Liberalism and Marx:
An interview with Domenico Losurdo
Platypus Review 46 | May 2012
On March 17,
2012, Ross Wolfe and Pam Nogales of the Platypus Affiliated Society interviewed
Domenico Losurdo, the author, most recently, of Liberalism: A Counter-History (2011). What follows is an
edited transcript of their conversation. Full audio and video recordings
of the interview can be found by clicking the above links.
Ross Wolfe: How would you characterize the antinomy of
emancipation and de-emancipation in liberal ideology? From where did this logic
ultimately stem?
Domenico
Losurdo: I believe that this dialectic between
emancipation and de-emancipation is the key to understanding the history of
liberalism. The class struggle Marx speaks about is a confrontation between
these forces. What I stress is that sometimes emancipation and de-emancipation
are strongly connected to one another. Of course we can see in the history of
liberalism an aspect of emancipation. For instance, Locke polemicizes against
the absolute power of the king. He asserts the necessity of defending the
liberty of citizens against the absolute power of the monarchy. But on the
other hand, Locke is a great champion of slavery. And in this case, he acts as
a representative of de-emancipation. In my book, I develop a comparison between
Locke on the one hand and Bodin on the other. Bodin was a defender of the
absolute monarchy, but was at the same time a critic of slavery and
colonialism.
RW: The counter-example of Bodin is interesting. He
appealed to the Church and the monarchy, the First and Second Estates, in his
defense of the fundamental humanity of the slave against the “arbitrary power
of life and death” that Locke asserted the property-owner, the slave-master,
could exercise over the slave.
DL: Yes, in Locke we see the contrary. While
criticizing the absolute monarchy, Locke is a representative of emancipation,
but while celebrating or legitimizing slavery, Locke is of course a representative
of de-emancipation. In leading the struggle against the control of the absolute
monarchy, Locke affirmed the total power of property-owners over their
property, including slaves. In this case we can see very well the entanglement
between emancipation and de-emancipation. The property-owner became freer, but
this greater freedom meant a worsening of the conditions of slavery in general.
RW: You seem to vacillate on the issue of the move
towards compensated, contractual employment over the uncompensated, obligatory
labor that preceded it. By effectively collapsing these two categories into one
another—paid and unpaid labor—isn’t there a danger of obscuring the
world-historical significance of the transition to the wage-relationship as the
standard mode of regulating social production? Do you consider this shift,
which helped usher in the age of capitalism, a truly epochal and unprecedented
event? What, if any, emancipatory possibilities did capitalism open up that
were either unavailable or unthinkable before?
DL: It was Marx himself who characterized the
so-called “Glorious Revolution” of 1688–1689 as a coup d’état. Yes, the landed
aristocracy became free from the king, but in this way the landowners were able
to expropriate the peasants and inaugurate a great historical tragedy. In this
case, too, we can see this dialectic of emancipation and de-emancipation. After
the Glorious Revolution, the death penalty became very widespread. Every crime
against property, even minor transgressions, became punishable by death. We can
see that after the liberal Glorious Revolution the rule of the ruling class
became extremely terroristic.
RW: Insofar as the de-emancipation of the serfs led
to the development of an urban proletariat (since the peasants thus uprooted
were often forced to move to the cities, where they joined the newly emerging
working class), to what extent did this open up revolutionary possibilities
that didn’t exist before? Or was this simply a new form of unfreedom and
immiseration?
DL: Of course, you are right if you stress that the
formation of an urban proletariat creates the necessary conditions for a great
transformation of society. But I have to emphasize the point that this
possibility of liberation was not the program of the liberals. The struggle of
this new working class needed more time before starting to have some results.
In my view, the workingmen of the capitalist metropolis were not only destitute
and very poor, they were even without the formal liberties of liberalism.
Bernard De Mandeville is very open about the fact that to maintain order and
stability among the workers, the laws must be very strict, and that the death
penalty must be applied even in the absence of any evidence. Here too we can
speak of terroristic legislation.
