Against His-story, Against Leviathan! by Fredy Perlman (Detroit: Black & Red, 1983).
I'm born in a certain age which has certain instruments of production and
certain kinds of knowledge; I have the possibility to combine my ability
with my knowledge, and can use the socially available means of production
as instruments with which to realize an individual or collective project.
Civilization is under attack. A new critical current has emerged in recent
years, united by an antagonism towards all tendencies that seem to include
'progress' as part of their programme. Perlman's book, described in the AK
Distribution 1993 Catalogue as "One of the most significant and influential
anarchic texts of the last few decades" (p. 30), is one of the key texts in
this 'primitivist' current. In the U.S.A. and this country, it is in
anarchist circles - particularly amongst those engaged in eco-struggles -
that primitivism has become particularly popular. But Perlman used to be a
Marxist (see the quote above), and he contributed usefully to the
development of a libertarian version of Marx's theory for a number of
years. The wholesale abandonment of Marx in favour of primitivism has
touched the non-Leninist revolutionary milieu in this country too, with the
recent conversion of Wildcat(UK)[2] to the anti-civilization position.
One direction that the primitivist current points in is the need to develop
a critique of technology. This is something the old left cannot grasp, and
is one of the reasons why it is unable to connect properly with tendencies
toward communism. According to most varieties of leftism, technological
progress and therefore economic growth will be of universal benefit so long
as they are planned rationally; what prevents the full and rational
development of the forces of production is the irrationality of the
capitalist market. All this is reflected in the way leftists relate to the
new struggles over technological 'progress', such as the anti-roads
movement. Thus, while opportunists like the SWP treat these new struggles
as valid only because they might be fertile grounds for recruitment to the
'real' struggle, leftists who are more openly traditional on this issue -
such as the RCP - repeat the old claim that what the proles really want is
more and better roads (so we can all get to work on time, perhaps!): a
modern infrastructure is necessary for growth, and an expanding economy
necessarily makes for a better quality of life.
The old project of simply taking over existing means of production was the
creation of an era before capital had so thoroughly invested its own
subjectivity in technology, design and the labour process. The technology
that promises to liberate us in fact enslaves us by regulating our
activities in and through work and leisure; machines and factories pollute
our environments and destroy our bodies; their products offer us the image
of real life instead of its substance. Now, more than ever, it is often
more appropriate to smash existing means of production than merely manage
them differently. We must therefore go beyond leftist notions of the
neutrality of technology and problematize their definitions of progress.
The current anti-roads movement offers an example of a practical
critique of progress - that is, one which contests dominant definitions
of progress through physically disrupting their implementation. As we
argued in our last issue, struggles such as that over the M11 link road in
north-east London should be understood as part of the class struggle. This
is often despite the ideas of those taking part, some of which echo
Perlman's ideological critique of progress. In contrast to the
practical critique, the ideological critique actively hinders an
adequate critique of capitalism. Thus Perlman rejects unwanted leftist
notions only through a retreat into a form of romantic quasi-anarchism
which is unable to grasp the movement necessary to abolish capital. Given
that Perlman is only one voice, however, the present article will use a
review of his book as a springboard for a critique of other expressions of
the new primitivist current.
The case against 'progress'
Perlman appears to agree with Marx that what distinguishes civilization
from primitive communism is the development of the means of production,
which enabled surplus labour and thus the existence of a parasitic
non-productive class. But the book challenges the traditional Marxist view
by suggesting that in primitive communism there were already 'surpluses'.[3]
If there was no problem with means of subsistence, then there could be no
need to develop the means of production. The emergence of civilization is
therefore comparable with the 'fall' from the Garden of Eden.
However, Perlman's claim that the ancient Sumerians felt obliged to
introduce technological innovation suggests that primitive communism wasn't
always so idyllic after all: the place where they were living was
'hellish'; they were intent on 'farming a jungle'; in the rainy season the
floods carried off both their crops and their houses, while in the dry
season their plants dried up and died.[4] This might suggest that population
growth forced people to live in marginal lands, away from any surpluses. It
also seems to conflict with Perlman's repeated claim that material
conditions were not responsible for the development of technology and thus
civilization; if lack of a regular water supply isn't a material condition,
then what is? Similarly, the material condition of a growing population
isn't discussed.[5] The social relations Perlman describes which accompany the
new technology seem to be rather arbitrary. Much (the whole of history, in
fact) seems to hinge on the decision made by the 'wise' [sic] Sumerian
elders to appoint 'a strong young man' to be the 'supervisor' of the
waterworks project. (So is chance to blame rather than the small
minority?)
