Interview With Karl Marx

Karl Marx

Prospct Magazine, October 2003
www.prospect-magazine.co.uk/ArticleView.asp?accessible=yes&P_Article=1229
5

Marx will not take the blame for communism and the gulag. But he enjoys
his 
continuing influence in the academy



Donald Sassoon: Well, Dr Marx, you are all washed up, aren't you? Fifteen

years ago your theories ruled half the world. Now what's left? Cuba?
North 
Korea?

Karl Marx: My "theories"-as you put it-never "ruled." I had followers I 
neither chose nor sought, and for whom I have no more responsibility than

Jesus had for Torquemada or Muhammad for Osama bin Laden. Self-appointed 
followers are the price of success. Most of my contemporaries would love
to 
be as washed up as you think I am. I wrote that the point was not to
explain 
the world, but to change it. And how many eminent Victorians have done
so?

DS: How about John Stuart Mill?

KM He was a well-meaning plagiarist and somewhat touching in his exertion
to 
reconcile the irreconcilable, and he is still read by second-rate minds
at 
Oxford or Yale; but has anyone heard of him in Peoria, Illinois, not to 
speak of Pyongyang? You recall William Jevons, founder of the theory of 
marginal utility. He was big in my day. But when did you last meet a 
Jevonsian? And Comte, the father of sociology (a ridiculous discipline,
if 
ever there was one), is he in print? And, please, don't ask me about
Herbert 
Spencer, whose forlorn tomb lies in the shadow of my monument at Highgate

cemetery. No doubt this setting of Marx opposite Spencer was a
gravedigger's 
idea of a joke.

DS Are there no great bourgeois thinkers?

KM Of course there are. And I punctiliously paid my respects to them. But

today few of my enemies bother reading Adam Smith or David Ricardo. And 
great scholars like Tschernyschewsky are now forgotten.

DS What about Jeremy Bentham?

KM What a provocation! Bentham, that insipid, pedantic, leather-tongued 
oracle of the ordinary bourgeois intelligence. A purely English
phenomenon 
who could have been manufactured only in England. Never has the most 
homespun commonplace ever strutted about in so self-satisfied a way.

DS How about more recent thinkers?

KM The fashion-following apologists of the propertied classes, now and 
again, try to find an adequate rival for me. They just can't bear the 
thought of lacking a recognised genius. So they resurrect Hayek one
summer 
and, by the next spring, they are all wearing Popper (now that's someone 
with only one idea in his head and, boy, did he flog it to death and 
irrefutably so!). The very lazy ones go for Isaiah Berlin-so easy to 
comprehend, so stupendously unoriginal, so devastatingly tautological. Of
my 
contemporaries only Darwin made the big time. And I understood it at
once. 
Friedrich convinced me to dedicate Das Kapital to him, but Darwin, coward
to 
the last, turned me down. On reflection, he was probably right. Had he 
accepted, natural selection would have been regarded as yet another
Marxist 
conspiracy.

DS OK. No one underestimates your renown. But you must agree: Marxism is
not 
what it used to be...

KM In reality my work has never been as important as it is now. Over the 
last 40 years or so it has conquered the academy in the most advanced 
countries in the world. Historians, economists, social scientists, and
even, 
to my surprise, some literary critics have all turned to the materialist 
conception. The most exciting history currently produced in the US and 
Europe is the most "Marxistic" ever. Just go to the annual convention of
the 
American Social Science History Association, which I attend regularly as
a 
ghost. There they earnestly examine the interconnection between 
institutional and political structures and the world of production. They
all 
talk about classes, structures, economic determination, power relations, 
oppressed and oppressors. And they all pretend to have read me-a sure
sign 
of success. Even diplomatic historians-or at least the best of them (a
small 
bunch admittedly)-now look at the economic basis of great powers. Of
course 
much of this work is crude economic determinism. But you can go a long
way 
with "vulgar" Marxism. Look at the success of simplistic theories 
propounding the view that empires collapse because they spend too much. 
Well, at least the economy is back in. Social history, the history of 
ordinary men and women, has supplanted the idiotic fixation with great
men. 
Of course, many things have moved on. Thank God for that. I was never one

for standing still. Das Kapital was unfinished, and not just because I
died 
too soon but because, in a very real sense, it could not be finished. 
Capitalism moves on and the analysis always trails behind.