I also describe the conditions in the workhouses as
approximating later internment camps and concentration camps. In the workhouses
there was no liberty at all. Not only was there no wealth, or material liberty;
there was no formal liberty either.
RW: You compile some disturbing passages from Locke,
Mandeville, and Smith in which they liken workers to horses and other beasts of
burden. You also offer a selection from one of Abbé Sieyès’s private notebooks
in which he refers to wage-laborers as “work machines.” Hobbes claimed that
there was a sensate understanding “common to Man and Beast,” and La Mettrie
famously wrote of the “machine-man.” Might this language reflect these
thinkers’ encounter with British and French materialism just as easily as it
might indicate deliberate dehumanization?
DL: With the dehumanization of the working class in
the liberal tradition, I don’t believe that this has to do with the
materialistic vision of the world. These liberal theorists, on the one hand,
dehumanized the working-man, while, on the other hand, they celebrated the
great humanity of the superior classes. I quote in my book a text by Sieyès, a
French liberal who played a considerable role in the French Revolution, in
which Sieyès dreams of the possibility of sexual relations between black men
and apes in order to create a new race of slave. That is not a materialistic
vision. On the contrary, it is a futuristic, idealistic, and eugenicist vision
to create a new race of workers who can increase productivity but who would be
forever obedient to their masters.
Pam C. Nogales
C.: In the seventeenth century, at least in England,
doesn’t private property become the grounds on which certain demands of liberty
can be made against the order of the king? Was it merely a historical necessity
that demands of liberty could only be made through this particular form of
private property? Or was this already a reactionary position to take, even in
the seventeenth century?
DL: I would continue to stress this entanglement of
emancipation and de-emancipation. The statement according to which men have the
right to think freely and convey their opinions is of course an expression of
an emancipatory process. But we must add that this class of property-owners,
once free of the control of the government, could impose a new regime of
control over their servants and slaves. In the first phase of the
bourgeois-liberal revolution, the servants were without even liberal liberty,
as well. I have quoted, for instance, that the inhabitants of the workhouses
were deprived of every form of liberty. The [indentured] servants who were
transferred to America, they were more like slaves. They were not modern
wage-laborers. For instance, Mandeville writes that the worker must attend
religious services. That is, they were not free in any sense of the word. On
the workhouses, I quote Bentham at length, who claimed to be a great reformer,
but was truthfully a great advocate of these workhouses. He envisioned the
formation of an “indigenous class” of workers born within these workhouses, who
would therefore be more obedient to their masters. This has nothing to do with
modern wage-workers.
Marx, arrested:
Brussels, 1848. Sketch by N. Khukov, 1930s.
PN: This gets back to the question of whether or not
capitalism offers new forms of freedom while simultaneously posing new
problems of unfreedom. On the one hand, we live in a most unfree moment.
One could highlight the historically unprecedented living conditions for
the worker in the crowded tenement houses of Manchester, or point out
that his employer is only interested in gaining profit and not in granting him
any form of freedom. But is the formation of a working class not at the
same time a historical transformation of the conception of a subject in
society that has implications beyond its manifestation in its present
moment? After all, the worker is not identical with his social activity. He, as
a bourgeois subject, has the right to
work. Does bourgeois right point beyond itself and is thus not
reducible to how it immediately appears?
DL: Of course I agree with you that some theorists
from the ruling class end up inspiring other classes that were not foreseen as
participants in liberal right. Consider Toussaint Louverture, the leader of the
slave revolution in Santo Domingo, which later became Haiti. How can we explain
this great revolution? We see in France theDeclaration of the Rights of Man.
In the original version of this document, the Rights of Man did not include
colonial peoples or the blacks. But we see Toussaint Louverture who read this
proclamation and claimed these rights for the blacks, as well. And we have this
great revolution as a result. This is not a spontaneous consequence of
liberalism, however. On the contrary, Toussaint Louverture was obliged to
struggle against the French liberals of the time, who admired the conditions
that obtained in the southern United States of America and strove to continue
the oppression of the black slaves. In Santo Domingo, the slaveholders were at
first positively impressed by the French Revolution. They thought this meant
freedom from the control of the king, such that they could now freely enjoy slavery,
and their property, the slaves. Toussaint Louverture drew the opposite
conclusion, and thus became the organizer of one of the greatest revolutions in
history.
