Trying to figure out what accounts for the continued appeal of Maoism among the American left.
The United States is a developed industrialized country with no peasantry so what could possibly be the appeal of a movement traditionally focused primarily both upon the peasantry as a revolutionary agent and upon achieving rapid industrialization in the post-revolutionary period? I can understand the appeal that Maoism might have in industrially undeveloped countries such as Nepal; but in a major industrial city in the United States?
Redundant post deleted.
Redundant post deleted.
in the '60s-70s period Maoism
in the '60s-70s period Maoism entered the picture due to both anti-imperialism among student anti-war movement and racially defined movements with a nationalist cast, like August 29th Movement, and I Wor Kuen. Analogies were made in which racial minorities were seen as "internal colonies". But this trend eventually faded into non-profits oriented to specific reform campaigns but with a few groups surviving as identifying with the statist, vanguardist politics of the post-World War 2 "Communist camp", such as Freedom Road. The newer generation just seem to be sort of generic Marxist-Leninists, advocates for some narrowly defined state socialist politics with a vanguard role for students of Marxist-Leninist ideas.
See this on Libcom by Yiching
See this on Libcom by Yiching Wu:
https://libcom.org/files/Yiching%20Wu-The%20Cultural%20Revolution%20at%20the%20Margins_%20Chinese%20Socialism%20in%20Crisis-Harvard%20University%20Press%20(2014).pdf
Yiching Wu’s has written an interesting ‘subaltern’ history of the Chinese Cultural Revolution, and in the quotes below demonstrates that for Maoists the most important event of the sixties was the Cultural Revolution - not May 1968, or even the release of Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.
Along with what everyone else
Along with what everyone else has said, the inexplicable, enduring appeal of the romantic myth of Che is an important aspect of Maoism's continuing influence, at least in the US.
As syndicalistcat wrote above, Maoism was highly influential amongst the Black Liberation movement. Specifically, the Black Panthers' Maoism helps lend credibility to the ideology, in that many today continue to view the Panthers as heros and martyrs. That they were incredibly brave, brutally repressed, and actually did some good has blinded many so-called anarchists to their abysmal, counter-revolutionary politics.
In another thread a couple weeks ago, Chilli Sauce wrote about the disturbing amount of social democracy just under the surface of many in the States who describe themselves as anarchists. That's very true, but I'd argue that there's a not insignificant amount of Maoism there too, thrown in for good measure.
I think modern leftism (e.g.
I think modern leftism (e.g. American/British campus SJW-culture), with its focus on identity, traces back to the American New Left and the social/political movements of that era (anti-revisionism, Maoism, third worldism, black power, women's liberation, later, the so-called New Communist Movement etc.), which went from being (at least, nominally) "against the system" in the 1960s and 1970s to becoming 'the system' by the 1980s and 1990s. Nowadays, its easy for the likes of Obama or Clinton, or the Ford Foundation to co-opt these kinds of partial/reformist struggles into their own political agenda (which is why I no longer support them).
Re: the Cultural Revolution.
Re: the Cultural Revolution. Maoists in the USA actually split over this. Only some Maoists romanticize the Cultural Revolution. Simon Leys wrote a book debunking the Cultural Revolution, the Emperor's New Clothes. What he shows there is that culture was just accidental because Mao, when he was kicked out of power in late' 50s, was given nominal control over the cultural sphere. what the Cultural Revolution was all about was the Mao faction's effort to get itself back into power at the head of the state. It was ultimately a power struggle between bureucratic factions & youth were being manipulated for this purpose. the RCP split over the Cultural Revolution with the majority going with the "Gang of Four" and the romanticized view while the RCP's trade union activists went with Revolutionary Workers HQ (which became Freedom Road). They were pro-China. Freedom Road more recently for example had a position in support of the FARC's guerrillaist war in Colombia.
I don't think Maoism has had any influence on anarchists as far as I can see, contrary to what someone above wrote. There has been some influence of racial autonomy politics or identity politics but this has a different source in USA. Not Maoism.
