Radical Ecology and Class Struggle: A Re-Consideration
north america / mexico |
environment |
opinion / analysis
Thursday August 11, 2005 00:35
by Jeff Shantz - Toronto-NEFAC

In recent years a variety of social movement and environmental commentators have devoted a great deal of energy to efforts which argue the demise of class struggle as a viable force for social change (See Eckersley, 1990; Bowles and Gintis, 1987; Bookchin, 1993; 1997). These writers argue that analyses of class struggle are unable to account for the plurality of expressions which hierarchy, domination and oppression take in advanced capitalist or what they prefer to call "postindustrial" societies (See Bookchin, 1980; 1986). They charge that class analyses render a one-dimensional portrayal of social relations. The result of this has been a broad practical and theoretical turn away from questions of class and especially class struggle.
Radical Ecology and Class Struggle:
A Re-Consideration
In recent years a variety of social movement and environmental
commentators have devoted a great deal of energy to efforts which
argue the demise of class struggle as a viable force for social
change (See Eckersley, 1990; Bowles and Gintis, 1987; Bookchin, 1993;
1997). These writers argue that analyses of class struggle are unable
to account for the plurality of expressions which hierarchy,
domination and oppression take in advanced capitalist or what they
prefer to call "postindustrial" societies (See Bookchin, 1980; 1986).
They charge that class analyses render a one-dimensional portrayal of
social relations. The result of this has been a broad practical and
theoretical turn away from questions of class and especially class
struggle.
In my view, both orthodox Marxist constructions of class struggle
and the arguments raised against that conceptualization have been
constrained by conceptually narrow visions of class struggle.
Commentators have either taken class to mean an undifferentiated
monolith (Bookchin, 1986; 1987) which acts, or more often fails to
act, as the instrumental agent in history or else as a fiction
generated to obscure hopelessly divided and antagonistic relations
within the working class (Laclau and Mouffe, 1985; Bourdieu, 1987).
What is generally missing from these otherwise disparate accounts is
a dynamic understanding of people as workers and workers as
activists.
Indeed one might argue that much of the difficulty arises from
arguments over the sociologically constructed working class (e.g. the
Marxist "totality" which treats workers in a deterministic manner)
rather than the working class in its variety of daily negotiated
manifestations. While it is worthwhile to criticize the economistic
construction of the working class as constituted by orthodox Marxism,
the outcome of such critiques should not be a rejection of the
central importance of class and the revolutionary implications of
class struggle.
SOCIAL ECOLOGY AGAINST CLASS STRUGGLE?
Anarchist social ecologist Murray Bookchin has gone beyond merely
turning away from notions of class struggle to actively condemning
them, even in their anarchist expressions. In Toward and Ecological
Society, Bookchin (1980: 218) argues that it is "the very class
nature of the proletariat... and its highly particularistic
interests...[which] belie Marx's claims for its universality and its
historic role as a revolutionary agent." Bookchin suggests that it is
as class members that workers are at their most reactionary. In his
view, the fact of workers' exploitation by the bourgeoisie and their
position within the factory system only reinforce workers' "actual
one-sided condition under capitalism as a 'productive force,' not as
a revolutionary force" (Bookchin, 1980: 241).
Bookchin is rightly critical of the factory system and sees it as
a major factor in the de-humanization of the working class. However,
he goes a step further by suggesting that the factory system also
assures the de-radicalization of the working class. In Post-Scarcity
Anarchism (1986), Bookchin argues that the factory system serves as
the training ground for bourgeois society and for the instilling of
bourgeois values. Through the imposition of a work ethic, the
hierarchical organizations of management, and the demands for
obedience, the factory system serves to indoctrinate workers as
subservient upholders of capitalism.
Bookchin (1986: 205) states that, in a sad parody of the Marxist
vision, the "factory serves not only to 'discipline,' 'unite,' and
'organize' the workers, but also to do so in a thoroughly bourgeois
fashion." This leads Bookchin (1987: 187) to argue elsewhere that
socialist, anarchist or syndicalist struggles focused around the
factory give "social and psychological priority to the worker
precisely where he or she is most co-joined to capitalism and most
debased as a human being at the job site." (That Bookchin thinks of
workers only in relation to the "factory system is another serious
problem which I will not go into here.)
For Bookchin, the only answer is to leave the job site and turn
solely to struggles within the "community" as though communities
exist without workplaces or classes. In Bookchin's view communities
are somehow separate from the class positions of those who live in
them. He argues that the workers who are so brutalized at the job
site are able to shed those experiences and become different people
within their communities. "Their human focus is the community in
which they live, not the factory in which they work" (Bookchin, 1987:
191). In Bookchin's analysis, as in liberal theory, "the most
powerful form of collective organization in contemporary capitalism
the modern business corporation is stripped of its communal status"
(Bowles and Gintis, 1987: 16).
This perspective leads Bookchin (1987; 1997) to insist that the
efforts of anarchist-communists or anarcho-syndicalists who organize
amongst workers, especially if they do so at work, are only
strengthening the very aspects of workers' social beings that must be
overcome if a radical transformation of society is to occur. Such
work, he argues, only serves to distract from the potentially
beneficial developments of consciousness which he expects to arise
from activities within the community.
