Review:
Bad: The Autobiography of James Carr (Pelegian Press, BCM Signpost, London WC1N 3XX)
This book tells the story of the
development of James Carr from an apolitical gang member, to a black
nationalist associated with the Black Panther Party, and finally to a
Korsch/Lukacs/Situationist-influenced position critical of the vanguardism
of the Panthers. The book was first published in 1975. This new edition
comes with an useful Afterword, written by BM Blob and News from
Everywhere. Carr died young, and most of the book is taken up with the gang
life and particularly the prison experiences preceding his eventual
politicization. The Afterword puts his life in context (the then dominance
of varieties of New Lefitism, conflicts within the Black Panthers, and the
crisis in the US prison system in the 1960s). It also points to the
important differences between this book and other autobiographies of
politicized prisoners: 'it avoids portraying the prisoner as a passive
victim of social injustice - and also refuses the martyr role that liberals
and leftists try to impose on convicts for their own fantasies and careers'
(p. 200).
James Carr survived prison through strength,
intelligence and ruthlessness, qualities which he applied not just to the
screws and governors but also to his fellow inmates. Like other cons, Carr
was involved in a war of all-against-all on two levels: first the
interpersonal competition and bullying, and second the 'race' war between
blacks, whites and Mexicans. In the book, graphic examples of inter-ethnic
violence among prisoners illustrate how this relationship of
divide-and-rule served the prison system. But the significance of Carr's
experience and perspective is that he was in some of the biggest and most
violent Californian prisons in the mid 1960s when a more politicized and
united movement of prisoners began to develop. The movement emerged through
a turn to black nationalism, which, Carr suggests, at least offered the
possibility of enabling cons to see their connections with others in
struggles outside the prison. The nationalist movement later developed into
a movement against the prison structure itself, and attracted all the
ethnic groups.
Carr has some acute comments to make on the limits
of the movement. Though the conscious anti-racism was a great advance, the
form of the movement remained guerrilla. In a memorable phrase, Carr says
"that [g]uerrilla ideology reduces all revolutionary questions to
quantitative problems of military force" (p. 169). The disastrous effects
of this reduction included the death of his friend and influential militant
activist George Jackson, as well as increasingly violent attacks by the
authorities on organized prisoner revolts: 'a fight to the finish' was what
the reactionary prison authorities wanted, says Carr.
The repressive response of the authorities to the
movement only confirmed the opposition between the prison system and the
cons as a whole. But Carr argues that "even when the cons realized that
they were all opposed to the system, they were prevented from locating
themselves realistically within it: rather than recognize that they were on
the margins of society and study strategically the development of society
as a whole, they saw themselves as a class apart from the proletariat, or
as its vanguard, and adopted an ideology of class war by which the only
battleground was the prison itself. They mistook the system's arm for its
heart" (pp. 168-9).
In this ideology, because modern capitalism relies
on coercion, then its coercive institutions are its essence or highest
expression. It is true that, along with torture and the death penalty in
many places, prison is typically the capitalist state's 'ultimate'
sanction. But Carr is surely correct in suggesting that the prison is not a
representative microcosm of modern class society. In fact, the reverse
would seem to be the case: the prison is more an echo of feudalism, with
its irrational petty rules, its separation of amount of work undertaken
from means of subsistence, its social immobility, and its entrenched sets
of interests in the form of the prison guards' organizations.
Carr also links this vanguardism with what he sees
as leftism's romantic fetishization of crime. During the time of the
political movement among prisoners, those on the outside promoted figures
like George Jackson into rebel heroes; but, as Carr says, they were always
tragic figures because their value to the movement was as martyrs. Leftists
and anarchists rightly point out that there is a relation between capital
and criminality; but the problem is how to grasp this relation without
seeing the con, on the one hand, as necessarily a rebel hero or, on the
other, as necessarily an anti-social element. Carr's analysis of what he
calls the criminal mentality ('born to lose') shows how criminality in the
form of robberies etc. is based on an antipathy to capital without
necessarily being revolutionary. We steal because we don't want to work,
says Carr - we want to have control over our lives. But if we have to keep
on pulling bigger and bigger robberies to live and meet our developing
needs, then we just perpetuate ourselves as robbers and ultimately as cons.
As robbers and particularly as cons we might go beyond ourselves, as Carr
and others did: by co-ordinating with others to resist the state, we fight
capital rather than exist within its interstices. The experience of prison
- the other side of the coin of the libeeral-democratic ideology of rights
and freedoms - has been shown on many occasions to have a politicizing
effect on prisoners: cons commonly come to hate and resist the viciousness
of the state machine. On the other hand, however, without potential support
for such a project, the experience of state power and antagonism easily
leads to individual survivalism or even to suicide.
Carr is scathing of prison reform, quoting Marx's
argument that basing a revolutionary movement on it is like basing
abolitionism on demands for better food for slaves. He criticizes his own
actions for merely reacting to the initiative of the enemy - for fighting
on their terrain. It is certainly true that all the time that the struggle
remains within capital's procedures and concepts it remains a struggle
within capital (for more fairness, rights etc.) rather than against it.
However, Carr is perhaps being rather harsh on himself since, quoting Marx
again, "Men [sic] make their own history, but they do not make it just as
they please; they do not make it under circumstances chosen by themselves,
but under circumstances directly found, given and transmitted from the
past" (1934/1852, p. 13).[1] As Carr's own story shows, rather than existing
fully formed prior to the struggle, tendencies to push beyond given limits
typically emerge from initial demands and conflicts which are more limited.
If the present form of the capital relation - the current class composition
- is a result of struggle between capitaal and proletariat, then neither of
these forces are always pure; anti-capitalism is mediated by existing
capitalism, particularly the latter's progressive tendencies.
More pessimistically, perhaps, just as moderate
demands can go beyond themselves in the struggle itself, so militant
struggles can feed back into a reassertion of the legitimacy of the prison system on a new basis. Prison history is the history of violent prison
struggles and with them various kinds of liberal reforms and reactionary
backlashes. Strangeways, 1990, for example, progressed from an initial plan
among prisoners for a limited protest, to a practical critique of the
prison in the struggle itself (with cons taking over and trashing the
building); the riot then fed into a set of liberal reforms (the ending of
slopping out); and finally it served as the justification for legislation
for harsher punishments for future rebels (the offence of prison mutiny).
This is not of course an argument against resistance or demands for better
conditions among prisoners, since any victories by militant prisoners are
to be welcomed, and all support (in the form of letters etc.) for
individual militants is to be encouraged, particularly if there are links
with struggles on the outside.
This book is an autobiography rather than a book of
theory, and James Carr led a pretty incredible life by anyone's standards.
Of all the incredible things in the book, including the massacres, killings
and maimings Carr took part in, it is perhaps his weight-lifting feats that
are most hard to believe. The prison lifestyle was often one of privation
and drug-taking, yet at one stage Carr apparently trained for five hours a
day (exhausting even for today's steroid-fuelled bodybuilders) and
bench-pressed 520lb! Not only this, but despite the fact that he was a
heavyweight, his waist measurement was only 27 inches.
[1] The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte (Moscow: Co-operative Publishing Society [Originally published 1852])