, reformist workers’ parties. Not surprisingly therefore he was to become the Marxist admired by Neil Kinnock, the same Labour leader who would purge the Labour Party of the Militant Tendency, a Trotskyist current that was trying to work inside the Labour Party and had achieved some influence.
At the same time. Hobsbawm remained keenly aware of imperialism and racism. He was not touched by nationalism of the dominators, as his quotation at the beginning of this note shows.
As we fight to build a revolutionary movement in the 21st century, we are aware that Marxists must come to grips with the realities of the 20th. Hobsbawm, perhaps the most important Marxist historian, indeed the most powerful historian of the 19th century, stumbled when writing about the 20th because he could never make a materialist assessment of Stalinism and the counterrevolution it involved. As we continue to learn from his strengths, we will also learn to identify and criticize his mistakes.
November/December 2012, ATC 161