Interesting information. I am
Interesting information. I am also intrigued by the worship of Guevara in the US. This appears to be closely tied to the worship of Paulo Freire. Freire’s contribution to colonisation is intelligently analysed in this book, Re-Thinking Freire, edited by Chet Bowers and Frédérique Apffel-Marglin:
https://ecoed.wikispaces.com/file/view/C.+A.+Bowers,+Frdrique+Apffel-Marglin,+Frederique+Apffel-Marglin,+Chet+A.+Bowers+Re-Thinking+Freire+Globalization+and+the+Environmental+Crisis+Sociocultural,+Political,+and+Historical+Studies+in+Educatio+2004.pdf
This chapter is particularly interesting:
http://la.utexas.edu/users/hcleaver/330T/350kPEEEstevaVsFreiretable.pdf
as is this other piece by Bowers:
http://www.cabowers.net/pdf/Transformative%20theorist-Commons.pdf
Slavoj Zizek sings the praises of Che Guevara in his book, Violence: Six Sideways Reflections. Zizek also identifies himself as a Leninist:
http://www.newstatesman.com/ideas/2009/11/381-382-interview-obama-theory
Zizek works closely with Alain Badiou the French philosopher and Maoist.
One possibly interesting thing is that while it may be true that Maoism has not influenced Anarchism directly, the two strands may be coming together in the form of the Maoist insistence on, as Badiou put it in 2010, “a politics without party”. This politics affirms the obsolescence of the notion of the transitional state, just as the communisers from Theorie Communiste have also argued and extended with their notion that programmatism (the old workers’ movement) is also obsolete. Of course, what the Maoists and the communisers (the ultra-left) are now arguing is what Bakunin and the anarchists of the First International were arguing in their warning that seizing the state would be counter-productive, and the pursuit of communism through the Chambers of Labour (workers’ councils) was the more appropriate strategy (see Rudolf Rocker, Anarcho-Syndicalism: Theory and Practice). As Badiou now insists, while the Bolshevik Party made ‘victorious insurrection’ possible it was “incommensurable to the tasks of the transition to communism” (Theory of the Subject, 2009).
stuff which I posted on a
stuff which I posted on a previous thread on the topic:
Also many of the CPUSA's
Also many of the CPUSA's leading african-american members found themselves in the "anti-revisionist" camp in the 1950s. This led to larger groups in those communities inclined to Maoism.
Also opportunistic fund
Also opportunistic fund raising:
- Bobby Seale, 1996
Ent's link to the 'previous
Ent's link to the 'previous thread', about the nature and influence of Big Flame in the UK, is really interesting.
ran and bought a shotgun,
ran and bought a shotgun, went and paid some phone bills, paid the rent up.
priorities
fnbrilll wrote: Also many of
fnbrilll
e.g. the Provisional Organizing Committee to Reconstitute a Marxist-Leninist Communist Party in the United States (POC) which had its core among black steel workers and miners in Pennsylvania and Puertorican port workers in NY and also counted Harry Haywood and Nelson Peery among its members (plus also Noel Ignatiev and Theodore W. Allen)
#14 Yes. A bunch of the
#14
Yes. A bunch of the national "New Communist Movement" groupings came from those contact networks but not directly from POC.
there is certainly a rise in
there is certainly a rise in popularity with various strata of poc and queer youth
klas batalo wrote: there is
klas batalo
Earlier this year I had submitted a post here to inquire about the Kentucky Workers League and a member of the League posted in reply:
So it does seem that you may be correct about there being a rise in Maoism's popularity, at least among certain strata. Also, I think it possible that some of these who embrace Maoism in America do so more out of a sense that it offers them a methodology to organize around rather then out any kind of strict adherence to classical Maoist strategies involving peasants and such. Although given the Black Panther influences these might well see in the lumpen class a "first-world" substitute for the peasantry.
Isn't part of the apeal of
Isn't part of the apeal of Maoism the fact that it is vanguardist. Maoists can put themselves in the position where they are the ones with the correct ideas who will become the leaders. I think the idea of fighting an insurgency also appeals to certain types and I think that those types are probably more present in the US than the UK for example.
I think that's a good
I think that's a good point--no need to do the long, difficult task of patiently organizing in your workplace when you can just kick it off all on your own.