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[A-List] A conference on imperialism
- To: The A-List <a-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Subject: [A-List] A conference on imperialism
- From: Louis Proyect <lnp3@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 09 Dec 2003 09:25:30 -0500
- User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.0; en-US; rv:1.0.1) Gecko/20020823 Netscape/7.0
Last Friday's conference on imperialism at Columbia University was held
at the palatial Casa Italiana, a recently restored edifice that was
entirely appropriate to the occasion in a distaff fashion. As my eyes
wandered about the auditorium during a particularly boring talk, I had
to chuckle inwardly at all the symbols of the Roman Empire that
festooned the wall, such as the fresco of Romulus and Remus, the two
legendary founders of Rome, being suckled by a she-wolf. If a similar
legend were created for the new Roman Empire, it would probably depict
George W. Bush and Dick Cheney being suckled by a rabid vampire bat.
A student neoconservative in the Daily Spectator had attacked the
conference in terms that have become familiar in the David Horowitz
neo-McCarthyite era:
"Columbia's conference on U.S. imperialism in the 21st century this
Friday, so soon after the deadly suicide bombings in Turkey, shows how
willful ignorance is rotting the core of this University's intellectual
life."
http://makeashorterlink.com/?I1A422CB6
The conference was the brainchild of the late Edward Said, who turned
the organizing over to Bashir Abu-Manneh and Hamid Dabashi, a couple of
left-leaning professors. Dabashi's opening remarks consisted largely of
bitter complaints about the impotence of the academic left and the
conference's failure to include any of the millions of disenfranchised
and super-exploited members of the colonial world in whose name it spoke.
All in all, this reminded me of the complaint I used to hear all the
time on the Marxism list that preceded this one. Lou Godena, a Maoist
CPUSA member who had graduated from Harvard University in the 1970s,
always asked where were the workers on the Marxism list. My reaction was
identical in both cases. If that kind of representation were ready to
manifest itself, we wouldn't be wasting time at conferences or on
listservs. More likely, we'd be dodging bullets in street combat with
fascist bands.
Dabashi has been fingered on Daniel Pipes's redbaiting Campus Watch
website. His response to this can be read at:
http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article747.shtml where he says, among
other things:
"A whole culture and an entire civilization have been systematically
maligned by a succession of illiterate charlatans--all the way from
jaundiced orientalist like Bernard Lewis to failed academics like Daniel
Pipes. They can no longer get away with it. They are now angry because
they no longer have a monopoly of public forums. This is not the United
States of even two decades ago. Massive labor migrations over the last
couple of decades have permanently changed the demographic constitution
of the US. The courageous and imaginative work of dissident
intellectuals like my dear and distinguished colleague here at Columbia,
Edward Said, has enabled a whole generation of defiant voices that have
for ever changed the shape and vision of civil discourse and public
engagement. As late as two years ago these shallow shells and empty
voices thought they can force Columbia to fire Edward Said, its most
glorious achievement in its entire history, its claim to fame. From
every magnificent page that Edward Said has written a defiant book is
now in press. These people are old, very old, in the very fabric of
their claim to an intellect."
The first panel was on "The Politics and Economics of Expansion".
David Harvey presented ideas drawn from his recent "The New
Imperialism". He dwelled at length on the oil connection, especially the
US's need to maintain control over resources that would be the lifeblood
of China in the coming decades.
Although not quite expressed in the same sweeping terms as Immanuel
Wallerstein, Harvey views the USA as a declining hegemon. He made the
case that US postwar hegemony rested on 4 institutions: industrial
production, finance, the military and cultural production. With the
decline of US industry and recent challenges to the dollar, it would
appear that military power is the sole guarantee of US hegemony today.
This would explain the war in Iraq. By maintaining a tight grip on
petroleum, the US would be able to dictate terms to its oil-starved rivals.