DS: So what have you achieved? What's left?

KM I devoted my life to the study of capitalism. I tried to lay bare its 
laws of motion. I tried to get to the kernel of its fundamental...

DS: You were obsessed with the economy...

KM And how right I was. You are all obsessed with the economy and, for
the 
foreseeable future, you will remain so. I don't need to explain this to 
readers of the Financial Times, the Wall Street Journal and the
Economist. 
Nor to politicians who promise heaven on earth and then say "you can't
buck 
the markets," and that globalisation (the current polite name for world 
capitalism) is unstoppable. Who is obsessed? Do you remember that petty 
Arkansas politician who became US president and played around with the 
intern? What's his name?

DS: Clinton.

KM Yes. "It's the economy, stupid!" Well, my dear boy, I said it first.

DS: At some length...

KM True, Das Kapital is no soundbite. Yet when required I produced my
share 
of good quotes. "Workers of the world unite; you have nothing to lose but

your chains" is better than anything the overpaid underbrained Downing 
Street spinners can come up with.

DS: But the idea that today's workers have nothing to lose is absurd.

KM You are right. Your workers-the workers of Europe and North
America-now 
have plenty to lose. In my day, of course, they were still treated 
abominably. Even 20 years after the Manifesto, although England was
richer 
than other countries, matters had not improved all that much. The search
for 
profits made more and more victims-and not just among the workers. In
1866 I 
noted the sensational newspaper stories about railway crashes. In those 
days, when Britain ruled the waves, the driver of a locomotive engine
would 
work for 30 hours on the trot with disastrous consequences. Railway 
catastrophes were then called "acts of God." I called them acts of 
capitalism. (Now, of course, things are completely different, aren't
they?) 
Or take the report in the London papers of June 1863 under the heading, 
"Death from simple overwork." It dealt with the death of Mary Anne
Walkley, 
a 20-year-old milliner, employed in a respectable establishment. This
girl 
worked, on average, over 16 hours without a break. As it was the "season"
it 
was necessary to conjure up quickly the gorgeous dresses for the noble 
ladies invited to a ball in honour of the Princess of Wales. Walkley had 
worked without stop for over 26 hours, with 30 other girls in one small 
room. You'll find all of this in Kapital. If you cared to read it, dear
boy, 
you will realise that it is not just a dry economic treatise. It drips
with 
outrage and indignation.

DS: But such things were exceptions even then-which is why they were 
reported. They no longer happen. Train drivers now have nice homes, go on

foreign holidays...

KM Yes, yes, and the main reason is that my side, my party, the
socialists, 
the trade unionists, the reformers whom I supported and encouraged, set a

limit to capitalist exploitation. Or, in the awful jargon used by the 
complacent scribblers of the bourgeois press, they erected labour market 
rigidities. But elsewhere, in the former colonies, where there is no 
democracy, no trade unions, no socialist parties, the degradation of
those 
who have nothing to sell but their labour power more than matches the 
sweatshops of my days. And even in the west, wherever the workers are not

organised, things are just a little better. Why don't august organs such
as 
Prospect lay bare the realities of your world instead of gazing nervously
at 
the navel of the bourgeoisie and keeping its readership snug and
sheltered? 
Everything I denounced still goes on. In the capitalist landmark itself,
the 
US of A, deskilling and lower wages occur across a broad spectrum of 
industries-from the most modern to the most backward. New sweatshops and 
homework have broken the backs of the trade unions in high technology
areas 
such as California. So when I hear sanctimonious claptrap about human
rights 
and freedom from the representatives of the bourgeois order, the Bushes
and 
Blairs and tutti quanti, I shake my venerable head disconsolately. Do
these 
people ever go to war to impose limits to the exploitation of labour? Do 
they ever fight for the freedom of workers to join unions? All they ever
do 
is replace "unfriendly" governments with "friendly" ones-governments 
friendly to capital accumulation.