The writings of John Zerzan, such as his collection of essays Elements
of Refusal,[6] seems to take Perlman's general argument further (back).
Zerzan's writings are not orthodoxy within the new primitivist current, but
they have been important in the American primitivist and eco-anarchist
scenes in setting agendas for debate on issues such as agriculture. The
whole problem in Zerzan's view may be summarized as follows: symbolization
set in motion the series of horrors that is civilization's trajectory.
Symbolization led to ideas of time, number, art and language which in turn
led to agriculture. Religion gets the blame as well, being carried by
language, and being one of the prime culprits for agriculture: food
production is "at base ... a religious activity" (p. 70). But why is
agriculture so bad? According to Zerzan, "captivity itself and every form
of enslavement has agriculture as its progenitor or model" (p. 75).
Therefore while Perlman might have wanted to defend existing primitive
communities against encroaching capitalist development, Zerzan sees anyone
using agriculture as already alienated and therefore not worth saving: even
most tribal types wouldn't be pure enough for him. Similarly, permaculture
is an aspiration of many primitivists, but, within Zerzan's vision, this
too would be part of the problem since it is a method of production. His
later work[7] has even dismissed hunter-gathering - since hunting leads to
symbolism (and all the rest).
It might be easy to dismiss many of Perlman's and Zerzan's arguments as
just half-baked idealism. They are not particularly original, and indeed
might be said to be no more than vulgarizations of the ideas of Camatte
(see below); if we are interested in theory, it might therefore be more
appropriate to develop a critique of his work rather than theirs. However,
Camatte is far less well known and far less influential than either Perlman
or Zerzan. The fact that their ideas are becoming something of a material
force - in the form of an increasing number of people engaged in struggle
espousing primitivism - means that we have to take them seriously in their
own right.
The modern context of primitivism
It would seem no coincidence that anti-civilization ideas have blossomed in
particular in the U.S.A. It is easy to see how such ideas can take hold in
a place where there is still a recognizable wilderness which is currently
being destroyed by production. The U.S.A. differs from Europe also in the
fact that it lacks the long history of struggle that characterizes the
transition from feudalism to capitalism (and the making of the
proletariat). Instead, it has had the wholesale imposition of capitalism on
indigenous cultures - a real genocide. Moreover, in recent years, the
U.S.A. has also differed from Europe in the extent of the defeat of
proletarian struggle over there.
Defeat brings pessimism, and when the current radical movement is on the
decline, it may be easier to be radical about the past than to be radical
in a practical way in the present.[8] In the biography of Perlman, we can
trace a movement from hope in the proletariat as the liberatory force to a
turn to nature and the past in the context of defeat. As a Marxist, Perlman
was caught up in the events of 1968, where he discovered the texts and
ideas of the Situationist International, anarchism and the Spanish
Revolution, and council communism. Afterwards, however, on moving to the
U.S.A., "[t]he shrinking arena for meaningful political activity in the
early '70s led Fredy to see himself as less of an 'activist' and
more as a rememberer."[9] Perlman's development is closely linked with that of
Jacques Camatte, sometime comrade of the Italian left-communist Bordiga.
Camatte broke with left-communist organizations partly due to his
recognition of the need to go beyond their (objectivist) perspective and
rethink Marx on the basis of the radical promise offered by such texts as
the 'Results of the Immediate Process of Production' (The 'missing
sixth chapter' of Capital, vol. I), the Grundrisse, and the
1844 Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts. However, Camatte
eventually concluded that capital was in fact all powerful; given this, the
proletariat offered no hope and the only option for humanity was to run
away and escape somehow.
In the case of Zerzan, his early work romanticizes proletarian spontaneity;
on the basis of his observations of apparently new expressions of
resistance in the form of worker sabotage and absenteeism, he pronounced
this to be the future of class struggle.[10] In the early 1980s, the recession
threw millions out of work. We might take this as the vindication of his
critics' predictions about the transience of these forms of the revolt
against work as viable expressions of the class struggle; for in the face
of widespread unemployment how could workers commit sabotage or go absent?
