Jimmie Higgins
8th November 2009, 01:12
http://www.socialistworker.co.uk/art.php?id=19502
Chris Harman's "How Marxism Works" was the first socialist books I read other than "The Communist Manifesto" and a few other things by Marx. Harman's "A People's History of the World" is really a fantastic introduction and overview of Western Civ from a Marxist perspective and I go back to it often to find historical references.
Solidarity from the US to those who knew of him worked with him and struggled along with him.
Andrei Kuznetsov
8th November 2009, 01:30
I pour out some liquor for a comrade.
Brady
8th November 2009, 04:41
Fucking hell I was just flicking through my copy of 'How Marxism works' this very day....very sad news.
RevolverNo9
9th November 2009, 00:48
This has been absolutely shocking, and a sledgehammer-blow to the IST and the whole socialist movement in Britain and beyond.
From being a leader in the students movement during his time the LSE in '68, and in the Vietnam Solidarity Campaign, where he courageously brought attention to Ho Chi Minh's ruthless suppression of Trotskyist opposition against those who showed uncritical support, to his (almost-unique) role as a pre-eminent Marxist and economist who remained outside the academy and at the heart of the resistance, Chris continually enriched a living socialist tradition.
His work on eastern Europe was some of the best done to develop the state-capitalist analysis, while in the shape of 'The Fire the Last Time', 'The Lost Revolution' and 'A People's History of the World' he also created excellent and rarely-matched history-writing. Everything Chris wrote was also united by the plain and accessible language he used, universally comprehensible, in stark contrast to the much of the 'English' of Marxists in the academy.
It's been a particular shock for us here in Britian, since he seemed in perfect health in his very last days before Cairo, and was as politically active as ever. It is perhaps fitting that Chris' life, though still cut short, robbing of us so much, ended in Cairo where he was speaking to the Egyptian revolutionary left, a testament to a man who was internationalist to the last.
Now should remind us to read again his amazingly diverse and cogent catalogue of writings - I recommend as many people as possible do this. That and the continuation of the fight for socialism is by far the most appropriate way of celebrating an old comrade.
Some of the tributes that have already come out:
Kieran Allen: http://www.swp.ie/index.php?page=499&dept=News&title=Chris+Harman+has+died
Lenin's Tomb:
http://leninology.blogspot.com/
SW:
http://www.socialistworker.co.uk/art.php?id=19502
4th International in Britain:
http://socialistresistance.org/?p=728
Huey P. Newton
9th November 2009, 01:00
I am sure he would of been satisfied at his accomplishments in life, he turned alot of young (and old i am sure) people onto socialism and contributed to awakening societal class conceousness.
communard resolution
11th November 2009, 19:27
R.I.P. comrade.
His book "The Lost Revolution" is a pretty awesome read.
Would you guys rather leave it at that or shall we discuss his legacy?
Mikhail Tukhachevsky
11th November 2009, 19:29
Truly sad news. Thanks for informing. Although I have serious differences with the IST, I always had a lot of respect for cde Harman and his excellent books. Truly a loss for the movement.
blake 3:17
14th November 2009, 02:40
Chris Harman (1942-2009)
A life in the heart of the struggle
Socialist Resistance pays tribute
Duncan Chapel (http://www.revleft.com/vb/spip.php?auteur333), Liam Mac Uaid (http://www.revleft.com/vb/spip.php?auteur469)
Chris Harman, the editor of International Socialism and a central committee member of the Socialist Workers’ Party (SWP), died from a massive heart attack on November 6th. He was 67. We, and others in the Fourth International, join in sending condolences to Chris’ family, friends and comrades.
A convinced revolutionary socialist all his adult life, Harman had played a key role in founding Socialist Worker and editing it until 2004. Harman was an internationalist from the start. That was reflected in myriad ways, from his participation in the Vietnam Solidarity Campaign in the late 1960s to the symbolic location of his death: Cairo.
