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[Marxism] Left Forum 2005
This is a report on Left Forum 2005
(<http://www.2005leftforum.org/>http://www.2005leftforum.org/), an academic
conference that is a pole of attraction for the people who contribute to
journals like New Left Review, Monthly Review, Science and Society,
Socialist Register, New Politics, etc.
Essentially it is a continuation of the Socialist Scholars Conference which
suffered a split last year after Eric Canepa, the long-time conference
coordinator, was fired by the steering committee. A near majority resigned
in protest and launched the Left Forum. The program is identical to that of
the Socialist Scholars Conference. There is a mixture of panels on the "new
imperialism", the state of the labor movement, Marxism and philosophy or
psychology, ecology, etc. The plenary sessions are dominated by celebrities
such as Barbara Ehrenreich or Cornel West. I make it a habit to stay away
from them.
Although there has not been an airing out of the politics that led to the
split, it arose out of differences over Yugoslavia and other "humanitarian
interventions." Canepa had been accused of being too soft on Milosevic
sympathizers and other "hard leftists" by Bogdan Denitch and other steering
committee members whose Dissent Magazine type politics favored an even more
explicit orientation to the Democratic Party and liberal imperialism. I had
heard that they favored a kind of synthesis between their kind of
socialism, such as it is, and the forces around the Dean campaign,
moveon.org, etc.
It is a little hard for me to take seriously the idea the Left Forum people
are pro-Milosevic or Saddam Hussein because one of their prime movers is
Stanley Aronowitz, a long time leader of DSA, America's leading social
democratic organization. My guess is that they correctly assessed the
attack on Canepa as an attack on the independent and radical character of
the Socialist Scholars Conference, despite its flaws. In other words, the
fact that the Left Forum happened and the fact that it was well-attended
(as far as I can tell) is important for the left. In their magnanimity, the
Left Forum organizers even allowed Bogdan to speak at the closing plenary,
curse his eyes.
As has been my tradition for the past several years, I attend only one day
of the conference since it is not worth an entire weekend to me. Basically,
a lot of the panels involve people saying the same thing that they have
been saying in one form or another for years. If you've heard Leo Panitch
making the case that US imperialism is not declining, there is no need to
hear it for the fourth or fifth time no matter how many accolades he has
received. Two or three times should suffice.
The other thing that bugs me is the utter inability of proles like me to
make comments during the discussion period for more than a minute or two.
After hearing 3 speakers go on for an hour or so, you lose the motivation
to make a 2 minute response. No matter how you slice it, these conferences
replicate the culture of the academy with its refereed journals, its
dissertation boards and its mad scramble for tenure and status.
That being said, the three panels I attended today were fairly interesting.
They started off with a 10am debate on Iraq between Anthony Arnove and
Tariq Ali on one side and Joanne Landy and Stephen Shalom on the other.
Although all four panelists were in favor of immediate withdrawal from
Iraq, the nub of the debate was how to regard "the resistance". Arnove and
Ali supported it, while Landy and Shalom staked out a "third camp" position
in tune with New Politics magazine, where they both serve as editors.
Arnove, a member of the ISO, referred to the racism and Islamophobia that
was infecting sections of the antiwar movement. He is of course correct.
Ali made the essential point that it would have been a disaster if the
occupation had not encountered an armed revolt. It would have allowed Bush
to gloat over his "great victory" for democracy.
Shalom and Landy clearly despise the people who are shooting at American
troops. For Shalom, the mass demonstrations of the kind that took place in
Baghdad last week are the only legitimate form of resistance. Landy
circulates petitions blaming the resistance for the murder of the Iraqi
trade unionist. Since nobody has a clue who killed him, it is disingenuous
in the extreme to demand that the antiwar movement take a stand against
such killings as if the culprits were ex-Baathists. Nobody can be sure at
this point who killed him.
