The Crisis of Liberalism
After
the catastrophe of World War One intellectuals had become disillusioned with
the philosophical beliefs and the political ideals that we associate with
liberal government:
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Locke’s social contract and the doctrine of natural rights
(In practice bourgeois business interests
dominated liberal government. Political freedom was seen as justification for
the control of capital by an increasingly small group of powerful people. Liberal
governments had also failed to deal decisively with the social consequences
of industrial capitalism. Governments refused to regulate the violent rise
and fall of the world economy; many craftspeople also struggled to adjust to
a new economy in which their old skills were no longer useful.)
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The innate goodness of humans
(Nationalist movements had unleashed irrational
passions, and the Great War had revealed no limit for man’s capacity for
cruelty and violence. Philosophers like Nietzsche glorified the irrational
and mocked the weakness of traditional moral belief. Evolutionary biologists like Darwin argued
that humans were no different in kind than the animals. Not merely did they
propose a purely physical origin of mankind, but they argued that there is no
moral dimension to evolution. Psychologists like Freud suggested that
irrational forces beyond our control or understanding drive human
behavior.)
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the efficacy of reason
The great optimists of the Enlightenment had
placed their faith in the ability of reason to engineer a new and better
society. Adam Smith had argued that the competition generated by the pursuit
of self-interest would reward human industry and create a more wealthy and
equitable society. Yet the lower
classes suffered in terrible living conditions, and their leaders doubted
that even if reform were enacted, it could not begin to address the severity
of the problems of poverty. The competition between national states had lead
to brutal and dehumanizing imperialist campaigns and an arms race that
resulted in the catastrophe of world war.
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science’s promise of a new utopia
Instead of improved quality of life, the new
technologies had created weapons of mass destruction: the machine gun, tanks,
poison gas, the airplane. Military leaders had used
these weapons indiscriminately resulting in the deaths not only of millions
of soldiers but also significant segments of the civilian population.
The Rise of New
Political Ideologies
New political movements on both the left and the
right rose to challenge the legitimacy of liberal government that had become enmired in a worldwide depression.
Fascism (the challenge to liberalism from the right)
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Fascist
The word derives from the Italian word fasces-
the bundle of rods that a Roman dictator wielded as a symbol of his absolute
power during a time of emergency.
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The Spread of Fascism
Fascist governments seized power first in Italy
and then in country after country throughout Central and Eastern Europe.
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The Roots of Fascism in Late Romantic Thought
Fascists rejected the Enlightenment belief in
reason in favor of the Romantic exaltation of vital, creative life force
expressed in powerful emotions and in action. They believed that reason
enfeebled the will. Unlike earlier Romantics, the fascists did not believe in
the imagination’s power to liberate the individual; rather they exalted a
national, increasingly racial identity.
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Fascism: the Rebellion of the Sons vs. the Fathers
Fascists sought the overthrow of impotent
parliamentary forms of government with their mediocre (and aged) leaders who
would be replaced by young, virile and dynamic leaders who possessed the will
to take decisive action.
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The New Nationalism
Fascists promoted a new
form of nationalism (that grew out of late Romantic thought)
o As opposed to liberal
movements that aimed to secure individual rights and create autonomous
states, fascist movements sacrificed political liberty to dreams of national
greatness and the promise of imperial power.
o Social Darwinists denounced ethnic and
cultural minorities (such as gypsies and Jews) and created a new nationalist
cult revering ancestors and the sacred bond between the people (the Volk) and
their national blood, soil, and mythic past.
o Fascists were the first
modern politicians to tap the vast potential of mass media to
manipulate the beliefs of the people. They used film, poster art, and huge
mass meetings to promote adulation of the party and its demagogic leaders.
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The Fascist Political Coalition
Fascists formed a political coalition (frequently
glued together with racist ideology) of the military, the landholding
aristocracy, the clergy, and big industrialists. They sought support among
the masses of peasants and the lower middle class (the petit- bourgeoisie).
They found support among those groups that had been most disturbed by the
changing economics of the industrial age.