Harman was a polymath, gifted as an author, speaker, editor, leader and economist. His book The Lost Revolution: Germany 1918 to 1923 is a powerful tool for revolutionary socialists. His greatest work, A Peoples’ History of the World, is invaluable. He was also outstanding as an activist and leader of the SWP and its forerunner, the International Socialists. Harman played a major role in helping the organisation develop its political direction and in explaining its choices to a radical audience. His famous 1990-91 debate with Ernest Mandel on the bureaucratic Stalinist dictatorships in Quatriéme Internationale was translated into English and is still in print as The Fallacies of State Capitalism (http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/offer-listing/1872242014/ref=dp_olp_new?ie=UTF8&condition=new). His analysis of the SWP split from Respect was valued even by those who opposed the SWP’s decision: it was translated by Inprecor and published in Respect: Documents of the Crisis (http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/0902869892?ie=UTF8&seller=A1IQ45MEW0OOAF&sn=Resistance%20Books) as the clearest exposition of the SWP’s viewpoint.
Harman took his role as an SWP leader seriously, but that did not stop him from having a transparent and comradely working relationship with socialists outside the SWP. Last month he was an active participant in the IIRE’s economists seminar (http://www.iire.org/content/view/179/30/lang,en/), in which most participants were Fourth Internationalists. While there, he spoke at a public meeting sponsored by Grenzeloos (http://www.grenzeloos.org/nieuwslog/index.php/id/342.html), the magazine of the Fourth International in The Netherlands.
As one of our comrades, Clement, put it on hearing the news: “Harman was for me the person from which I discovered Marxism, and which showed and revealed that revolutionary engagement was compatible with highly demanding scientific investigation for understanding and changing the world.” Harman’s openness, his books and articles, his work in the struggle and the contribution he made to developing the socialist consciousness of tens of thousands of people are a fitting monument to his revolutionary life.
Socialist Resistance editorial board,
November 7 2009.
P.S. This tribute is in Spanish at Foro Anticapitalista (http://foroanticapitalista.blogspot.com/2009/11/chris-harman-una-vida-en-el-corazon-de.html). Photos of Chris and others at the economists seminar are online at http://bit.ly/2oFMZv while the speeches by Chris, Claudio Katz and Michel Husson are available as audio files at http://bit.ly/4fmACP.
http://www.revleft.com/vb/puce.gifDuncan Chapel is a member of the International Viewpoint editorial committee. He serves on the executive committee of the British Section of the Fourth International, Socialist Resistance, and the commission of the International Institute for Research and Education.
http://www.revleft.com/vb/puce.gifLiam Mac Uaid is an editor of Socialist Resistance and a member of its executive committee. His blog is online at liammacuaid.wordpress.com
http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article1750
Sam_b
14th November 2009, 02:59
I posted this in the IST group as well. Very sad news indeed, it wa sonly last month that I was talking with comrade Harman and he was in good spirits and health.
The one thing that had a radical impact on my politics is his pamphlet Prophet and the Proletariat which is arguably more relevant today than it was when initially published in 1994. You can read it online at http://pubs.socialistreviewindex.org.uk/isj64/harman.htm
As much as it is awful news, we have to keep moving forward, organising and building our movement; as Chris would have wanted. We mourn his passing, but hold up his contribution to the struggle and will continue.
Q
15th November 2009, 13:53
An obituary in the WW (http://www.cpgb.org.uk/worker/793/theworking.php) aswell:
The working class intellectual and the apparat
James Turley offers an appreciation of the life of Chris Harman, 1942-2009
A prominent figure on the British far left for several decades, Chris Harman, has died aged 66. All that time, he was a member of a single organisation.
Perhaps remarkably, that organisation is the Socialist Workers Party - or its antecedents in the shape of the Socialist Review Group and International Socialists. This is an organisation prone to sharp shifts in political direction, and splits around those shifts. Harman lived through the bulk of this history as an active and enthusiastic participant, yet did not depart with any of the waves of splinter groups that litter the socialist political landscape today.