PN: Concerning the radical inspiration for the
framework you set up between Toussaint and the French Revolution, the striking
thing about the Haitian Revolution is that it caused a division within France.
It was not simply Toussaint versus the French liberals; the Haitian Revolution
actually caused the French liberals to split and led to disarray. It raised
another problem: Insofar as France could militarily continue to defend itself
from counterrevolutionary forces in Europe, at this particular moment, it still
depended on colonial production. It therefore seems to me that the Haitian Revolution
posed the problem of the radicalism of liberalism straightforwardly and there
were a number of responses. Is it possible to call Toussaint a liberal because
he believed in the promises of liberalism?
DL: No! Toussaint was a Jacobin. Between the Jacobins
and the liberals there was a great deal of struggle. If we read all the authors
who are generally classified as liberal—for instance Constant, de Tocqueville,
and so on—they spoke very strongly against Jacobinism. For these liberal
authors, Jacobinism was something horrible. I don’t agree, therefore, with your
claim that there was a “split” within the liberal parties of France. Jacobinism
is in my interpretation a form of radicalism, because they appealed not only to
the liberation of the slaves “from above,” but struggled together with the
slaves in order to overthrow slavery. After the fall of the Jacobins in France,
the new government began to immediately work for the restoration of slavery.
The French slave-owners had acclaimed the first stage of the French Revolution,
since they thought they could then freely exercise control over their slaves.
After the advent of Jacobinism and the radicalization of the Revolution, the
liberals went to the United States and expressed their admiration.
RW: Could you elaborate on the historical and
conceptual distinction you draw between liberalism on the one hand, and
radicalism on the other?
DL: Even if we conceive of radicalism as the
continuation of liberalism, we should not forget that, for instance in the
United States, even the formal abolition of slavery was the consequence of a
terrible conflict, a war of secession. We don’t see a direct continuity between
liberalism and the abolition of slavery, because this liberation was only made
possible by a protracted Civil War. But Lincoln, too, was not a representative
of radicalism because he never appealed to the slaves to emancipate themselves.
Only in the final stage of the war of secession, in order to add more soldiers
in the struggle against the South, did Lincoln agree to let some black soldiers
fight.
It is another fact that in the history of liberalism,
Robespierre is not considered a liberal, but a strong enemy of liberalism. In
the French Revolution, it was Robespierre who abolished slavery, but only after
the great revolution in Haiti. He was then compelled to recognize that slavery
was over.
The author who makes the best impression on the issue
of slavery is Adam Smith. Smith was for a despotic government that would
forcibly abolish slavery. But Smith never thought of the slaves as catalysts of
their own liberation. So on the one hand, Adam Smith condemns and criticizes
slavery very harshly. But if we asked him what was in his eyes the freest
country of his time, in the final judgment, Smith answers that it is England.
If we look at the history of the American continents,
we can ask: Which was the most liberal country? I believe it was the U.S. But
now, if we ask the question: Which was the country that had the greatest
difficulty in the emancipation of the slaves? Again, it was the United States.
But if we consider the succession of emancipation in
the American continents, we see Haiti first, followed by the countries of Latin
America (Venezuela, Mexico, and so on), and only later the United States of
America. If we read the development of the world between the United States and
Mexico, in the middle of the nineteenth century, the United States—after
defeating Mexico, after annexing Texas—reintroduced slavery into these
territories where it had already been abolished. This, in my eyes, demonstrates
that we cannot consider the abolition of slavery as a consequence of
liberalism.
RW: How would you account for the admiration of Marx
for a figure like Lincoln, who created the conditions (through war) for the
emancipation of the slaves?