But instead of recognizing the setbacks to the struggle as a whole, Zerzan
saw in the new unemployment figures the 'collapse' of capitalism and the
'vitality' of the revolt against work. For those who were still in jobs,
work intensity increased during this period. To Zerzan, however, the most
important thing, was a decline of the work-ethic. Zerzan also dismissed
strikes (successful or otherwise) as being cathartic charades. His focus on
attitudes allowed the perilous state of the proletariat as a movement to be
overlooked.
Zerzan's unrealistic optimism is merely the flipside of the pessimism that
comes with defeat.[11] But holding on to such ideas - substituting the simple
negation of civilization for the determinate negation of capitalism - is
not only a reflection of pessimism with current movements; it also
functions to prevent adherents from connecting with these movements. The
ultimate test of the primitivists' case might be its usefulness in
struggles. Primitivists say they don't want to 'simply' go back (maybe they
want to go back in a more 'complex' way - in a tardis, perhaps), but
neither do they say much about what we should be doing now; and Perlman and
Zerzan give few examples of collective struggles that seem to them to point
in the right direction.[12] In the past, Perlman and Zerzan made contributions
to revolutionary struggle; but whatever useful contributions Zerzan may
make now do not particularly seem to flow from his theory.
For the modern primitivist, the despair of failing to locate the future in
the present, and of failing to counteract the pervasiveness of production,
may leave no alternative but principled suicide (possibly in the service of
a bombing mission against one or other manifestation of the
'mega-machine'), or resignation before Leviathan's irresistible progress,
and a search for an individual solution. Although primitivists see capital
as a social relation, they seem to have lost the sense that it is a process
of class struggle, not just an imposition by a powerful oppressor. Since,
in their account, all praxis is alienated, how can proletarian
praxis possibly offer the way out? So, for example, George Bradford,
writing in Fifth Estate,[13] argues that all we can hope to do is
maintain human decency, affirm moral coherence and defend 'human
personhood', and hope that others do the same.
History produces its own questioners
The issue touches upon the definition of 'human nature'. In confronting
this, we find two sorts of position in the writings of primitivists.
Firstly, consistent with Marx's approach, some acknowledge that human needs
and desires are indeed historical products.[14] But, for the logically pure
primitivist, this is problematic because such needs and desires would
therefore be an effect of the very thing they are trying to overcome; these
needs would be part of history and civilization, and therefore alienated.
(Recall the traditional leftist view that capitalism holds back our needs
for technological progress; to the primitivist, needs like these would be
part of the problem.)
Given this, primitivists often imply instead that the human needs and
desires to which civilization is antithetical are ahistorical or
suprahistorical.[15] Perlman says nothing explicit in his book about the
precise features of this ahistorical human nature he seems to be positing,
except that he "take[s] it for granted that resistance is the natural human
response to dehumanization" (p. 184). The rest, we can assume, is simply
the negative of his account of civilization: non-hierarchical, non-working
and so on.
Again, an ahistorical 'human nature' argument against capital
('civilization', 'government' etc.) is not a new one, and we don't have to
re-invent the dialectical wheel to argue against it. In fact, we can turn
to some of Perlman's own work for a pretty good counter-argument. In his
Introduction to Rubin's Essays on Marx's Theory of Value,[16] Perlman
discusses Feuerbach's conception of human nature. As Perlman says, for
Feuerbach the human essence is something isolated, unhistorical and
therefore abstract. The great leap in theory beyond the bourgeois idealists
made by Marx was to argue against this that "the human essence is no
abstraction inherent in each single individual. In its reality it is the
ensemble of the social relations." (p. 122).[17]
By contrast, then, the later Perlman makes a huge leap backwards in theory
to rediscover old, bourgeois notions which define human nature in terms of
certain negative desires located within each individual.[18] Similarly, Zerzan
counterposes 'alienation' (be it through hierarchy, agriculture or wage
labour) to an asocial humanity. His more promising early writing on
absenteeism and sabotage was flawed by his inability to recognize the
limits of struggle that does not become collective.[19] His more recent work
centres on a critique of language, that aspect of human life which,
probably more than any other, allows us to share and therefore makes us
social beings.