DS: But in the west, workers used the freedoms you mention to improve
their 
lot under capitalist national states, not to abolish them. Admit it: the 
working class has been a disappointment to you.

KM It is true that the national state which had appeared as the workers 
chief oppressor turned out, in the following 100 years, to be their main 
source of loyalty. The middle class, especially the intellectuals, proved
to 
be far more internationalist than the proletariat. We had a premonition 
about this reformism. I recall the first elections held under the 1867 
Reform Act. Manchester (Manchester!) had returned three Tories to two 
Liberals. Engels was upset. He wrote that "the proletariat has
discredited 
itself terribly."

DS: How do you explain it?

KM The socialist struggle presents an unavoidable contradiction. We need
to 
fight for reforms but each gain saps the revolutionary will of the
workers. 
Strong workers extract real improvements. Weak ones starve. You don't 
seriously think that the bourgeoisie would have conceded the eight-hour
day, 
paid holidays, old age pensions, a free health service, education for
all, 
and national insurance in a paroxysm of philanthropy? To get these things
it 
was necessary to strike not at the heart of the capitalists but at their 
profit. You don't imagine that capital goes to Thailand, Taiwan,
Bangladesh 
or Brazil hoping to find well-organised workers, conscious of their
rights 
and able to secure high wages? The conditions of life achieved by workers
in 
the west cannot be writ large over the entire planet. Capitalism can be 
global-as I explained a long time ago when capital was but a gleam in a
vast 
worldwide bog dominated by petty commodity production and peasants. But
can 
everything else go global? Swedish social democracy? Or the lifestyle 
reached by many American workers? Even the Catholics know that they can't

all be popes. Will one day the 1.3bn Chinese and the 1bn Indians go to
work 
driving their own cars powered by cheap petrol? And return home to 
air-conditioned rooms? And in the morning spray their armpits (4.6bn of 
them!) with deodorant without hearing the deafening sound of the ozone
layer 
cracking? Are there no limits to growth?

DS: So now you too resort to Malthus and say that the future may be 
catastrophic. May I remind you, Dr Marx, that you were a Victorian
optimist, 
a child of the Enlightenment. In the Manifesto you...

KM The Manifesto, the ScheiàŸmanifesto! Let me put it into perspective. I

wrote the damn thing in February 1848, when I was under 30. Most of my 
scientific work was still to come. The Manifesto, commissioned by an 
insignificant leftist group, was written against a tight deadline. As it
hit 
the bookshops (well, that's a figure of speech, I don't think it sold
more 
than 1,000 copies in 1848) Europe was swept by a wave of revolution:
France, 
Germany, Hungary, Poland, Italy. Everywhere the masses were clamouring
for a 
constitution, for freedom, for democracy. The Manifesto reflected the 
optimism of those heady days. We thought that everything was possible. 
Imagination had seized power.

DS: And then?

KM Then the counter-revolution set in. Some gains were achieved here and 
there, but on the whole, my side lost. In France, the home of our most 
cherished hopes, a little upstart with a grand name, Louis Napoleon, took