While appreciating Bookchin's insights of course community
initiatives are important, certainly the disciplined regimentation of
the workplace must be overcome there remain difficulties which must
be further discussed. First, if workers are to overcome their
alienated class character, then they must at some point confront the
growing contradiction between their developing community
consciousness and the material confinement and dehumanization
experienced at the job site. Rather than being simply left behind, or
ignored, the job itself will be a crucial arena for struggle.
The constitution of new identities as expressive human beings in
transcendence of alienated class identies implies a successful
struggle over the very structures of domination, regimentation,
hierarchy and discipline which exist concretely within the workplace.
One cannot assume that the job site will simply wither away with the
flowering of a new identity. More likely it will be impossible to
fully develop the human expressiveness of which Bookchin (1986)
speaks, given the continued existence of this significant nexus of
capitalist power, domination and exploitation.
Appeals to humanity, conscience and personality cannot be made in
abstraction from the very material conditions which restrict and
deform peoples' humanity, conscience and personality. While struggles
at the level of the workplace should not, indeed cannot, be elevated
to the sole site of transformation, the corrective to this is not to
abandon these struggles altogether. People learn through action.
Likewise, it is not enough simply to condemn or ignore peoples'
identies as workers. Rather the fullest implications of this subject
position must be understood through the activities and through the
voices of workers themselves.
Rather than arguing for or against the workplace as opposed to
the community one must move forward to a fuller extent of engagement
carried out at both sites. That each realm of experience and action
is an important site for transformation and struggle must be
appreciated. That the workplace must be transcended and the community
developed, or even restored, does not erase the fact that the process
through which each can occur will not allow a retreat from one and a
romantic preoccupation with the other. The development of community
must be the dissolution of the factory system and all that it
entails.
When attempting to articulate a fuller understanding of class
struggles it is worthwhile to remember that such struggles do not
begin and end at the point of production. As Bookchin (1986: 249)
himself has noted, without understanding the class implications, "it
may emerge from the poverty of the unemployed and unemployables, many
of whom have never done a day's work in industry." Likewise, the
class struggle entails an extremely crucial ideological dimension
that extends far beyond any restricted notions of "class
consciousness" or "superstructure." It is an ideological development
which arises fundamentally from peoples' varied activities in a
society ruled by the dictates of private property. Bookchin (1986:
249) comes up against this when he concedes that class struggle "may
emerge from a new sense of possibility that slowly pervades society
the tension between 'what is' and 'what could be.'" This tension is
precisely the contradiction which workers in struggle experience
between their desires for self-determination and the limits of the
workplace.
As importantly, such an understanding may infuse struggles over
class with radically new visions of the vast terrain from which
social change can emerge. A deeper understanding of class struggle
concerns itself with the expression of ethical and cultural
insurrections which occur along with economic insurrections. Out of
this awareness the potential for an ecological understanding of class
society and a class analysis of ecological society might emerge.
Certainly the historic anarcho-syndicalist and
anarchist-communist struggles have exhibited this conscious awareness
that class struggle entails more than battles over economic issues
carried out at the workplace (See Kornblugh, 1964; Thompson and
Murfin, 1976; Salerno, 1989; Rosemont, 1997a; 1997b). Class struggles
have been concerned with the broad manifestations of domination and
control that are constituted along with the ruthlessly private
ownership of the planet's ecosystems and their vast potentials for
freedom.
GREEN SYNDICALISM: ONE ALTERNATIVE TO SOCIAL ECOLOGY
As a corrective to the retreat from class in much anarchist, new
social movement and "radical" thought some activists have tried
recently to learn the lessons shown by the history of the Industrial
Workers of the World (IWW or "Wobblies"). The late Earth First!
organizer Judi Bari used her knowledge of IWW organizing work to help
build an alliance between timber workers and radical
environmentalists in the redwood forests of Northern California. By
showing that a radical working class perspective may also contain a
radical ecological perspective, Bari contributed much to a deeper
understanding of the root causes of ecological destruction and the
destruction of logging communities. Moreover her efforts in Northern
California provided a sharp and living critique of the common view
among environmentalists (See Foreman, 1991; Bookchin, 1980; 1986;
1987) that class analyses and class struggle approaches have little
to offer in the effort to bring about an ecological society.
This approach has led to the development of syndicalist practice
informed by radical ecology a "green syndicalism." Green syndicalists
have understood that labor struggles and ecological struggles are not
separate (See Bari, 2001; Purchase, 1994; 1997a; 1997b). Within green
syndicalism this assumption of connectedness between historical
radical movements, including labor and ecology, has much
significance. These green syndicalist perspectives are important in
reminding (or informing) ecology activists and workers alike that
there are radical working class histories in addition to the
histories of compromise which so preoccupy Bookchin's thinking.
