Why Did Marx Expect the Working-Class to be Socialist?
I've written an article on this burning subject, published by the good people at Critique.
Entitled, 'Marx, the Proletariat, and the "Will to Socialism"', it can be viewed as a pre-print here.
The phrase 'Will to Socialism' has been lifted from Karl Katutsky's 1919 polemic against the Bolshevik Revolution, The Dictatorship of the Proletariat. It wasn't a section that Lenin, in his famous riposte, took exception too, incidentally.
Abstract of my article:
This article examines the development of Marx's thought in its attempt to explain why the proletariat as a class were historically inclined to accept socialist ideas. For Marx, socialist consciousness arises from an innate desire to secure one's mode of subsistence. Class consciousness always idealises independent proprietorship. This holds true for proletarians. However, as capitalism makes individual proprietorship impossible, only collective ownership appears to offer secure independence.
Keywords: Marx; Class-Consciousness; Gracchus Babeuf; Flora Tristan; Karl Kautsky; Working-Class
Here's the core of the argument:
"Marx noted that the conditions of existence for the proletariat are necessarily collective. Their labour is socialised, i.e. meaningless unless pooled. The proletariat are incapable of individual subsistence - unlike artisans or peasants they can not personally own their means of survival. Individual workers contribute to the production process, but the division of labour makes each individual contribution meaningless in itself. Operating a single lathe, heaving coal, administering paperwork, answering phones or whatever else cannot in themselves provide the means for living. The proletarian does not produce the requirements of individual existence directly as might a peasant, not even indirectly, as might an artisan or a bourgeois, as the product of her labour has no marketable use-value, it is only useful as a partial input to a chain of production. Only the end-product, the fruit of many inputs, has a marketable value.
"A peasant can theoretically support himself and his family with his plot of land. He can imagine self-sufficiency and his psychological desire for security finds expression in an ideal vision of complete control over his means of subsistence. The peasant always wishes to be a proprietor. The proletarian cannot imagine similar circumstances for herself. There is no point fighting for control of her segment of the production process. What advantage could there be in owning privately one’s section of the conveyer-belt, or even one’s desk in the open-plan office? In isolation, it will produce neither food, shelter nor marketable products.
"Thus, for Marx, the proletariat is impelled by the desire for personal security to realise a program of collective ownership of the entire, integrated production process. The human instinct for control of oneself and one’s immediate environment, which for previous classes meant essentially a drive towards perfecting private control of the means of personal subsistence and wealth creation, for the proletariat is converted into a desire for collective control and ownership of the means of production. This is why the proletariat is the ‘universal class’, impelled towards some form of socialism or communism."
If you have any views on the article, I'd really like to know of them. Please drop me a line.
Labels: Marxologist