Primitivists' conception of the essential ontological opposition as being
between history (civilization) and an abstract human nature, instead of
between two historically-contingent sets of interests (capital
versus the proletariat), means that their critique tends to be merely a
moral one. For example, as his widow and biographer states, Perlman
argues that the trail-blazers of civilization did have other
choices.[20] In Worker-Student Action Committees, a similarly
voluntaristic theme works as a useful critique of the limits of the
practice of those taking part in the events in Paris in May 1968:
'Subjectively they thought they were revolutionaries because they thought a
revolution was taking place ... They were not going to initiate this
process; they were going to follow the wave wherever it pushed them.' (p.
82). But, in the absence of a proper recognition of the logical-historical
drives and constraints of particular modes of production, Perlman's
primitivism represents the degeneration of a non-objectivist version of
Marxism into a version of the anarchist critique of power, with all its
obvious weaknesses: "These leaders were just bad or stupid people!'
Similarly, in the case of Zerzan, language is said to have arisen not so
that people could co-operate with each other, but 'for the purpose of
lying" (Elements of Refusal, p. 27). So we must blame, not class
interests, but people's moral failings![21]
Whose progress is it anyway?
Bound up with the primitivist view of pre-history as an ideal state is the
rigid distinction they draw between nature and human productive activity.
What makes us human are the set of 'first order mediations' between
humanity and nature: our needs, the natural world around us, our
power to create, and so on. To be human is to be creative. Through 'second
order mediations', these basic qualities of existence are themselves
mediated by relationships - of power, alienation, exploitation and so on -
between classes. Zerzan idealizes a golden age before humanity
became distinct from nature only because he conflates human creative
activity per se with alienated creative activity; to him, any human
creative activity - any activity which affects the rest of nature - is
already saturated with exploitation and alienation.
What the anti-civilization position overlooks, therefore, is the mutual
constitution of humanity and (the rest of) nature: humans are part of
nature, and it is their nature to humanize nature. Nature and humanity are
co-defining parts of a single moving totality; both are therefore subject
to change and change each other. Changes in the world may lead to new
social relations among human beings - relations which may involve a
different relation to that world, a different praxis and technology (such
as when the Iron Age developed out of climatic changes). We are products of
nature, but we also create ourselves through our own activity in shaping
the world that we inhabit. While it is certainly true that to privilege
'humanity' in any of these changes may be to damage the very environment we
need to live, to privilege 'the natural world' by viewing all our activity
as an assault on it may be to damage humanity.
If the change from pre-history to agriculture and other innovations wasn't
necessarily alienating - if the latter weren't by their nature imposed
within and through social relations of domination - then the whole
historical opposition Perlman and Zerzan set up between progress and its
popular resistance is thrown into doubt. Evidence from history suggests
that progress is by no means necessarily the expression of the powerful;
rather the powerful were sometimes indifferent to progress, and the
powerless were sometimes the ones who contributed to it.[22]
In Antiquity, particularly in Greek society, there was technological
stagnation rather than progress. The surplus product of slave labour was
used for innovations only in the sphere of civic society and the
intellectual realm. Manual labour, and therefore innovations in production,
were associated in the minds of the Greek ruling class with loss of
liberty. Although the Romans introduced more technical developments, these
were largely confined to the material improvement of cities (e.g., central
heating) and the armed forces (e.g., roads) rather than the forces of
production. In both cases, military conquest was preferred to economic
advance through the forces of production.
In the feudal period, both lords and peasants had reasons to bring
innovations to agriculture to increase production. The growing desires for
amenities and luxuries in the aristocratic class as a whole, particularly
from about the year 1000 onwards, motivated an expansion of supply from the
countryside. Hence the introduction of the water-mill and the spread of
viticulture. The peasants were motivated to create and satisfy new needs by
the particular parameters of the feudal mode of production, which tied the
peasant to only a certain weekly toll and fixed number of days to work: the
rest of the time was their own, and could be used to improve their quality
of life. Hence more and more villages came to possess forges for local
production of iron tools; cereal cultivation spread; and the quality and
quantity of production on the peasants' own plots increased.