DL: Of course Marx was right in his admiration for
Lincoln. Lincoln was a great personality, and Marx had the merit to understand
that the abolition of slavery would bring about great progress. Why do I say
this? Because in utopian socialism, there were those who constructed this
argument: “Yes, capitalism is slavery. Black slavery is only another form of
slavery. Why should we choose between the Union and the Confederacy? We see in
North and South only two different forms of slavery.” Lassalle, for instance,
was of this opinion. Marx understood very well that these two different forms
of slavery—wage-slavery and slavery in its most direct form—were not
equivalent. The South was for the expansion of slavery.
Marx in 1848
PN: For Marx, what was really at stake in the Civil
War were the historical gains made by the bourgeois revolutions, on which any
proletarian revolution would have to depend. And insofar as liberalism in its
post-1848 moment had begun to undermine the promises of the bourgeois
revolutions, it was no longer revolutionary. Do you think that with the
relationship between Marx and the American Civil War, there was a certain
promise that, insofar as slavery could be abolished, bourgeois right could
potentially be radicalized?
DL: I am critical of some ideas of Marx, but not the
enthusiasm with which he greeted the struggle of Lincoln or the Northern Union.
In this case Marx was correct. But Marx spoke of the bourgeois revolutions as
providing political emancipation. Perhaps he didn’t see the aspect of
de-emancipation. We can make a comparison with the middle of the nineteenth
century: the U.S. and Mexico. In Mexico, no bourgeois revolution took place. In
the U.S. we must say that the American Revolution was a form of bourgeois revolution.
Comparing these two countries, we see that in Mexico, slavery was abolished. In
the U.S. slavery remained very strong. Why should we say that in the U.S. the
political emancipation was greater than in Mexico? I don’t see why.
RW: In explaining the manifold “exclusion clauses”
that restricted the application of bourgeois rights to certain privileged
groups or individuals, you use the old dichotomy of the “sacred” and “profane.”
According to this model, those fortunate enough to live inside the boundaries
of this “sacred space” at any given moment can be said to inhabit the
“community of the free,” while those who fall outside of its domain are
meanwhile relegated to the “profane space” of unfreedom. Why do you associate
freedom with sanctity, and unfreedom with profanity?
DL: In this religious analogy, the “sacred space”
is, of course, the space that is more highly valued than any other. With
liberal ideology, we see a religious attitude. But that isn’t the most
important point, because even in normal language, “sacred” has a more positive
meaning. Regardless of whether one is religious, when people speak of something
that is “sacred,” what this means is that this thing has a particular
importance.
RW: How do you account for the rise of nationalism, the
role it played in carving out the “sacred space” of the “community of the
free”? Nationalism goes virtually unmentioned in your account. Lost, then, is
the patriotic particularity that emerged opposite Enlightenment universality at
the outset of the eighteenth century. In your work on Heidegger, you draw on
the sociologist Tönnies’s distinction between “society” [Gesellschaft] and
“community” [Gemeinschaft] to explain the exclusivist connotations of the
ideology of the national or folk community (the Volksgemeinschaft promoted by
the Nazis).[1] Insofar as it displaced the spiritual energies
traditionally invested in religion to that of the nation, might this be the
root of the “sacred space” that you associate with the (national) “community of
the free”?
DL: Regarding “sacred space” and “profane space”: I
make a comparison with religion because religion proceeds in this way. Profane
derives from a Latin word. Fanum was the temple or church. Profanum was what
was outside the church. That is the distinction that we find already in the
first phase of religious consciousness. Liberalism proceeds in the same way—we
have the fanum, or temple, which is the space of the community of the free.
Profanum is for the others, those outside of this space.
Why do I use this formulation for the community of the
free? I don’t believe that the category of “individualism” is adequate to the
description of liberal society. “Liberalism” and “individualism” are
self-congratulatory categories. Why? If we consider individualism, for example,
as the theory according to which every individual man or woman has the right to
liberty, emancipation, and self-expression—that is not what we see in liberal
society. We have spoken of the different forms of exclusion, of colonial
peoples, of workingmen, and women. Therefore, this category is not correct.
RW: But is it liberal society or the national
community that is free? In your study on Heidegger, you distinguish between the
more universal category of “society,” the socius or Gesellschaft, and the more
particular category of “community,” the communitas or Gemeinschaft. Isn’t this
distinction useful here?