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Fascist Anti-Communism
Fascists were united by their fear and hatred of
the emerging proletariat. They were able to take power primarily due to the
fear that the Russian Revolution would spread to Central Europe.
The Fascist Inversion of Enlightenment Beliefs
Human Equality: racism
Rule of Law: glorification
of spontaneous action and violence
Cosmopolitan Brotherhood: A Nation of ‘Volk’ willing to expel and if
necessary exterminate aliens.
Individual Rights: Collective Identity: an elite core of party initiates surround a demagogic
leader.
Marxism
(the challenge to liberalism from the left)
Socialism in Spain
In Spain, the socialists hailed primarily from
the industrial region around Madrid and from the Basque industrial cities on
the Northern Coast. The Union General de Trabajadores
(UGT) was organized in 1879. Unlike orthodox Marxists, the socialists in this
union believed that political actions such as strikes should be accompanied
by efforts to reform the government through parliamentary methods. After the
Russian Revolution of 1917, the UGT voted not to join the Third Internationale. The socialist intellectuals of the UGT
enabled the Republican- Socialist coalition to form which took power in 1936-
sparking the Civil War.
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Origins of Marxist Thought in Enlightenment
Philosophy
Marxist political
philosophy grew out of the same core Enlightenment beliefs from which
liberalism originated.
o The essential goodness of human
nature
o The belief in the power of
reason to perfect society
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Social Rights over Political Rights
Marxists rejected liberal government’s protection
of individual rights at the expense of social justice.
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Violent Revolution
Marxists believed that social justice could never
be achieved through reform. Only violent revolution could bring the working
class to power and destroy the structure of capitalism.
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History as Class Struggle
Marxists believed that class struggle and violence
were the essential vehicles of social change and progress.
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Socio-Economic Environment Determines Identity
Where liberals believed that the individual could
overcome poverty through education and the development of self-discipline,
Marxists argued that the individual alone could not determine his own
destiny. Real social change could only be achieved through the transformation
of the environment itself.
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Dialectical Materialism
o Marxists held to a
strictly materialist philosophy. They rejected all metaphysical and religious
idealism. They argued that people should struggle to change the world, not to
transcend it.
o Marxists held that
historical progress is not random but can be understood through rational
principles.
o Marxists believe that
existence precedes identity. Man is defined by the socio-economic environment
(not liberal rights, not national identity, not religious belief, not ethnic
culture).
o Marxists argued that
technological advances in the ways that goods are produced and wealth is
distributed drive historical change.
o Marxists that
technological change creates class struggle. New social classes emerge and
history proceeds when opposing classes clash.
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The Stages of History
§ Slavery: slave owner vs.
land owner
·
Technological change: the hand mill, loose yoke, plow
§ Feudalism: aristocracy vs.
bourgeoisie
·
Power machinery
§ Capitalism: bourgeoisie
vs. industrial worker
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The computer?
§ Socialism: the final stage
of history
Leninism
Leninism in Spain
In Spain the Leninist faction among the socialists
organized as the Spanish Communist Party (CP). They functioned under the
direct orders of the central party in Moscow. During the Civil War, as the
Republic’s war effort depended more and more upon support from the Soviet
Union, the Communists sought to oust more moderate socialists from positions
of power and refused any compromise with the powerful anarchist party, the
CNT.
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Interventionism
Unlike Marx, who believed that the forces of
history would lead inevitably to a successful worker’s revolution, Lenin
believed that change would come only through the intervention of a political elite that would educate and lead the
masses to revolution.
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The dictatorship of the proletariat
Lenin argued that the liberal-capitalist phase of
history could be by-passed in undeveloped countries like Russia through a
political stage that he described as ‘the dictatorship of the proletariat’.
In this phase, the revolutionary elite would seize power and then force the
country through its capitalist phase of industrial development. Once the
country had developed an industrial infrastructure, the need for
authoritarian control would eventually decrease, and the worker’s utopia
would be realized.
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Hard Bolshevism (vs. the soft Menshevik belief in socialism through reform)
o Bolsheviks criticized
earlier revolutionaries’ soft ‘petit-bourgeois’ morality. They argued that
change could only be achieved through the disciplined denial of compassion.
o The Bolsheviks were
cold-blooded, opportunistic, disciplined, scientific, patient and fanatical.