The only problem with this scenario according to Harvey is that the USA
has overprojected its military power. It is one thing to rain bombs on a
defenseless population from a B-52. It is another to actually impose an
occupation on a restive population. Unfortunately, Harvey did not feel
comfortable with the implications of immediate withdrawal from Iraq,
since the power vacuum would leave chaos and civil war in its wake. He
failed to recognize, however, the importance of an Iraqi victory for
global struggles against US imperialism. If fedayeen armed with nothing
but rocket-propelled grenades can defeat the most advanced military
power in world history, then liberation struggles will be encouraged. In
that sense, the domino theory was always correct.
Harvey was followed by Gérard Duménil, a French economist who is deeply
involved with empirical studies of production and income that are
intended to corroborate Marxist economic categories such as the falling
rate of profit. (http://www.cepremap.ens.fr/~levy/index.htm)
His main point is that neoliberalism is mainly involved with redividing
the pie shared by boss and worker in order to give the former a bigger
slice at the expense of the latter. Before WWII, the US rich enjoyed 16
percent of national income. This was reduced to 8 percent in the postwar
period but has recently returned to 15 percent under the two-party
attack on wages and living standards.
Globally, increased exploitation levels have matched this pattern.
Nearly half of US corporate income comes from overseas operations that
are to the disadvantage of 3rd world countries. Since raw material
prices have been dropping to historical levels, the industrialized
countries are virtually robbing countries like Guatemala and Nigeria.
This asymmetric relationship is sustained by the power of US finance,
which imposes debt regimes on 3rd world countries. Closely related to
this predatory relationship is a deepening consumerist logic in advanced
capitalist countries, which is made possible by cheap consumer goods
manufactured in 3rd world countries.
Duménil considers his analysis to be at odds with Harvey's "declinism",
but both positions are held at such a high level of geopolitical
abstraction that it is difficult to see how they translate into terms
that can actually be validated empirically. During a break I told my
friend Ahmet Tonak, the eminent Marxist economist and all-round nice
guy, that both Duménil and Harvey left out of the equation the most
important aspect of US hegemony, namely the collapse of the USSR. I
would maintain that if there was still a USSR, the USA would be much
more reluctant to see its industrial base dwindle to such a degree. As
Dick Gephardt told an interviewer the other night in the course of
defending steel tariffs, without a steel industry you can't defend the
country--which really should be translated into: "Without steel, you
can't rule the world".
Ellen Meiksins Wood spoke next and repeated arguments she has made
elsewhere in connection with her new book "Empire of Capital". Since I
have described them elsewhere
(http://www.columbia.edu/~lnp3/mydocs/origins/Wood_interview.htm), I
will not comment on them here except to say that she has become almost
monomaniacal around the question of tieing an analysis of contemporary
imperialism to the Brenner thesis.
Following Wood was Robert Buzzanco, a professor at the U. of Houston who
made much of "divisions in the ruling class" over Iraq. He is the author
of a book on dissent in the military over Vietnam, which was not about
angry black privates fragging white lieutenants, but Generals worrying
over and allegedly resisting LBJ and Nixon's plans for escalating the
war. In a nutshell, Buzzanco is pushing for an alliance between the
antiwar movement and bourgeois politicians although he didn't have the
gumption to come out and say that in as many words.
After lunch there was a panel on "Imperial Geopolitical Relations" that
was about as high-level as the morning's session.
The first presenter was British professor Peter Gowan who is a
specialist on competition between Europe and the USA, especially in the
financial arena. Apparently he was in the Trotskyist movement briefly
like a lot of the editors and contributors to New Left Review.
Unfortunately, except for Tariq Ali, none seems to have the fire and
passion of Ernest Mandel who recruited most of them.
Gowan made the point that capitalism can never be a truly unified global
system, since there are so many conflicts between individual states.
Instead you have elements of cooperation and competition between them.
An example would be the refusal of Europe to accept a US proposal on
Merger and Acquisition standards. However, in my view this is not the
same sort of thing that Lenin was grappling with in 1914.
He also talked about the role of the USA in establishing a unipolar
system after WWII that would provide for the security of capitalist
states trying to forestall socialist revolution or military threats from
the USSR. A key element of the post-WWII order was transforming Japan
and Germany into major industrial powers. This combination of military
and economic ties provided fertile soil for the expansion of capitalism
until the recent period.