over. He was the first elected dictator in modern history. I wrote an 
instant book (I use your terminology, just to show that my century had 
invented most of what yours claims for itself). Contrary to all the 
neoliberal philistines who think I'm an economic determinist-coming from
the 
dummkopfs who go round shouting that markets are the basis of freedom,
what 
chutzpah!-I explained that when the bourgeoisie is threatened, it will
give 
up power to anyone it can pick up from the gutter. Who cares about civil 
rights and elections and press freedom when the rule of capital is in 
danger? The bourgeoisie, realising that its political rule was
incompatible 
with its own survival, destroyed its own regime, vilified its own
parliament 
and invited Napoleon to rule. It abdicated its powers to the scumbag
leader 
of a party of decayed roués, swindlers, mountebanks, gamblers, untenured 
academics, and beggars. With these dregs the second empire was created
out 
of a victory in a popular referendum. All this I analysed. All this I 
deconstructed (yes, I keep up with modern charlatans). The result: the
first 
theory of fascism. So don't tell me I have ever been under any illusion 
about the people. I know how to look at the harshest reality with 
equanimity. I realised we had lost, as your socialist friends have now.
And 
I plucked up my courage and went to work. I spent my days in the British 
Museum reading room, solitary and proud, my soul devoured with rage, my
arse 
festered with carbuncles, but my mind doing its duty, the duty of 
intellectuals: face reality.

DS: No one doubts your integrity. It is your analysis which is
questionable. 
If democratic governments can be a threat to the bourgeoisie, then it is 
surely wrong to say, as you wrote in the Manifesto, that the "executive
of 
the modern state is but a committee for managing the common affairs of
the 
whole bourgeoisie."

KM Well, was I that much off the mark? Is it not the case that all 
governments are constrained by capitalism's own structures? That, when
all 
is said and done, they are forced to do all they can to ensure its 
profitability, train its workforce, repair its failures, and mop up the 
debris it excretes on the way? And they all do it, all slaves to the 
imperatives of capitalism: the left and the right and the middle and the 
socialists and fascists and liberals and greens. Once in power they must 
keep the show on the road. If the show runs well, then they tax and spend

and redistribute this and that and help the poor and the sick just as the

Victorians did. When the profits roll in they bask in morality and
ethics. 
When profits decline and the economy enters into one of the economic
cycles 
I had predicted, philanthropy is discarded like an ageing mistress. Then 
your good bourgeois discovers that you cannot tax and spend, that the 
unemployed are scroungers, that public medicine costs too much, that
single 
mothers are feckless. The conscience of the bourgeoisie is closely wired
to 
the vicissitudes of the stock exchange.

DS: And what about the intellectuals?

KM Second-rate theorists; in reality the paid lackeys of the rich. The
thing 
about bourgeois scribblers is that they always theorise after the event. 
They pick up intellectual garbage, polish it up, call it theory and serve
it 
up as science. Rebellion against capitalist modernity takes the form of 
religious fanaticism and they call it "a clash of civilisations."
Communism 
falls and the "end of history" is proclaimed-Oh poor Hegel, what would he

say? The first time a great thinker, the second time a Fukuyama farce?

DS: Calm down. Let's move on. I've got to ask you this: the Soviet Union,

the gulag, communist terror.

KM I thought you would. I must admit that I am as vain as the next person

and all this personality cult and Marx-worship did get to me. It did
tickle 
me to see my face on banknotes of the old DDR and a Marxplatz in every 
Prussian city. Of course, thanks to Engels's marketing skills and the 
efforts of Bernstein and of that tedious man, Kautsky, I became the grand

guru of the socialist movement soon after my demise. Consequently Russian

westernisers had to take me as seriously as electricity. So I was not 
surprised when Lenin decided to turn me into the Bible. Lenin was a
clever 
politician with good instincts. But he was also a fundamentalist
determined 
to find in my works the justification for whatever it was he wanted to
do. 
He made "Marxism" up as he went along. This detestable habit, typical of 
religions since time immemorial, spread everywhere. I began to have the 
feeling that even my shopping lists were being drafted into the service
of 
this or that faction of the movement. Take the notion of the
"dictatorship 
of the proletariat." This was a formula I had devised to suggest,
following 
its ancient Roman usage, an exceptional government in a time of crisis. I

must have used this expression no more than ten times in my life. I can't

tell you my surprise when this resurfaced as a central idea of Marxism,
used 
to justify one-party rule. What can I say? And I was rather surprised
when 
the first so-called socialist revolution occurred in such a deeply
backward 
country run by Slavs-of all people. What the Bolsheviks were doing was 
accomplishing the bourgeois revolution that the Russian bourgeoisie was
too 
small and stupid to carry out. The communists used the state to create a 
modern industrial system. If one must call this the "dictatorship of the 
proletariat," well, so be it.