The key to understanding the massive growth in productivity in the feudal
period, however, was the recurrent rent struggles between peasants and
landowners. Disputes over land, initiated by either pole of the feudal
relationship, motivated occupation and colonization of new lands in the
form of reclamation of heaths, swampland and forests for agricultural
purposes. It was a continual class struggle that drove the economy forward.
Primitivism, by suggesting that the initiators of progress are always the
ruling class, projects features of capitalism back into the past - as do
most bourgeois theories. Previous class societies were based largely on a
settled level of technology; in such societies technological change may
have been resisted by the ruling classes since it might have upset settled
relations of dominance. Capitalism is the only mode of production based on
constantly revolutionizing technology and the means of production.
Moreover, characterizing capitalism as simply the rule of technology or the
'mega-machine' fetishizes fixed capital as a prime mover, thereby losing
sight of the struggle behind the shape of the means of production. Progress
within capitalism is characteristically the result of capital responding to
forms of resistance. For example, in the shift to Taylorist production
methods, the variables that the management scientists were having to deal
with were not merely technical factors but the awkwardness and power of the
workforce; this could best be controlled and harnessed as variable capital
(so the scientists thought) by physically separating the job of work into
its component parts and the workers along the production line so they were
unable to fraternize. One of the next steps in improving output was the
introduction of the 'human relations' approach, putting a human face on the
factory, which was forced upon capital by worker resistance (in the form of
absenteeism and sabotage) to the starkness of pure Taylorism.
Thus, we might understand progress in the forces of production not as the
absolute imposition of the will of one class over another, but as the
result of the class contradiction itself. If progress is in an important
sense a compromise, a result of conflict - both between classes and between
competing capitals - then some of its effects might be positive. We might
hate capitalism, but most of us can think of capitalist technologies we'd
like to keep to meet our present and future needs (though not as
commodities, of course) - be it mountain bikes, light bulbs or word
processors. This is consistent with our immediate experience of modern
capitalism, which isn't simply imposed upon us monolithically, but has to
reflect our own wishes in some way. After all, isn't the essence of the
spectacle the recuperation of the multiplicity of our own desires?
Therefore it is not some abstract progress which we want to abolish, but
the contradictory progress we get in class society. The process of
communism entails the reappropriation and radical, critical transformation
of that created within the alienated social relations of capitalism. To
hold that the problem is essentially technology itself is a mystification;
human instruments are not out of our control within capitalism because they
are instruments (any more than our own hands are necessarily
out of our control), but because they are the instruments of capital - and therefore of reified, second-order mediations.
Given all this, the argument by Wildcat[23] - that IF the productive
forces need to be developed to a sufficient degree to make communism
possible, and IF these forces are not developed sufficiently now,
THEN revolutionaries might have to support their further development -
applies only to Marxist objectivism rather than to the version of Marx's
project we are trying to develop. At any time, the revolutionary supports
the opposition to capital (and, by extension, takes the side of any
communist tendency in any class society). Actions by the opposition to
capital can force concessions from capital, making further successful
resistance possible both subjectively (confidence, ideas of possibility
etc.) and objectively (pushing capital beyond itself, weakening its
mechanisms of control etc.). 'Progress' often describes the deferment of
this revolutionary process, as the mode of production is forced to change
its form: look at the way the class compromise of the post-war settlement
entailed the development of new production and accumulation methods in the
form of Fordism. In their attack on progress, Wildcat mistake the
shadows for the substance of the fight.
Good and bad Marx
A critique of Marx and Marxism is certainly necessary, but primitivism
(like postmodernism) is merely the ideologization of such a critique. The
anti-civilization position is not just a necessary attack on leftism, but a
counter-productive attack on everything in Marx. In defending some version
of Marx against primitivism, we certainly need to acknowledge the problems
in attempting to separate from some of its own consequences a theory which
sought not merely to interpret the world but to change it. However, some of
the primitivist critics seem to simply fit Marx up rather than attempt to
understand some of the limitations of his theory. For example, Zerzan's
critique of Marx claims to link Marx's practice with the supposed problems
of this theory. But the critique consists almost entirely of a list of
Marx's personal shortcomings and says virtually nothing about his theory.[24]
At least Wildcat bother to dig out some quotes from Marx, which they
then use as evidence in a critique of (their reading of) Marx's theory.