He first joined the SRG in the 1960s as a schoolboy. At that time, the line was in favour of full Labour Party entry; by 1970, it had moved away from Labour work and embraced a rank-and-filist workerism; by 1975, it had shifted from a previously fairly democratic internal culture to a bureaucratic-centralist ‘Leninism’; by 1980 the rank-and-filism of what was now the SWP was undermined by a new concern for anti-racism, feminism and other such things previously snootily dismissed as the concern of ‘people who should be in the International Marxist Group’ (the IMG was the British section of the Trotskyist Fourth International and was at its most influential in the late 70s).
Worse was to come - the announcement from guru Tony Cliff that the labour movement was in the midst of a “downturn” left the SWP cadre caught out by the 1984-85 miners’ strike, and disoriented within it. Variants of this policy continued until the late 1990s, characterised by a lurch toward the Seattle-generation ‘anti-globalisation’ movement. Chasing the movements brought the SWP to almost total immersion in anti-war work after 9/11 - a turn which the current leadership says came at the expense of the SWP’s own organisational health and also cost it dear in terms of any serious orientation to the working class.
After leaving school, Harman completed his degree at Leeds University. Pivotally, he followed it up with a PhD at the London School of Economics. At the time, the LSE was a critically important site of campus radicalism, and an inspiring environment for any young revolutionary. This was the time of the Paris événements, the Red Army Fraction, and a wave of anti-war sentiment not topped in the west until the recent catastrophe in Iraq. Students - provided they attended the right institutions - seemed to have the best view of the barricades.
Harman never finished his doctorate - he became, in 1968, a full-timer for the IS, a role he would fulfil in different ways for the rest of his life. He started out editing International Socialism (ISJ), and working as a journalist for the new Socialist Worker. At that time SW was edited by Roger Protz, a former Healyite (his editing skills are now put to productive use on The Good Beer Guide). Harman was later to be the longest-serving editor in the paper’s history, though in the early days the job was rotated somewhat - not least because of the constant series of splits, which claimed Protz among many others. In this period, he wrote Bureaucracy and revolution in eastern Europe (now republished as Class struggles in eastern Europe, 1945-1983), and extensive analysis of the eastern bloc from the point of view of Tony Cliff’s theory of state capitalism.
In many ways, Harman was unlucky to take up the SW reins when he did, first in 1975 and then in 1982. The IS had been heavily involved in the industrial struggles which swept across Britain in the early 1970s. Its rank-and-filist posture allowed it to recruit modestly but significantly, and it began to attract experienced class fighters. As these struggles weakened, however, Cliff announced a major change in the class struggle - the now infamous “downturn”, which entailed a retreat into propagandism and the kind of ‘inward-looking’ politics that would have today’s SWP leaders gasping with shock - had they not all been through this particular somersault themselves.
It is certainly true that after this time industrial struggles faded, and began to be defeated. It is possible for basic labour struggles to carry on at an intense pitch for many years, but not forever. Eventually, escalating disruption will force the issue - either the workers ‘get political’ in a serious way and address the question of state power or the capitalists beat them down. There is no shame, either, in concentrating on propaganda when this happens in order to retrench cadres and harden people for lean, demoralising times.
The difficulty with the Cliff/SWP version of the “downturn” is that it was too mechanistic. The fact that there is a downturn means that every event must be viewed myopically through its prism. This particular “downturn” was dated to 1978 (similar theses were advanced by the Eurocommunist Eric Hobsbawm at the time), but within the year there was the winter of discontent. Five years later, of course, there was the miners’ strike. It seemed to escape Cliff that the balance of class forces could shift suddenly as well as molecularly - there is no way a strike that lasts almost a year can have been doomed from the outset, yet the SWP was only able to emerge from its propagandism by embracing the most narrow form of economism.
It is this phase of the SWP’s history which was covered by Harman’s time at SW. He also produced extensive studies of the German Revolution (The lost revolution, 1982) and, later, political Islam (The prophet and the proletariat, 1994). Cliff demanded one more wrenching change out of him yet, however, with the anti-globalisation movement heralding a new global upturn in the guru’s mind. The reorientation to the anti-war milieu and political Islam in particular fell to his successor, the rather more philistine Chris Bambery; it is difficult to gauge how closely Harman identified with the Respect project, although later editions of The prophet and the proletariat included some telling changes to reflect the Rees leadership’s new, more positive view of Islamism.
