Marx and Bakunin – Anton Pannekoek

Anton Pannekoek's letter to Australian anarchist Kenneth Joseph Kenafick (26 May, 1949) on the differences between Marx and Bakunin, Marxism and anarchism. Kenafick had sent a short letter with a copy of his book Michael Bakunin and Karl Marx to Pannekoek on 12 February, 1949—the former can be read here. Attached is Pannekoek's handwritten copy, which he notes is "deel v brief aan Kenafick" (part of letter to Kenafick), obtained from the International Institute of Social History in Amsterdam. (IISG, Pannekoek Archives, F. 108 PP.8)

Submitted by mikail firtinaci on October 20, 2014

Marx and Bakunin

... I think that we are now in a mood, determined by the present conditions produced by social development, to look more objectively, without taking sides, at that contest between two great revolutionaries that dominated the rev. movement in the 19th century; to appreciate that we have both of them, and to understand their difference and opposition. Both they took part in the revolution of 1848, as militants; but then their ways parted; they were indeed products of entirely diverse social milieus. B. [Bakunin] came from Russia w[h]ere Czarist absolutism kept down all social and spiritual progress; Marx was formed by the rising Western industrial capitalism. For Bakunin therefore liberty was the great idea; he saw in ... State power the basis of the slavery and poverty of the masses. Marx saw in capitalist exploitation the cause of misery and slavery; political freedom he saw present in England, where, however the competing small business, unorganized, he considered organization as the chief demand, which could only be ascertained by a central dominating power, democratic state power, dominated by the working class. So their basic ideas stood against one another; M.[Marx] saw that Bakunin's political freedom was not sufficient (vide England); B. saw that Marx's organized state power would bring worst slavery. Bakunin had studied and assimilated, as many Russians, Western science and knowledge, and, different from other Russians, applied them to take part in the struggle of the exploited masses in Western Europe, thinking that their grievances were the same as his. Marx revolutionized Western science and put in this way, by his Historical Materialism and his Economic theory of Capitalism, a new basis to all further class struggle.

Their clash in the 1st International has been treated from both sides, by socialists and anarchists, each defending their great forerunners, repeating mostly all the old arguments and accusations. You know the work of the Swiss author Brupbacher on Marx and Bakunin; when the well known German historian and socialist Franz Mehring then confirmed to his point of view and expressed his own critical attitude to many of Marx's assertions, he found much reproach among his socialist party-comrades; I think I remember that Rjasanoff, certainly one of the best experts in socialist history, criticized Mehring thereon.

It was not simply the clash of two opposite characters, here the fiery spirit who appealed to the rebellious feelings to fight for freedom, there the fundamental scientist trying to organize the awakening working class. It was the problem how to unite organization and freedom into one form and method of revolutionary action. It could not be solved at that time, because its solution demands a higher stage of proletarian consciousness than was present in the 19th century. Capitalist development has since changed these conditions. Organization has become a weapon of capitalism, and in its hands state power became, in Germany and in Russia, a crushing instrument of despotic suppression of all freedom. Now that socialists calling themselves followers of Marx, in unilateral distortion of his views, acts as agents of state-capitalism, now it is natural that the attention turns, in wide circles, to the writing of Bakunin. And so I think that a book explaining his views will find much interest among the workers.

We should not forget, however, that thereby the problem is not solved. This solution can only proceed from the action of the working class, when it has to fight against worsening conditions under a more powerful state dictatorship. I think it must be clear that council organization forms the synthesis of the views that in the preceding century seemed to stand in complete antagonism. Therein the goals of organization and freedom are combined into a harmonious unit. It first appeared sponaneously in the soviets of the Russian revolution, but was there soon suppressed and distorted by state capitalism. Then in Germany 1918-19 it sprang up as Arbeiterrate, and here and in Holland, in the splinter groups opposing the development of the CP, the idea of workers' councils found ever more a clear expression. By this new point of view I think we will be able to understand better the work of our great predecessors. ......

Comments

mikail firtinaci

10 years 1 month ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by mikail firtinaci on October 21, 2014

I posted this because I think Pannekoek had a very valid point that especially resonates with the contemporary situation. Today;

1 - In Ukraine; there are so called anarchists and marxists who are siding with Ukrainian/Russian regimes.

2- In Syria; there are anarchists and marxists who defend NATO and PKK alliance.

3- There are also anarchists and marxists who oppose states, class collaboration and capitalism in every war.

Of course there are still crucial differences between the revolutionary anarchist and marxist groups. However, when it comes to internationalist class struggle against war and militarism, revolutionary anarchists and marxists have clearly more in common than pro-war anarchists and marxists.

AES

10 years 1 month ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by AES on October 21, 2014

Thanks for this letter transcript above.

Revolutionary working class organisation (especially at around 1920s period) in the case of council communism from a marxist premise; and in the case of revolutionary anarcho-syndicalism from an anarchist premise, reached almost exactly the same conclusions.

