New book on Russia
I got this on myspace. Looks very promising. It seems to confirm Brinton's findings in The Bolsheviks and Workers Control with the additional research archives made available since Brinton's time.
Pirani sounds like an interesting chap. I found his debate with Cyril Smith here a lesson in how to disagree on principals and remain comradely. He and Smith didn't learn that from Healey!
Speaking of whom, as a side note, I have a friend here in town who for many years was the sole north american member of the WRP. I actually have a NewsLine press card which I've never used.
Wednesday, July 30, 2008Workers against the Bolsheviks
Book review from the July 2008 issue of the Socialist Standard
The Russian Revolution in Retreat, 1920-24. Soviet workers and the new communist elite. By Simon Pirani, Routledge, 2008.
One of the consequences of the fall of state capitalism in the USSR at the beginning of the 90s has been the opening up of the archives of the old regime, including those of its secret police. This book is a fascinating study, based on the minutes of meetings of soviets and factory committees as well as police reports, of the fight put up by factory workers in Moscow in the period 1920-24 to defend their interests under, and at times against, the Bolshevik government. Pirani also describes the beginnings of the emergence of members of the Bolshevik Party as a new, privileged elite.
In 1920 and 1921 during the civil war and its immediate aftermath, conditions in Russia were dire. Workers were paid in kind, but the rations often arrived late and were sometimes reduced. This led to protests and strikes, which the Bolshevik government was prepared to accommodate as long as these were purely economic and did not challenge their rule. The government was particularly edgy in 1921 at the time of the Krondstadt Revolt, whose demands for free elections to the soviets and a relaxation of the ban on private trading, had the sympathy of many workers. In fact, in the still not entirely unfree elections, to the local soviets that year members of other parties (Mensheviks, Socialist-Revolutionaries, anarchists) and non-party militants made gains at the expense of the Bolsheviks. Pirani concentrates on these "non-partyists" who seemed to have been factory militants who wanted to concentrate on economic issues, but with an acute understanding of the balance of forces and what could extracted from the government.
In 1923 the government cracked down on the other parties, including their factory activists, and stopped them carrying out any open activity. Pirani notes that "no non-communist political organization worked openly in Moscow again until the end of the Soviet period". The non-partyists survived a little longer while the Bolsheviks tried to co-opt them into their party. What political opposition there was was confined to dissident Bolsheviks, inside and outside the party, some of whom adopted a pro-working class stand over wages and conditions, but eventually they too were silenced and many of them joined the members of the other parties in the labour camps of Central Asia and Siberia.
Lenin's attitude was typical of the one he had displayed twenty years earlier in his notorious pamphlet What Is To Be Done? : that workers were not to be trusted to know their own best interest; judging this had to be left to an intellectual elite organised as a vanguard party. Pirani summarises part of Lenin's speech to the 11th Bolshevik Party Congress in 1921:
"Lenin argued that the Russian working class could not be regarded as properly proletarian. 'Often when people say 'workers', they think that that means the factory proletariat. It certainly doesn't', he said. The working class that Marx had written about did not exist in Russia, Lenin claimed. 'Wherever you look, those in the factories are not the proletariat, but casual elements of all kinds.'"
Pirani comments that "the practical consequence of this was that political decision-making had to be concentrated in the party". This distinction between the actual working class (who cannot be trusted) and the "proletariat" (organised in a vanguard party who know best) has been inherited by all Leninist groups ever since and used to justify the dictatorship of the party over the working class.
Pirani's book should be read by those who think, or who want to refute, that the state in Russia under the Bolsheviks could ever have been described as "workers". The workers there always had to try to defend their wages and conditions against it, even in the time of Lenin and Trotsky.
Adam Buick
There's a website for the book at http://www.revolutioninretreat.com/ with links to some shorter articles about Russia by Pirani.
In the article Mass Mobilisation versus Mass Participation, he details the refusal of Moscow workplace organizations to endorse Party policies they had no role in shaping in regards to the confiscation of church valuables and the trial of the SR's. In both cases speakers asked why Communists who hoarded wealth or were guilty of anti-working class violence during strikes weren't being dealt with before attacking others. The more out-spoken workplaces passed alternative resolutions including critiques of the Party, some simply refused to vote. In those cases of course the Party/State sponsored resolutions passed, but with humiliatingly low support.
In the first case much of the refusal came from the metal working industry, where workers also played prominent roles in the history of the Workers Opposition and Proletkult.
It may come from my days as a dissident labor council delegate, but I find this particularly fascinating stuff. Meeting halls packed to the rafters with a pissed off rank and file and the officials looking worried. Gotta love it.
I was looking around for something else and rediscovered this thread and the book, which I see is now available in paperback.
£20.00 inc postage from Amazon in UK.
Does anyone know where Pirani stands politically? I know he was in the WRP when it imploded but where (if anywhere) has he evolved to since?
He's done a few talks for the AWL in the last few years, I think. Doubt he is affiliated to any group, just a Trot for hire I'd guess.
Friends, thanks for your interest in my book, The Russian Revolution in Retreat. It’s a history book, but you can see by reading it – or by reading stuff on www.revolutioninretreat.com – that my conclusions question and/or reject key Trotskyist articles of faith, e.g. the need for a “vanguard party” to “lead” the working class, the role of the “workers’ state” in the transition to communism, the assumption that the Trotskyist opposition only narrowly failed in 1923-24 to build some kind of “democratic socialism” in the USSR, etc.
So whoever guessed I’m a “Trot for hire” guessed wrong! I joined the WRP as a teenager in 1971 and remained a Trotskyist until the early 1990s. But I’ve moved a fair way politically since then: I am a communist who thinks that the self-emancipation of the working class must mean exactly that, and that the accent now needs to be on collective action. I accepted invitations to speak about my book from the AWL and others I disagree with. But I spend as much time discussing with former and current anarchists and autonomists, and people with no fixed “ism”, as I do with those of my former Trotskyist comrades who share my hopes of collectively generating revolutionary ideas relevant to the 21st century.
About the price. As someone mentioned above, it’s now available from Amazon or wherever in a paperback costing 20 UK pounds. Europe Asia Studies, the very mainstream academic journal, published a review of The Russian Revolution in Retreat that denounced the publisher’s “reprehensible pricing strategy, geared towards depleting the acquisition budgets of research libraries” and called on libraries and individual buyers to wait for the paperback. Which they did. I have another book on Putin’s Russia being published by Pluto next month.
Simon Pirani.
Sounds interesting, alot of anarchists I know have had a state socialist, trotskyist past so I dont hold that against u. Do you know if anyone will be able to pick up a copy at the 2009 London anarchist book fair? http://www.anarchistbookfair.org/ Good chance to sell it there.
I actually have a NewsLine press card which I've never used.
maybe you could get the braves to recognize you as the baseball beat writer
(sorry everyone, back to seriousness...)
I prefer the yankees or blue jays?
blue jays?
blue jays?
(really tho' mr pirani is here we should keep on topic but i'd be glad to start another thread where i can laugh at david after the yanks win it again this year)



Looks like it could be really interesting .... but eighty quid!!!