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Hexen
30th January 2013, 19:52
Why the ideas of Karl Marx are more relevant than ever in the 21st century

Marxism enjoys new currency in economic crisis. But as Marx said, the point is not just to interpret the world, but to change it



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guardian.co.uk (http://www.guardian.co.uk/), Friday 25 January 2013 10.34 EST
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http://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Guardian/Pix/pictures/2010/6/29/1277813733367/German-Political-Philosop-006.jpg Although he did not explicitly use the phrase, Karl Marx is credited with explaining the 'creative destruction' of capitalism. Photograph: Bettmann/Corbis

Capital used to sell us visions of tomorrow. At the 1939 World's Fair in New York, corporations showcased new technologies: nylon, air conditioning, fluorescent lamps, the ever-impressive View-Master (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/View-Master). But more than just products, an ideal of middle-class leisure and abundance was offered to those weary from economic depression and the prospect of European war.
The Futurama ride even took attendees through miniature versions of transformed landscapes, depicting new highways and development projects: the world of the future. It was a visceral attempt to renew faith in capitalism.
In the wake of the second world war, some of this vision became a reality. Capitalism thrived and, though uneven, progress was made by American workers. With pressure from below, the state was wielded by reformers, not smashed, and class compromise, not just class struggle, fostered economic growth and shared prosperity previously unimaginable.
Exploitation and oppression didn't go away, but the system seemed not only powerful and dynamic, but reconcilable with democratic ideals. The progress, however, was fleeting. Social democracy faced the structural crisis in the 1970s that Michal Kalecki, author of The Political Aspects of Full Employment (http://mrzine.monthlyreview.org/2010/kalecki220510.html), predicted decades earlier. High employment rates and welfare state protections didn't buy off workers, it encouraged militant wage demands. Capitalists kept up when times were good, but with stagflation – the intersection of poor growth and rising inflation – and the Opec embargo, a crisis of profitability ensued.
An emergent neoliberalism did curb inflation and restore profits, but only through a vicious offensive against the working class. There were pitched battles waged in defense of the welfare state, but our era has largely been one of deradicalization and political acquiescence. Since then, real wages have stagnated, debt soared, and the prospects for a new generation, still wedded to a vision of the old social-democratic compact, are bleak.
The 1990s technological boom brought about talk of a light and adaptive "new economy", something to replace the old Fordist (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fordism) workplace. But it was a far cry from the future promised at the 1939 World's Fair.
The 2008 recession shattered those dreams, anyway. Capital, free of threats from below, grew decadent, wild, and speculative.
For many in my generation, the ideological underpinnings of capitalism have been undermined. That a higher percentage of Americans between the ages of 18 and 30 have a more favorable opinion of socialism than capitalism at least signals that the cold war era conflation of socialism with Stalinism no longer holds sway.
At an intellectual level, the same is true. Marxists have gained a measure of mainstream exposure: Foreign Policy (http://www.foreignpolicy.com/) turned to Leo Panitch (http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2009/04/15/thoroughly_modern_marx), not Larry Summers, to explain the recent economic crisis; and thinkers like David Harvey (http://davidharvey.org/) have enjoyed late career renaissances. The wider recognition of thought "left of liberalism" – of which the journal I edit, Jacobin (http://jacobinmag.com), is a part – isn't just the result of the loss of faith in mainstream alternatives, but rather, the ability of radicals to ask deeper structural questions and place new developments in historical context.
Now, even celebrated liberal Paul Krugman has been invoking ideas (http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/12/08/rise-of-the-robots/) long relegated to the margins of American life. When thinking about automation and the future of labor, he worries that "it has echoes of old-fashioned Marxism – which shouldn't be a reason to ignore facts, but too often is." But a resurgent left has more than worries, they have ideas (http://jacobinmag.com/2012/04/the-politics-of-getting-a-life/): about the reduction of working time, the decommodification of labor, and the ways in which advances in production can make life better, not more miserable.
This is where what's evolving, however awkwardly, into the 21st-century socialist intellectualism shows its strengths: a willingness to present a vision for the future, something deeper than mere critique. But intellectual shifts don't mean much by themselves.
A survey of the political landscape in America, despite Occupy's emergence in 2011, is bleak. The labor movement has shown some signs of life, especially among public sector workers combating austerity, but these are at best rearguard, defensive struggles. Unionization rates continue to decline, and apathy, not revolutionary fervor, reigns.
Marxism in America needs to be more than an intellectual tool for mainstream commentators befuddled by our changing world. It needs to be a political tool to change that world. Spoken, not just written, for mass consumption, peddling a vision of leisure, abundance, and democracy even more real than what the capitalism's prophets offered in 1939. A socialist Disneyland: inspiration after the "end of history" (http://www.wesjones.com/eoh.htm).



Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2013/jan/25/karl-marx-relevant-21st-century

Rusty Shackleford
31st January 2013, 19:27
The changing of the nature of the workplace is paramount to modern socialist thought methinks.

The changing political scene internationally is a major factor in consciousness but if it cannot be made relevant and tied to the day to day lives of workers in the US for example, it is simply posturing on international politics and events.

The transition from fordism to other manufacturing models is key when looking at industrial labor but also the question of service industry labor needs to be addressed.

I have a book i need to read at some point called "High Tech, Low Pay" by Sam Marcy written in the late 80s early 90s about "Saturnization" of manufacturing. (semi or full automation)


When it comes to politics, marxists can easily write about the goings on, but when it comes to labor, marxism seems to be lagging.

Core concepts and critiques are still very accurate, but the application of them may need an overhaul.

If anyone has resources on this please share! Im sure LibCom has some stuff on it. Ill probably surf through Kasama at some point if i remember to.

Questionable
31st January 2013, 19:40
Oh, so Marxism needs to be an intellectual tool instead of a revolutionary theory now?

I guess we were all doing it wrong.

Rusty Shackleford
31st January 2013, 19:53
Oh, so Marxism needs to be an intellectual tool instead of a revolutionary theory now?

I guess we were all doing it wrong.


Directed at me or the article?

Popular Front of Judea
31st January 2013, 19:59
"Socialist Disneyland". Reminds me of an Anarchy comic sequence where an alienated punk from the early 80's is frozen and awakes in a future anarcho-communist utopia. Needless to say it doesn't end well..

Questionable
31st January 2013, 21:05
Directed at me or the article?

The article, of course. I always find it funny when bourgeois economists admit the accuracy of Marx's theories but then immediately repudiate the role of the proletarian afterwards.

Hit The North
31st January 2013, 21:19
Oh, so Marxism needs to be an intellectual tool instead of a revolutionary theory now?

I guess we were all doing it wrong.


From the article:
Marxism in America needs to be more than an intellectual tool for mainstream commentators befuddled by our changing world. It needs to be a political tool to change that world.


Say whaa? Maybe you should have read the article to the end?