DL: If we consider the history of liberalism, we see
on the one hand a “community of the free” that tends to be transnational. But
on the other hand, we already see nationalism in this liberal society. For
instance, Burke speaks of “the English people,” a people in whose “blood” there
is a love of liberty. There is a celebration of the English people. The
ideology of nationalism was already present in liberalism. England—though not
only England—claimed to be a special nation, a nation involved in a project of
liberty. Of course in the twentieth century we have a new situation, where
Heidegger celebrates the German nation.
PN: Isn’t the transformation of concepts like
nationalism symptomatic of a deeper problem in liberalism itself? Doesn’t the
shift that takes place in 1848 indicate the conservative (and thus reactionary)
transformation of the liberal tradition, because a latent conflict within
bourgeois society was only now being historically manifested? Since you raised
the criticism of how Marx conceived of bourgeois revolutions, I would like to
talk about the relationship of liberalism to Marxism, specifically in the
moment of the mid-nineteenth century. To what extent would you say that the
success of a radical or Marxist conception of revolution be the negation of
liberal society, and to what extent would you say that it would be the
fulfillment of liberal society?
Maximilien Luce,
Une rue à Paris en Mai 1871 ou La commune, oil on canvas, 222.5 cm x 151 cm,
1903–1905 (Musée d’Orsay).
DL: One can find a new definition of liberalism and
say that the October Revolution of 1917 was a liberal revolution—why not? But
in normal language, the October Revolution is not considered a liberal
revolution. All the liberal nations of the world opposed the Bolshevik
Revolution.
Marx does not speak at any great length about
liberalism. He speaks about capitalism and bourgeois societies, which claimed
to be liberal. I criticize Marx because he treats the bourgeois revolutions
one-dimensionally, as an expression of political emancipation. Marx makes a
distinction between political emancipation and social emancipation. Social or
human emancipation will be, in Marx’s eyes, the result of proletarian
revolution. On the other hand, Marx says the political emancipation that is the
result of bourgeois revolution represents progress.
Again, I don’t accept this one-sided definition of
political emancipation, because it implied the continuation and worsening of
slavery. In my book I quote several contemporary U.S. historians who claim that
the American Revolution was, in reality, a “counter-revolution.” Why do I quote
these historians? They write that if we consider the case of the natives or the
blacks, their conditions became worse after the American Revolution. Of course
the condition of the white community became much better. But I repeat: We have
numerous U.S. historians who consider the American Revolution to be, in fact, a
counter-revolution. The opinion of Marx in this case is one-sided. Perhaps he
knew little about the conditions in America during the American Revolution. He
knew the War of Secession well, but perhaps the young Marx was not familiar
with the earlier history of the U.S.
Another example
of the one-sidedness of the young Marx can be found in On The Jewish
Question. He speaks in this text of the U.S. as a country of “accomplished
political emancipation.” In this case, his counter-example is France. In
France, he claimed there was discrimination based on wealth and opportunity.
This discrimination was disappearing, and was now almost non-existent, in the
U.S. But there was slavery in the U.S. at this time. Why should we say that the
U.S. during the time of slavery had “accomplished political emancipation”?
RW: “Radicalism,” as you have been defining it,
would be liberalism without exclusion. If one were to get rid of the division
between the “sacred space” and “profane space,” it would just be liberalism for
all. Insofar as radicalism purports to remove any distinction between those who
are inside and those outside the realm of freedom, and thereby bring everyone
into the “sacred space” of freedom, wouldn’t radicalism to some extent just be
universal liberalism?
DL: It is impossible to universalize in this way.
For instance, colonial wars were for the universalization of the condition of
the white slave-owners. That was the universality proclaimed by colonialism.
The universalization of liberal rights to excluded groups was not a spontaneous
consequence of liberalism, but resulted from forces outside liberalism. These
forces were, however, in some cases inspired by certain declarations, for
instance of the Rights of Men.
