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- | ====== Introduction ====== | ||
- | ===== Communist Theory Beyond the Ultra-left ===== | ||
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- | ==== The Class Struggles During the Years Following the First World War. Social democrats, communists and left-communists ==== | ||
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- | ==== The Ultra-left and the Mediations ==== | ||
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- | ==== From the Victory of Labour to the Dissolution of the Proletariat ==== | ||
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- | ==== Real Subsumption: | ||
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- | ==== The Double Mill and the Reproduction of Capital and Labour ==== | ||
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- | ==== From Self-organisation to Communisation ==== | ||
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- | > With the restructuring of the capitalist mode of production, the contradiction between the classes is found at the level of their respective reproduction. In its contradiction with capital, the proletariat puts itself into question.((Théorie communiste, ' | ||
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- | Presumably the most important of the texts by Théorie communiste that we have translated is // | ||
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- | In contrast with the view of communism as a paradise on earth that we are to enter 'after the revolution', | ||
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- | The proletarian revolution is centered around the dissolution of the proletariat, | ||
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- | > The supersession of really existing self-organisation will not be accomplished by the production of the ' | ||
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- | In light of this view on the supersession of self-organisation, | ||
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- | A central idea in the text, which we find immensely important, is that the syndicalism which characterises all everyday class struggles can not be explained by the existence of trade unions, or that this nature would somehow disappear in the struggle outside the union; syndicalism does not exist //because of// institutionalisation. But if trade unions organise proletarians as workers and go into negotiations with the buyer of labour power, while the self-organised, | ||
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- | On the other hand, there is an important distiction between trade union and self-organisation when it comes to the possibilities for how far the syndicalist struggle can be fought. In the text TC claim that first self-organisation must be reached and triumph in order to be superseded later, and that this is the only way in which the proletarians gains practical knowledge of their situation, in other words that all capitalist categories and class belonging itself constitutes an exterior constraint to the struggle, and their asking of the question of communisation is made possible. | ||
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- | > The self-organisation of struggles is a crucial moment of the revolutionary supersession of struggles over immediate demands. To carry on the struggle over immediate demands intransigently and to the very end cannot be achieved by unions, but by self-organisation and workers’ autonomy. To carry on the struggle over immediate demands through workers’ autonomy on the basis of irreconcilable interests is to effect a change of level in the social reality of the capitalist mode of production.((Théorie communiste, op. cit., pp. 27--28)) | ||
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- | TC are saying that nowadays the proletarians simply get fed up with self-organisation as soon as it is established, | ||
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- | > There is a qualitative leap when the workers unite against their existence as wage labourers, when they integrate the destitute and smash market mechanisms; not when one strike ‘transforms’ itself into a ‘challenge’ to power. The change is a rupture.((Théorie communiste, op. cit., p. 40)) | ||
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- | > [The proletarians can] fight against market relations, seize goods and the means of production while integrating into communal production those that wage-labour can’t integrate, make everything free, get rid of the factory framework as the origin of products, go beyond the division of labour, abolish all autonomous spheres (and in the first place the economy), dissolve their autonomy to integrate in non-market relations all the impoverished …; in this case, it is precisely their own previous existence and association as a class that they go beyond as well as (this is then a detail) their economic demands. The only way to fight against exchange and the dictatorship of value is by undertaking communisation.((Théorie communiste, op. cit., p. 30)) | ||
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- | For TC, it is the class relation understood as exploitation which gives the proletariat its position as a capitalist category and at the same time delivers the key to the dissolution of the classes and the capitalist categories. With exploitation class struggle does not become one thing and the Marxian (economic) concepts something else. 'It is the insufficiency of surplus-value in relation to accumulated capital which is at the heart of the crisis of exploitation.' | ||
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- | In 2003 the publishing collective Senonevero, where TC among others participate, | ||
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- | ==== Some last words on the first part ==== | ||
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- | Let us finalise this first part of the issue by saying a few words about the texts. The issue begins with a number of texts, originally published as a debate between Théorie communiste and Aufheben in their respecive magazines. Through this debate we came in contact with the ideas of TC for the first time. Aufheben presents TC for their readers, partly in their own words, partly through a couple of translated texts. We have translated these texts, as well as the debate itself and a few other texts by TC. We hope that it will be sufficient to let the debate present itself. A few texts by TC follows and a couple of these texts have already been mentioned. We are especially happy to present an interview from the last summer with a leading member of TC. < | ||
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- | ===== Debate ===== | ||
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- | The second part is a discussion on a text from the last issue, ' | ||
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- | Björkhagengruppen criticises Marcel on the basis of partly different conditions. For instance, they argue that Marcel did not do a proper reading of Hegel and thus fails to preserve a distinction between the concepts of essence and appearance. Furthermore, | ||
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- | Marcel states in his reply that he acknowledges the critique in the mentioned articles, but he also refers to a coming publication, | ||
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- | Furthermore, | ||
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- | We find it very pleasant and positive that people < | ||
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- | ===== Marx–Engels series ===== | ||
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- | In our series with première translations of texts by Marx and Engels, this time we make three apparently disparate: the years 1844--1845, 1860 and 1877. The first one is a few passages from Marx's and Engel' | ||
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- | Apart from this we publish two letters by Marx from two different time periods. Neither do we feel like writing anything about these other than that they contain interesting formulations which surely might suprise one or two Marx necrophiles. We find one in a comment on the dissolution of the Communist League where some words are spent on the party and in the historical way he always intended. In the second letter we find a tired Marx who shares his view on the idolising of his personality. | ||
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- | October 2006 | ||
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- | ~~DISCUSSION~~ |