In a way, the debate reflected the somewhat "soft" character of the Left
Forum, despite claims to the contrary by Bogdan Denitch and company. Tariq
Ali, the "street fighting man", spent a lot of energy last year urging a
vote for John Kerry, who attacked George W. Bush from the right on the war
in Iraq. Although I have nothing but praise for the ISO on its involvement
in the Nader campaign and for its willingness to stick up for the freedom
fighters in Iraq (so there, Bogdan Denitch!!), the exchange between him and
his detractors seemed confusing at times. Landy, who achieved some
notoriety for her anti-Soviet agitation in the 1970s and 80s, bragged about
her refusal to take sides in the Cold War. In response, Arnove made the
obligatory denunciation of "Soviet imperialism". Landy also rubbed his nose
in the fact that he signed one of her stupid fucking petitions during the
first Gulf War about how "we the undersigned are opposed to both George
Bush and Saddam Hussein." I hope the comrades in the ISO have learned from
the experience. In fact, I expect they have since none of them have signed
Landy's petition supporting the counter-revolution in Cuba.
For a real debate to take place, it would have been necessary to include
somebody like Jim Petras. Petras even goes farther than me in taking up the
cause of the USA's latest bogeyman. I imagine that Joanne Landy would never
speak from the same platform as him after he denounced her Cuba petition
and her past membership in the Council on Foreign Relations.
In his closing remarks, Tariq Ali really made a fool out of Stephen Shalom
who kept baiting the hard left about whether it should have backed Pol Pot
because the USA was attacking Cambodia. Ali dryly observed that the only
reason that the Khmer Rouge had a seat in the UN for 12 years is that the
USA and Great Britain resisted all attempts to unseat it.
The next panel at 12pm was an examination of "fascism". One presenter, an
editor of Cultural Logic who came up to me to say hello (I am on the
editorial board--please keep that a secret), had some wittily dismissive
things to say about Philip Roth's new novel, which imagines President
Charles Lindbergh instituting fascism in the USA. Michel Warshawsky
explained why Israel was not fascist. But the most interesting if muddled
presentation came from a North Carolina A&M professor who tried to
resuscitate the "3rd period" ideology of the early 1930s, citing R. Palme
Dutt, and contemporary American authors (including Thomas Frank) who dwell
on the ultraright. He believed that loss of hegemony might provoke a
fascist takeover in the USA rather than a need to repress an unruly working
class.
I took the opportunity during the discussion period to present my own views
on fascism in about two minutes or so. Fortunately I am a very fast speaker.
I started off by noting that fascism is about repression, while the
rightwing in the USA, particularly the Christian right, is about
self-repression. Thomas Frank's book is basically about working class
people who repress themselves. They deny themselves alcohol, pornography
and other nice things while happily kissing the hand of the boss or
politician who cuts their wages, benefits and social safety net. If these
people ever stop repressing themselves and begin to bite the hand that
slaps them, then there might come a time when the boss is required to
organize fascist bands. That time is nowhere near. We are passing through a
period of intense quiescence, not class struggle. That could change, of
course, but we should not be chicken littles. That's not the role of Marxism.
I also noted that after Great Britain lost its empire and world hegemonic
status, it did not see fit to organize fascist bands. It just muddled along
as junior partner to US imperialism. Since the USA models itself on the
British Empire rather than the Third Reich, perhaps we can see our own
future in Great Britain's slow steady decline. Of course, if you are a
member of the British ruling class, things are not really that bad one way
or the other.
Speaking of slow, steady decline, the last panel I attended was on Jared
Diamond's "Collapse". I heard presentations by Neil Smith, a CUNY professor
with a fine Scottish burr and John Bellamy Foster who described Diamond's
book as "terrible".
After the discussion ended, I was approached by a Greek Marxist who is on
the editorial board of one of the country's leading journals. He told me
that he is a regular reader of the Marxmail archives and finds the
discussion here very interesting. So keep up the good work, Comrade Organic
Intellectuals!!
Louis Proyect
Marxism list: www.marxmail.org
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- Thread context:
- Re: [Marxism] Cultural Logic clarification, (continued)
- [Marxism] Re: Left Forum 2005,
Yoshie Furuhashi Sun 17 Apr 2005, 00:37 GMT
- [Marxism] John T. McTernan,
Louis Proyect Sun 17 Apr 2005, 00:33 GMT
- [Marxism] Left Forum 2005,
Louis Proyect Sat 16 Apr 2005, 23:00 GMT
- [Marxism] Fw: E.P. Thompson and the 'New Left',
Graham M. Sat 16 Apr 2005, 21:56 GMT
- [Marxism] Michael Moore asked me Wassup?,
Brian Shannon Sat 16 Apr 2005, 20:47 GMT
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