Understanding and acknowledging that is helpful to avoid unnecessary departures from an essential learning experience of both schools of thought and struggle in a history without an end.

jojo

10 years 1 month ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by jojo on October 22, 2014

mikail firtinaci

I posted this because I think Pannekoek had a very valid point that especially resonates with the contemporary situation. Today;

1 - In Ukraine; there are so called anarchists and marxists who are siding with Ukrainian/Russian regimes.

2- In Syria; there are anarchists and marxists who defend NATO and PKK alliance.

3- There are also anarchists and marxists who oppose states, class collaboration and capitalism in every war.

Of course there are still crucial differences between the revolutionary anarchist and marxist groups. However, when it comes to internationalist class struggle against war and militarism, revolutionary anarchists and marxists have clearly more in common than pro-war anarchists and marxists.

The anarchists and Marxists referred to in (1) and (2) above are fraudulent because BOURGEOIS anarchists and Marxists. This is apparent from their commitment to petty bourgeois nationalist wars and alliances.

The working class has no country to defend and does not fall for leftist lies that pretend to see some factions of the lying hypocritical and capitalist loving bourgeoisie as being some how better than some alternative form of bourgeois excrement.

We should reiterate that workers have no country to defend and no interests in common with any aspect of the decaying bourgeoisie, now stinking to high heaven as their played out capitalist system of cruelty and exploitation reaches its decaying historical climax.

Do not support any of them. To the dustbins with them all.

robynkwinters

7 years 1 month ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by robynkwinters on November 2, 2017

The Antonie Pannekoek Archives seems to say this was actually from a letter to Kenneth Joseph Kenafick not Paul Mattick.

Map 108/09 Kenafick, K., 1949, 1 brief

Anton Pannekoek aan K. Kenafick, 26 mei 1949 (kopie):
[Over de tegenstelling Marx (organisatie proletariaat) en Bakoenin (opheffing staat)] “I think it must be clear that council organisation forms the synthesis of the views that in the preceeding century seemed to stand in complete antagonism. Therein the goals of organisation and freedom are combined into a harmoneous unit.”

I can't find this letter anywhere else, though, so I'm not entirely sure which source is correct.

mikail firtinaci

7 years 1 month ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by mikail firtinaci on November 2, 2017

Councils and Communes

The Antonie Pannekoek Archives seems to say this was actually from a letter to Kenneth Joseph Kenafick not Paul Mattick.

Map 108/09 Kenafick, K., 1949, 1 brief

Anton Pannekoek aan K. Kenafick, 26 mei 1949 (kopie):
[Over de tegenstelling Marx (organisatie proletariaat) en Bakoenin (opheffing staat)] “I think it must be clear that council organisation forms the synthesis of the views that in the preceeding century seemed to stand in complete antagonism. Therein the goals of organisation and freedom are combined into a harmoneous unit.”

I can't find this letter anywhere else, though, so I'm not entirely sure which source is correct.

Thanks for the warning. I may be wrong and I will check the source. I also found the letter in the IISG Archives in Amsterdam

freemind

5 years 1 month ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by freemind on October 14, 2019

I have reappraised Marx in the last few years and as an Anarchist I find Pannekoeks Synthesis theory accurate.Marx and Bakunin had their faults but they have been exacerbated by people who misrepresented Marx initial and essential beliefs.So called Marxists and Anarchists have widened the split rather than look at what they both had in common.They compliment each other and it’s important to remember that the Anarchist and Marxist schools are of one origin ieCommunism with one goal is Anarchism but differed on how to achieve this.
Marx would have recoiled at the monstrosity of Bolshevism and Bakunin at the lack of cogent praxis from Anarchists.We need to advance Commonality not let careerist parasites take us into a dead end.

adri

5 years 1 month ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by adri on October 15, 2019

freemind

They compliment each other and it’s important to remember that the Anarchist and Marxist schools are of one origin ieCommunism with one goal is Anarchism but differed on how to achieve this.

I wouldn't say Proudhon was after a needs-meeting communist society, and Bakunin/anarchist collectivists also argued for distribution according to deed (Marx also argued for labour vouchers in the "first phase of communist society" but not as a permanent feature of communism), which anarchist communists like Kropotkin and Berkman wrote against. I agree however people shouldn't dismiss Marx on the basis of what people who've called themselves Marxists have done.

freemind

5 years 1 month ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by freemind on October 15, 2019

I’m not arguing or comparing different Anarchist thinkers or saying Marx and Bakunin were identical.Im stating that they both have attributes and common points as well as differences and they should be learned from.
I don’t consider Proudhon an Anarchist myself and regard him as dismissible like Individualists as Anarchism matures however that growth has been hampered by History and deviant schools of thought claiming to be Libertarian have filled the void.