DS: But the purges, the crimes, the blood....

KM I did say that capital is born dripping from head to foot, from every 
pore, with blood and dirt.

DS: I mean communism not capitalism.

KM The Russian revolution was not a socialist revolution waged against a 
capitalist state. It was a revolution against a semi-feudal autocracy. It

was about the construction of modern industry, modern society. Industrial

revolutions always occur at great cost whether led by communists or pukka

bourgeois. Your modern political accountants, as they scavenge through 
history to make the case for the prosecution, have they totted up the
deaths 
caused by colonialism, and capitalism? Have they added up all the
Africans 
who died in slavery on their way to America? All the American Indians 
massacred? All the dead of capitalist civil wars? All those killed by the

diseases caused by modern industry? All the dead of the two world wars?
Of 
course Stalin and co were criminals. But do you think that Russia would
have 
become a modern industrial power by democratic, peaceful means? Which
road 
to industrialisation has been victimless, and undertaken under a benign 
system of civil liberties and human rights? Japan? Korea? Taiwan?
Germany? 
Italy? France? Britain and its empire? What were the alternatives to
Lenin 
and Stalin and the red terror? Little Red Riding Hood? The alternative
would 
have been some Cossack-backed antisemitic dictator as cruel and paranoid
as 
Stalin (or Trotsky; frankly I have no preference), far more corrupt and
far 
less efficient.

DS: So was it all inevitable?

KM That I don't know and neither do you. But don't you dare to reproach
me 
with one drop of blood or one writer in jail. May I remind you that I was
a 
political exile because I defended freedom of speech, that I lived all my

life in shabby conditions and that I died in 1883 when Lenin was 13 and 
Stalin four. I could have written a bestselling "Black Book of
Capitalism" 
and listed all the crimes committed in its name. But I did not. I
examined 
its misdeeds dispassionately, in a balanced way as I would examine now
those 
of communism. Much as I like polemic I knew capitalism was better than 
anything that preceded it and that it could lay the basis for the realm
of 
true freedom, freedom from want, freedom from fear, freedom from the
state, 
which is what communism is. Take the piece I wrote on the Indian revolt
of 
1857 in the New York Daily Tribune. English soldiers committed
abominations: 
raping women, roasting whole villages. Did I use this to score some petty

points? I did not. Nor did I wax sentimental over the destruction of
idyllic 
native communities. These I denounced as the solid foundations of
oriental 
despotism and tools of superstition. I explained that British imperialism

was bringing about a social revolution and celebrated it, but I saw no 
reason not to lament the devastating effects of English industry on
India.

DS: How about your early writings on alienation? The 1844 manuscripts
were 
popular in the 1960s. People saw their relevance to the modern world.

KM Nonsense. The reason I did not publish such stuff is that it was 
inconsequential claptrap. It is typical that the disaffected petty
bourgeois 
intelligentsia would have lapped this up. I have no time for them.

DS: So you don't think your relation with Hegel...

KM Hegel Schmegel. I must tell you a secret: I never actually read,
except 
in the most cursory fashion, Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit or his S
cience 
of Logic. Life's too short.

DS: This will be a bit of a shock in some quarters.

KM People should read the great English economists, Adam Smith and David 
Ricardo. Well, not really English: one's a Scot, the other a Sephardic 
Jew-clever people of good stock, who know the value of money. Germans
like 
Hegel transform hats into ideas. I prefer the Brits who transform ideas
into 
hats.

DS: What do you make of present-day socialism?

KM It has been moribund for a long time. It fulfilled its task:
civilising 
capitalism in its heartland. More could not be asked of it. It is now
going 
quietly. Communism too has collapsed, its task fulfilled: the
construction 
of capitalism. They understand this well in China-where the next century 
will play itself out. In Russia, where we are witnessing the transition
from 
lumpen communism to lumpen capitalism, it's a different matter. But how
can 
you build anything with the Russians? One should read their novels,
listen 
to their music, but as for a viable economy...