They insisted upon military discipline and absolute obedience to orders from
above.
o Bolsheviks believed that
the revolutionary goal was the only good. Any act that contributed to this
end was therefore good.
o Bolsheviks mistrusted any
democratic spontaneity and insisted upon the necessity of the party elite’s
absolute leadership.
o Bolsheviks were also
master manipulators of mass politics:
§ Constant agitation and
manipulation of the masses
§ Emotional sloganeering
“Land, Bread, and Peace”
§ No institutional role for
the popular will
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International Revolution
o Bolshevik ideology held
enormous appeal to peoples in the undeveloped countries which had been
exploited by imperialism
o The notion of a bold leap
past the bourgeois phase of development into industrial modernism appealed to
3rd World revolutionaries.
o Bolshevik ideology
combined socialism with a strong anti-Western message: throwing off the
chains of imperialism.
o In 1919 the Bolshevik
government formed the Comintern: a branch of
government devoted to the export of the revolution to the liberal West. The
Bolsheviks financed the development of revolutionary cells that aggressively
subverted liberal democracy.
Anarchism
(notes
from The Spanish Republic and the Civil War (1965) Gabriel Jackson
(pp. 17-21))
Anarchism in Spain
The other mass working class movement to arise in
the late nineteenth century was anarchism. In Spain, anarchism gained more
support than socialism- particularly in the region of Catalonia, and this
split in the left would eventually lead to fighting as the Republican cause
unraveled during the Civil War.
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Anarchism vs. Socialism
Anarchism and socialism share the same purpose:
the creation of a collective social system. They both look to the industrial
workers to lead the revolution. However, socialists organized their movement
from above while anarchists opposed any authority and believed that power
should arise from the workers themselves. Socialist leaders demand strict
discipline from the workers. The revolutionary elite calls
the shots: where and when strikes or demonstrations should be taken.
Socialists also believed that workers’ goals could be met through the reform
process: compromise with the liberals was possible. Anarchists opposed any
effort at reform; they opposed any centralized leadership. They believed that
their aims could be achieved through a general strike that will topple the government.
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Anarchism and the Ancient Spanish Fuero
Anarchists sought the destruction of the state’s
central authority. They did not theorize about the form of government that
would replace it beyond asserting that power should flow up from decentralized
local organizations. This concept of the revolutionary commune as the basic
unit of society appealed to many Spaniards because the ancient institution of
the village fuero was organized along
collective lines. The village people would share firewood, pasture land, and
farm the ancient church lands together. Fishermen in Catalonia collectively
owned the ships and nets, and they shared profits together. Anarchism
exercised a religious fascination upon the people: its leaders were
charismatic idealists, and the movement as a whole has been compared to
primitive Christianity. The coming general strike loomed like Judgment Day.
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The CNT in Catalonia
The Confederacion
Nacional de Trabajo
(CNT) was formed in 1911 in Barcelona (in the NW province of Catalonia). This
anarcho-syndicalist union of factory workers organized itself according to
the principles of the fuero. There were no
degrees of membership according to skill. Their leaders were unpaid, and they
asked for no dues. Their idealistic vision sought the creation of a classless
society in which human equality would be realized. Despite the millenarian
character of this ideology, the loose organization of the CNT enabled a
violent terrorist wing to develop. Three Spanish Prime Ministers were killed
by anarchist bombs. Also, the loose organization enabled the police to
infiltrate this organization easily.
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The FAI
During the early 1920’s in Catalonia, a series of
terrorist attacks brought down the hammer of the government, and a power
struggle for leadership of the CNT took place between advocates of violence
and advocates of union actions. The suppression of strikes by the dictator
Rivera in 1923 sealed the victory for the extreme wing of the anarchist
party. The Federacion Anarchista
Iberica (FAI) took over leadership of the union
and remained in the position of dominance through the 1930’s. The extremist
views of the FAI helped split the left and prevent the Republic from mounting
a united effort against the Fascists.
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