Harman’s most significant contribution to the life of the SWP and the British left beyond came in his writings. These include, as we have seen, extensive historical studies, notably of the 1918-23 revolutionary period in Germany, and detailed analyses of the Stalinist countries. At different times, he was called upon to be political economist, anthropologist, historian and more - and with disciplined research and lucid writing, he more or less stepped up to the mark each time.
‘Called upon’ not by History, or the spontaneous whims of an erudite Marxist imagination, but by the interests of the SWP machine. It is impossible to discuss Harman’s legacy separate from that of the organisation he belonged to. Alex Callinicos himself admits: “He was interested in particular problems usually not for their own sake but in order to address political arguments” (Socialist Worker November 14). For all his often-valuable work, then, it is difficult to find anything like a slant on something genuinely new within Marxist theory. Harman was a Cliffite to the marrow - some of his most extensive researches amount to evidentiary appendices to Cliff’s State capitalism in Russia; others (the anthropology, particularly) were embedded in internal spats conducted dishonestly by the apparat.
Harman’s role in all this is not an unfamiliar one - that of the ‘red professor’, who is always ready to spin a yarn to justify the contingent decisions of the leadership. In this, he is in considerable company among communists - Ernest Mandel’s mind worked around the strategic shifts of the Fourth International, a host of WRP academics rendered Gerry Healy’s gibberings into Trotskyist jargon, and that is to say nothing of the countless Stalinist intellectuals working from the 1920s until the ‘official’ CPGB was liquidated, of whom Rajani Palme Dutt is the most prominent example.
Yet there is a paradox, highlighted if we compare him with his comrade and eulogist, Alex Callinicos. Callinicos is also a talented scholar; he has published widely, and well beyond the confines of the SWP press. He writes with lucidity and some originality (though not without flaws) on epistemology and economy, education and imperialism. Crucially, he more or less has his own research programme - he can write what he wants without interference from the (rest of the) central committee. Politically, meanwhile, he is the hack’s hack - he has gleefully flitted between contradictory political positions, repeatedly rotated allies, and his backroom manoeuvrings in the SWP’s split with its American sister organisation in 2001 earned him the Stateside nickname, ‘Stalinicos’.
Harman, as we have noted, was mostly concerned with direct or indirect interventions in the political life of the SWP. Yet while these interventions, to say the least, tend towards the winning side, it would be wrong to dismiss him entirely as a hack. In that rather obscure manner we now associate with the whispering war between Gordon Brown and Tony Blair, it was suggested widely in the organisation that Harman, in his later years, differed significantly with the direction it was taking. Articles in International Socialism on popular fronts past - were they veiled criticisms of Respect? I have certainly heard people claim, conspiratorially, that they are on the ‘Harman side’ of the SWP. He embodies a contradiction - unquestioning fealty to the apparat, battling with the need to articulate differences somehow.
Finally, a personal note - it is always a difficult balancing act to write an obituary for a comrade in the movement whose views and practices differ vastly from one’s own. Recognition of that comradeship is a vital necessity, whose abandonment is the abandonment of solidarity; yet to ignore the political differences is its own betrayal.
For me, Chris Harman was not just any SWPer. His articles in ISJ were a serious advert for the ‘partyist’ left as I was beginning to reconsider anarchism; the general high quality of ISJ, then under his editorship, convinced me I was jumping ship to a more intellectually serious politics. But it could never be the politics of the SWP. It was frustrating to see Harman propping up those politics and the regime that sustained them - frustrating for giving tired dogmas and strategic stillbirths a vitality they did not deserve, and for quietly wasting the insight and effort of a serious working class intellectual.
His death is a great loss to our movement.
chegitz guevara
15th November 2009, 18:37
Inspiring talk by Harman.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mCwFx2sEAAA
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