"Historically, it was the IWW who broke the stranglehold of the
timber barons on the loggers and millworkers in the nineteen teens"
(Bari, 1994: 18). It is precisely this stranglehold which
environmentalists are trying to break today. "Now the companies are
back in total control, only this time they're taking down not only
the workers but the Earth as well. This, to me, is what the IWW-Earth
First! link is really about (Bari, 1994: 18). In her work, Bari
forged real connections between the suffering of timber workers with
ecological destruction today. The history of workers' struggles
becomes part of the history of ecology.
Significantly, green syndicalists reject the productivist
premises of "old-style" Marxists who often viewed issues such as
ecology as external to questions of production, distracting from the
task of organizing workers at the point of production. Within green
syndicalist perspectives, ecological concerns cannot properly be
divorced from questions of production or economics. Rather than
representing "separate worlds," nature, producers or workplace become
understood as endlessly contested features in an always-shifting
terrain. Furthermore these contests, both over materiality and over
meanings, contradict notions of unitary or one-dimensional responses.
Green syndicalists thus stress the mutuality and interaction of what
had been conceptually separated nature, culture, workers (See Bari,
2001).
Through this expanded analysis of class struggles one may come to
a more concrete understanding of the dynamic nature of conflict. No
longer posited as one-sided or pre-given, it becomes clear that the
struggles themselves lead to the emergence of entirely new issues and
demands such as the quality of work and ecology.
Green syndicalists insist that overcoming ecological devastation
depends on shared responsibilities towards developing convivial ways
of living in which relations of affinity, both within our own species
and with other species, are nurtured (See Bari, 2001). They envision,
for example, an association of workers committed to the dismantling
of the factory system, its work discipline, hierarchies and
regimentation all of the things which Bookchin identifies (Kaufmann
and Ditz, 1992; Purchase, 1994; 1997b). This involves both an actual
destruction of some factories and their conversion towards "soft"
forms of small, local production. These shifting priorities express
the novelty of green syndicalism not the discourse of industrial
management presented in the caricatures of its detractors.
Within green syndicalism one sees evidence of "deep green"
perspectives which express new visions of relations between
industrial workers and radical ecology. Green syndicalist
perspectives are suggestive of some tentative synthesis. The emphasis
still remains on possibility.
CONCLUSION
In Remaking Society Bookchin, (1989: 172) concludes that "the
bases for conflicting interests in society must themselves be
confronted and resolved in a revolutionary manner. The earth can no
longer be owned; it must be shared." These statements represent truly
crucial aspects of a radical vision for an ecological society. What
is perplexing is that Bookchin does not draw the necessary
implications out of his own radical conclusions. The questions of
ownership and control of the earth are nothing if not questions of
class.
As conflicts over nature deepen and the theft represented by
property becomes de-legitimized by the further destruction of varied
eco-communities there is the potential for greater mobilizations of
people as workers in a diverse but united struggle for communitarian
reconstruction. It is from a standpoint of unity-in-diversity (social
and ecological) that a newer, richer understanding of class and class
struggle must begin. Through open communication and alliance workers
as environmentalists (and indeed environmentalists as workers) will
add to this deeper understanding of class struggle.
REFERENCES
Bari, Judi. 1994. Timber Wars; Monroe: Common Courage
----------. 2001. "Revolutionary Ecology: Biocentrism and Deep
Ecology." Hodge Podge. 7: 35-38 Bookchin, Murray. 1980. Toward and
Ecological Society; Montreal: Black Rose Books
----------. 1986. Post-Scarcity Anarchism; Montreal: Black Rose
Books
----------. 1987. The Modern Crisis; Montreal: Black Rose Books
----------. 1990. The Philosophy of Social Ecology; Montreal: Black
Rose Books
----------. 1997. "Deep Ecology, Anarchosyndicalism, and the Future
of Anarchist Thought." In Deep Ecology and Anarchism: A Polemic;
edited by Freedom Press. London: Freedom Press, 47-58
Bourdieu, Pierre. 1987. "What Makes a Social Class? On the
Theoretical and Practical Existence of Groups." Berkeley Journal of
Sociology. 32: 1-18
Bowles, Samuel and Herbert Gintis. 1987. Democracy and Capitalism;
New York: Basic Books
Eckersley, Robyn. 1989. "Green Politics and the New Class:
Selfishness or Virtue." Political Studies. 37(2): 205-23
Foreman, Dave. 1991. Confessions of an Eco-Warrior; New York: Harmony
Books
Laclau, Ernesto and Chantal Mouffe. 1985. Hegemony and Socialist
Strategy; London: Verso
Purchase, Graham. 1994. Anarchism and Environmental Survival; Tucson:
See Sharp Press
----------. 1997a. Anarchism and Ecology; Montreal: Black Rose
Books
----------. 1997b. "Social Ecology, Anarchism and Trades Unionism."
In Deep Ecology and Anarchism: A Polemic; edited by Freedom Press.
London: Freedom Press, 23-35
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Jump To Comment: 1For people who are interested, Zabalaza Books has produced a pdf pamphlet version of this text which is available from:
http://www.zabalaza.net/zababooks/dl_earth&animal_lib01.htm
or to download it directly, click below...
http://www.zabalaza.net/pdfs/varpams/radiceco&classtrug_js.pdf