From the Grundrisse, they find a quote to show that Marx thought
that capitalist progress and thus alienation was a necessary step to the
full development of the individual;[25] and from the Preface to A
Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy they quote Marx's
well-known statement declaring that the development of the productive
forces is the precondition for communism.[26] These kinds of theoretical
statements they link to Marx's failings in practice, in particular his
support for the American Civil War. In response, we might pick out a dozen
more quotes from different texts by Marx - or even from the same texts
Wildcat draw upon - to show the importance he placed on proletarian
subjectivity and self-activity; and we might link these with his important
and innovatory contributions to revolutionary practice, such as his support
for the Silesian uprising and the Paris Commune.
But a mere selection (or even an aggregation) of quotes from Marx is not an
analysis. If we think there is anything useful in Marx's work, we could try
to locate his limits and contradictions in their historical context rather
than in the person of Marx in abstraction.[27] As Debord argued, Marx's limits
and contradictions reflect those of the workers' movement of the time. The
economistic element in Marx's theory - exemplified in writings such as
Capital - was merely one facet of his project as a whole. When the
struggle appeared to be at its most promising, the totality and hence the
subjective came to the fore in Marx's theory (as in the case of the overall
content and direction of the Grundrisse); but in the face of
setbacks Marx was reduced to scientistic justifications. It was also
important rhetorically, of course, to foresee the inevitability of the
communist revolution in the maturation of capitalism (as in The
Communist Manifesto, for example). Understanding Marx this way allows
us to critically develop his revolutionary theory in the direction of
communism rather than leading us simply to dump it as a whole uncritically.[28]
In an important sense, Marx was simply describing his observation that the
development of the forces of production in the end brought communism closer
through the proletarianization of the population. It is also true that at
times he was an advocate of such development. But the main point is that
such advocacy of capitalist progress does not flow from his
theoretical premises in the clear cut way the primitivists would have us
believe. Productivism is one trajectory from his work; this is the one
taken up by the Soviet Marxists and other objectivists in their narrow,
scientistic reading. But, taking his project as a whole, Marx's theory also
points to the active negation of capital through thoroughgoing class
struggle on all fronts.
Theory, history and future
To grasp present trends, we need more than the radical anthropology offered
by primitivists. We need theory that allows us to understand the historical
specificity of struggles. Capitalism is the most dynamic of class
societies; the proletariat is the only revolutionary class that seeks to
abolish itself and all classes. There are therefore many features of the
present epoch of class struggle that are lost in the simple gloss
'civilization'. In order to struggle effectively, to understand the
possible directions of struggles and the limits of particular ideologies
within struggles, we need to develop - not reject - the categories Marx
derived to grasp the capital relation and the process of its negation.
'Primitivism' is itself a product of a particular period of capitalist
history. The same setbacks that have encouraged postmodernism among
radicals in the academic realm have helped produce primitivism in circles
of activists. One merely describes 'the end of History', the other actively
calls for such an end; both are an inverted form of liberal idealism which
reject the traditional liberal faith in capitalist progress.
However, if primitivism was, like postmodernism, simply a complacent
expression by well-paid academics of the defeat of industrial class
struggles then we wouldn't bother giving it space in these pages. All of us
are forced to make a response to increased pollution and environmental
destruction brought about by the growth of the alien power that is capital;
primitivism is, at best, an attempt to engage in struggles around these
kind of issues. The alarming and compelling new appearance of the
fundamental problematic of alienation, in the form of world-wide
environmental destruction for profit, has encouraged new forms of
resistance (particularly in the U.S.A.), and these new forms seek ideas.