DS: How about Blair, Schröder, the third way?

KM Do I have to have a view about these people? To say that history will 
forget them is too grandiose. They won't even register. And this shows
how 
low your lot has sunk. In my days we faced Bismarck, Lincoln, Gladstone
and 
Disraeli... real enemies.

DS: So that's it? The triumph of capitalism.

KM Quite, but let's be a bit dialectical. As this is not a system where 
everyone can win, there will be resistance. For now it's just puny sects 
playing at revolution. Or the "No Global" bunch , the anti-globalisers...

DS: What do you think of them?

KM A mishmash of inchoate fragments. But better than nothing. At least
they 
stand up to capital, but they won't change the world, let alone explain
it.

DS: And feminism?

KM I did write that great social changes are impossible without the
feminine 
ferment. But there is far to go. The majority of workers in the world are

now women, but the vast majority of feminists are not workers. What many 
western feminists want is to share power with western man. And why not?
Who 
would want to be some schmuck's hausfrau? But this makes no difference to

the feminine army of labour.

DS: What about America?

KM Always liked the Yankees: no feudalism, no hallowed traditions. Of 
course, a lot of cant and religion. But somehow they come out of every 
capitalist crisis stronger and stronger. Wonderful system of government. 
Fake democracy, fake elections, fake political system surrounded by
humbug 
and greedy lawyers. This allows business to get on with its tasks, buying

candidates, a bribe here, a bribe there. The people are not taken in.
Half 
of them don't bother to vote. For the other half, politics is harmless
fun, 
like watching Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? I moved the headquarters of
the 
first international of workers to New York not just to control it better
but 
also because America was becoming the workers' country par excellence. It
is 
really the only working-class country in the world. Their games, their 
culture, their manners, their food; everything about Americans is working

class. Of course, old Europe remains rather snobby about them, a
consolation 
prize for lost supremacy.

DS: Finally, what about the war against terror?

KM Well, in the end everyone chooses his enemies. It is absurd to think
that 
a capitalist world should not encounter some form of resistance. The 
communists and socialists offered a rational, modern, sensible
opposition. 
They shared many of the values of their liberal opponents: basic rights,
the 
idea of popular democracy, the emancipation of women, a distaste for 
organised religion. But once the communists and the socialists were wiped

out what do you expect? The triumph of rational thought? Of course not.
The 
political vacuum was filled by fanatical fundamentalists, religious
bigots, 
crazed mullahs. You wipe out the communists in Iran and the Ayatollah
comes 
in. You do the same in Iraq, you get Saddam Hussein. The USSR falls and 
Osama bin Laden arises.

DS: And you? How do you spend your time?

KM Oh! I have fun. Friedrich and I play on the internet. Did you know
that 
"Karl Marx" scores 367,000 Google hits? And I never miss The Archers,
that 
wonderful saga of the idiocy of rural life. What a hoot!

_________________________________________________________________
Add MSN 8 Internet Software to your current Internet access and enjoy 
patented spam control and more.  Get two months FREE!     
http://join.msn.com/?page=dept/byoa


------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor ---------------------~-->
Buy Ink Cartridges or Refill Kits for your HP, Epson, Canon or Lexmark
Printer at MyInks.com. Free s/h on orders $50 or more to the US & Canada.
http://www.c1tracking.com/l.asp?cid=5511
http://us.click.yahoo.com/mOAaAA/3exGAA/qnsNAA/9rHolB/TM
---------------------------------------------------------------------~->

To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

 

Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/






________________________________________________________________
The best thing to hit the internet in years - Juno SpeedBand!
Surf the web up to FIVE TIMES FASTER!
Only $14.95/ month - visit www.juno.com to sign up today!

_______________________________________________
Marxism-Thaxis mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
To change your options or unsubscribe go to:
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/marxism-thaxis

Reply via email to