With the collapse of the USSR, the need for US military security would
seem to have disappeared. However, the US military has not shrunk at
all. For Gowan, this points to the need for the USA to re-establish the
kind of primacy it once enjoyed. By asserting its military power in
Iraq, it establishes its place in the pecking order as other states are
reduced to vassalage status.
Gowan believes that a Dean or Kucinich presidency would stop this trend.
I think that he is kidding himself. Kucinich will never become a
candidate and Dean is no Kucinich. He is instead a conventional
Democratic Party liberal who would return the USA to the kind of
multilateralism that Clinton embodied. As Gowan himself admitted, even
Clinton sought to re-establish US primacy.
Gilbert Achcar spoke next. Although he is highly regarded in some
circles, I found his presentation discursive to the point of being
meandering and could not keep track of what he was trying to say.
Someday I will try to read one of his articles to see what the hubbub is
about.
He was followed by Boston University professor Irene Gendzier who said
that the war occurred because people were not aware of certain
government documents that could be found in less-traveled sections of
the library. These documents show that--believe it or not--Saddam
Hussein and the USA were the best of friends in the early 1980s. If
Americans knew about this, they never would have allowed the government
to invade Iraq. I should mention that Jared Israel hails from Boston as
well.
Rashid Khalidi spoke next about what was new in the Bush "turn", namely
the exercise of preemptive strikes. He was also a guest on the Charlie
Rose show only 2 nights earlier where he appeared alongside the
atrocious Thomas Friedman, who needs to get rid of that awful moustache.
Maybe he should chop his head off to do the trick. As Edward Said
professor of Mideastern affairs at Columbia, Khalidi is an eloquent
spokesman for Palestinian rights and Moslem people in general. This has
earned him a spot on Daniel Pipes's website as well about which he said:
"It is a McCarthyite attempt to silence the very few voices that speak
out about the Middle East, and to impose by fear a uniformity of view on
the campus debate. This monitoring of the classroom is reminiscent of
the tactics used by police-state dictatorships. It intends further to
delegitimize and marginalize the field of Middle East studies."
full: http://www.electronicintifada.net/v2/article718.shtml
In the final panel on "Solidarity and Anti-Imperialism", I had the great
pleasure to hear Mike Davis for the first time in my life. Davis is
somewhat notorious for accepting speaking engagements and not showing
up. He is a somewhat ascetic and mournful looking man in his early 60s
with close-cropped gray hair and beard, looking for all the world like a
monk or Irish Catholic priest.
His talk was a model for these types of gathering and put just about
every other speaker to shame. He tried to explain the importance of a
shift in demographics in the 3rd world from the countryside to the city.
In the early days of the colonial struggle, the fight was mainly in the
countryside and peasant-based. The city might have supplied the
intelligentsia but not the fighters. A partial explanation was the class
nature of the city, which put many inhabitants into compromised
positions as servants and soldiers of the colonizers.
This has begun to change drastically in the late 20th century as
transformations in the countryside drive people into cities like Mexico
City, Cairo, and Jakarta. But they are not absorbed into the working
class as they were in Engels time when he wrote "Conditions of the
Working Class in England". They constitute a major portion of the
"informal economy" and subsist by begging, peddling and petty crime.
Despite their failure to develop class bonds, there are strong bonds
based on earlier traditional patterns of the village. The 'colonias' of
Mexico City are one example; the Shiite slums in Baghdad are another.
These vast slums will be important arenas of revolutionary struggle, but
not in a conventional Marxist sense. Ideological hybrids will
characterize many of the movements that are churned up.
I expect that Davis's talk will appear in print at some point. When it
does, I will surely alert comrades to this.
Akeel Bilgrami gave a rather low-keyed talk on the clash of
civilizations. He was followed by Francis Fox Piven, a CUNY professor
and DSA figure, who gave what amounted to a Nation Magazine editorial
from sketchy notes. Highly disappointing. The last speaker was Rahul
Mahajan who castigated the left for not being sufficiently
anti-imperialist. Unfortunately, Mahajan has defended UN occupation of
Iraq in violation of his own professed principles.
All in all, a demonstration of the best and the worst of the academic left.
--
The Marxism list: www.marxmail.org
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