Marxism, identified with the old forms (of both capital and its
resistance), is seen to fail in the eyes of this new wave of resisters -
hence the appeal of a radical alternative, such as primitivism. But the
problem of primitivism lies in a flawed diagnosis of the problem of
Marxism: the essential problem in Marx and Marxism is not the belief in
progress, but objectivism.[29] A revolutionary theory adequate to
the struggle needed at the present time must therefore start with a
critique of the objectivism of previous revolutionary theories.[30]
R. Gregoire & F. Perlman, 1969[1]
Perlman's book begins by distinguishing between a state of nature (harmony
between humanity and the rest of nature) and civilization. Civilization
began, not because everyone wanted to improve their conditions of
existence, not because of 'material conditions', but because a small group
of people imposed it on everyone else. Perlman traces the origin of
civilization to the Sumerians, who, he says, felt obliged to build
waterworks to ensure a regular supply of water. The Sumerians invested
power to direct the building of the waterworks in one individual, who
eventually became a powerful expert elite and then a warrior elite - the
first ruling class, in effect. Under the direction of their ruling class,
the Sumerians then waged war on their neighbours, eventually enslaving
them. The rest of Perlman's book is taken up with the rest of world
history, comprising the evolution of - and resistance to - various types of
Leviathan (the name, taken from Hobbes, which Perlman uses for
civilization, class society or the state), each of which takes in human
beings as its living energy, is animated by them, and excretes them out as
it decays, only to be replaced by yet another Leviathan. Leviathans fight
with each other, but the winner is always Leviathan. Given that the
opposition is between Leviathan and the oppressed majority, the differences
between types of class society can therefore be largely glossed over.
Ideas of a golden age and a rejection of civilization are nothing new. The
Romantic Movement in bourgeois philosophy began with Rousseau, who
eulogized unmediated relations with 'nature' and characterized 'industry'
as evil. (Perlman quotes Rousseau approvingly.) But why has this old idea
become so popular now?
The argument that the turn to primitivism reflects the limits of the class
struggle at the present time has certain consequences for the coherence of
the primitivist position. To say that primitives necessarily resisted
civilization may be to project on to them the primitivist's own desires -
specifically, her own antipathy to technology and 'civilized' (i.e. class)
society. Primitives very likely were not conscious of their way of life as
a possibility or choice in the way the modern primitivist is, and therefore
would not have valued it in the same way that we might, and may not
necessarily have resisted the development of the productive forces. The
desire to transcend civilization seems itself to be a product of class
society; the rosy view of pre-history is itself a creation of history.
Primitivists say little about variations and changes in climate in
pre-historic times. In certain times and places, there may well have been
societies like the idyll described by Perlman; but it is equally likely
that other situations were nightmarish. All primitive societies relied
completely on the benevolence of nature, something which could easily
change; and changes in climatic conditions could wipe out thousands.
Perlman and Camatte certainly knew their Marx, and developed their early,
more promising, revolutionary theory through a confrontation with him. But
Against His-story and much of Zerzan's work recommend no such
constructive confrontation; rather they encourage a simplistic and
dismissive attitude by characterizing Marx as merely a nineteenth century
advocate of progress. From that perspective, any apparently radical
critique of Marx is welcomed, including that of postmodernist scumbags like
Baudrillard. (The Mirror of Production, a book by the media darling
and recuperator of situationist ideas, which groups Marx with the rest of
the 'modernist' has-beens, is promoted in the primitivist-influenced
Fifth Estate periodical.)
In approaches to history, there is an important difference between looking
to it for a communist ideal and attempting to understand why previous
communist tendencies have failed - and thus why we have more chance than
the Luddites, millenarian peasants, classical workers' movement etc. But in
order to go beyond these previous tendencies, we also need to interrogate
the present and the future. What new developments in technology call forth
new unities within the working class? Do changes to the means of
communication enable those engaged in struggles to understand and act more
effectively upon their global significance?
[1] Worker-Student Action Committees (Detroit: Black & Red), p. 85.
[2] Wildcat, 17, Spring 1994.
[3] The argument is based on M. Sahlins's Stone Age Economics (London: Tavistock, 1974), which suggests that stone age types had 'what they wanted' in abundance.
[4] Against His-story, p. 18.
[5] If 'overpopulation' by human beings is seen as the problem, the solution might be to call for the annihilation of 99.99% of the human race to return the other 0.01% to the state of nature, a rather problematic conclusion for someone who is supposed to be on the side of the human race against Leviathan: for, after all, who will decide who should make up the privileged 0.01%?
[6] J. Zerzan, Elements of Refusal (Seattle: Left Bank Books, 1988).
[7] J. Zerzan, Future Primitive and other Essays (New York: Autonomedia, 1994).
[8] The historians E.P. Thompson, Eric Hobsbawm and Christopher Hill are prime examples of people who, because of the separation of past from present, are/were able to pursue a revolutionary historiography within academia alongside a merely reformist political practice.