In speaking of the enduring legacy of liberalism, I
have never said that we have nothing to learn from liberalism. There two
primary components of the legacy of liberalism. First, and perhaps the most
important point: Liberalism has made the distinction between “sacred space” and
“profane space” that I have spoken about. But liberalism has the great
historical and theoretical merit of having taught the limitation of power
within a determined, limited community. Yes, it is only for the community of
the free, but still it is of great historical importance. On this score, I
counterpose liberalism to Marxism, and rule in favor of liberalism. I have
criticized liberalism very strongly, but in this case I stress the greater
merits of liberalism in comparison to Marxism.
Often, Marxism has spoken of the disappearance of
power as such—not the limitation of power, but its disappearance—the withering
of the state and so on. This vision is a messianic vision, which has played a
very negative role in the history of socialism and communism. If we think that
power will simply disappear, we do not feel the obligation to limit power. This
vision had terrible consequences in countries like the Soviet Union.
RW: So you believe that historical Marxism’s
theorization of the eventual “abolition” of the state, or the “withering away”
of the State—as Lenin, following Engels, put it—was misguided?
DL: Totally misguided!
RW: So do you feel that society can never
autonomously govern itself without recourse to some sort of external entity,
something like the state? Must the state always exist?
DL: I do not believe society can exist without
regulation, without laws. Something must ensure obedience to the laws, and in
this case the “withering away” of the state would mean the “withering away” of
rights, of the rule of law. Gramsci rightly says that civil society, too, can
be a form of power and domination. If we conceive the history of the United
States, the most oppressive forms of domination did not take the shape of state
domination, but came from civil society. The settlers in the American West
independently carried out the expropriation, deportation, and even
extermination in more extensive ways than the state. Sometimes, even if only
partially, the federal government has tried to place limits on this phenomenon.
Representing civil society as the expression of liberty—this is nonsense that
has nothing to do with real Marxism.
Marx himself speaks of the despotism in the capitalist
factory, which is not exercised by the state, but rather by civil society. And
Marx, against this despotism, proposed the interference of the state into the
private sphere of civil society. He advocated state intervention in civil society
in order to limit or abolish this form of domination, in order to limit by law
the duration and condition of the work in the factory.
RW: That’s the famous passage where Marx describes
industrial capitalism as “anarchy in production, despotism in the workshop.” In
other words, haphazard production-for-production’s-sake alongside this kind of
militarized discipline of industrial labor. But insofar as Marx conceives the
modern state as the expression of class domination, the domination of the
ruling class over the rest of society, do you believe that a classless society
is possible? Because it would seem unclear why a classless society would need a
state, if the state is only there to express class domination.
DL: On the one hand, Marx speaks along the lines you
just laid out. In many texts, Marx and Engels say that the state is the
expression of one class’s domination over the other. But at other times, they
speak of another function of the state. They write that the state functions to
implement guarantees between the different individuals of the ruling class, the
individual bourgeois. And I don’t understand why this second function of the
state would disappear. If we have a unified mankind, in this case too there is
the necessity of guarantees between individuals within this unified mankind.
Furthermore, we are not allowed to read the thesis of
Marx and Engels in a simplistic way. Sometimes they speak of the “withering
away” of the state. In other circumstances, however, they speak of the
“withering away” in its actual political form. These two formulations are very
different from one another. But in the history of the communist movement, only
the first definition was present, the most simplistic definition: the
“withering away” of the state as such. The other formulation is more adequate:
the “withering away” of the state in terms of today’s political form.
RW: And the other great legacy of liberalism?
DL: The other great legacy of liberalism exists in
its understanding of the benefits of competition. And here I am thinking of the
market, too, about which I speak positively in my book. We must distinguish
different forms of the market. For a long time, the market implied a form of
slavery. The slaves were merchandise in the market. The market can assume very different
forms. Not that the market is the most important fact. We cannot develop a
post-capitalist society, at least for a long time to come, without some form of
competition. And this is another great legacy that we can learn from
liberalism. |P
Transcribed by Ross Wolfe
[1].Domenico Losurdo, Heidegger and the Ideology of War:
Community, Death, and the West (Humanity Press, Amherst NY, 2001).
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