[9] Lorraine Perlman, Having Little, Being Much: A Chronicle of Fredy Perlman's Fifty Years (Detroit: Black & Red, 1989), p. 91.
[10] See The Refusal of Work, Echanges et Mouvement (1979).
[10] Wildcat's position too seems to be tied up with a pessimism that comes from the low point of the struggle: 'it is difficult at present to see how the New World Order of Madonna and MacDonald's [sic] contains its own negation' (Wildcat, 17, p. 16). The all-or-nothing approach that is characteristic of varieties of ultra-leftism swings fixedly from unreasonable optimism to despair; when resistance is strong, it seems to make sense to see the proletariat as attempting always to express spontaneous revolutionary tendencies, which are hampered only by leftism and the unions. But when the resistance is defeated, there seems to be nothing left - hence the appeal of a diametrically opposite extreme position.
[12] In the same way, Rousseau was aware that his moral critique of civilization did not point to any practical solution.
[13] 'The Triumph of Capital', Fifth Estate, Spring 1992.
[14] "Needs are created by human society, along with the means to satisfy them." (Wildcat, 17, p. 16).
[15] Freud argued that the essence of civilization was the sublimation of (socially unacceptable) pre-existing drives. In seeing an opposition between civilization and the full and unadulterated expression of human desires, Perlman and Zerzan agree with Freud; the only difference is that Freud thought much of civilization was good. S. Freud (1930) 'Civilization and its Discontents' in A. Dickson ed., Pelican Freud Library 12 (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1985).
[16] I.I. Rubin (1928) Essays on Marx's Theory of Value, trans. M. Samardzija & F. Perlman, (Detroit: Black & Red, 1972).
[17] Marx, 'Theses on Feuerbach', in C. Arthur ed., The German Ideology (Student Edition), (London: Lawrence & Wishart, 1974).
[18] An example of the drive to expand civilization and the productive forces being located in the psychology of individuals rather than in the totality of social relations comes in Against His-story when Perlman attributes the conquest of primitives by Europeans to the latter's 'resentment' of those who seem to be free (p. 267).
[19] See the debate in The Refusal of Work.
[20] L. Perlman, op. cit.
[21] The moral undertone in the critique of civilization resonates with the puritanically moral conceptions of human needs held by many eco-anarchist types, who tell their comrades that the latter 'don't really need' some of the things they desire, and who attempt to specify to them 'all the things we really need' - usually a spartan list reflecting historically-contingent notions of 'biological necessities'.
[22] Descriptions based on Perry Anderson, Passages from Antiquity to Feudalism (London: NLB, 1974).
[23] Wildcat, 17, p. 11.
[24] 'The Practical Marx' (1979) in Elements of Refusal. The style seems typical of Zerzan whose articles are frequently made up of a collection of quotes and empirical snippets with little analysis.
[25] Wildcat, 17, p. 24.
[26] Ibid., pp. 9-10.
[27] The irony of Zerzan's pseudo-critique is that he could find legitimate reason for making a valid criticism of Marx simply by opening Volume I of Capital where the Luddites are dismissed as 'reactionary'. Marx contradicts himself in the 'missing sixth chapter' of the same volume ('Results of the Immediate Process of Production') by characterizing technology not as a neutral object but as the very agent of the worker's alienation and therefore a proper target of rational class hatred.
[28] On this point of developing Marx using Marx's method, see G. Debord, The Society of the Spectacle, (London: Practical Paradise Publications, 1967), A. Negri, Marx beyond Marx, (New York: Autonomedia, 1994) and F.C. Shortall, The Incomplete Marx (Aldershot: Avebury, 1994). It is true that the question of ecology which concerns primitivists remains neglected even in these relatively recent developments. Again, however, it is only by understanding the historical context of this neglect in Marx and others that we might develop revolutionary theory instead of merely counterposing it to an ecological approach.
[29] The primitivist George Bradford suggests that the only way that capital and the mega-machine will be destroyed is through the weight of their own complexity - in other words through an objective process of decline. A mere critique of 'progress' is an inadequate critique of objectivism (and hence an inadequate grasp of the subjective) and so reproduces further objectivism.
[30] See 'Decadence' article in this issue and Aufheben 2 and 3.