{"id":361,"date":"2025-02-17T19:00:19","date_gmt":"2025-02-18T01:00:19","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/thepartisans.info\/?p=361"},"modified":"2025-02-17T19:15:47","modified_gmt":"2025-02-18T01:15:47","slug":"reclaiming-actually-existing-revolutionary-pasts","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/thepartisans.info\/index.php\/2025\/02\/17\/reclaiming-actually-existing-revolutionary-pasts\/","title":{"rendered":"Reclaiming Actually-Existing Revolutionary Pasts\u00a0"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p>by Ynker Ashkhadavoruhi\u00a0<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>We all have a critique of capitalism. In fact, it is becoming more obvious that even liberals today have some critique of capitalism. Critique has been an important framework through which to make sense of, understand, and see sites of the contradictions of capitalism \u2013 areas where organizing can happen, nuances to how this organizing should happen, as well as how to approach organizing so as to widen anti-capitalist action rather than narrow it. Critique is immensely necessary and it is a powerful site of rejection \u2013 rejecting what is, unearthing it, discovering its operations, and pointing to the ways in which capital produces realities far outside of the scope of the \u201ceconomic.\u201d It is careful and meticulous critique, for instance, that has guided us toward seeing how everyday life \u2013 not just production and <em>reproduction <\/em>\u2013 is caught up in capital\u2019s net of extraction. It is critique that has led to the widening of \u201cthe working class\u201d to include working class culture, social organizing, kin-work, and of course reproductive labor. Critique has allowed us to understand the nuanced gendered and raced dynamics of exploitation and extractive economies as well as how the working class in the imperialist center is produced by and maintained by colonial exploitation and extraction in the periphery.\u00a0<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Critique, while necessary, has also produced some problems. In a 2017 essay, Jodi Dean she tells us that <a href=\"https:\/\/www.google.com\/books\/edition\/Red_October\/ThF6tAEACAAJ?hl=en\">the U.S. needs a leftist party<\/a>, but that this formation of a party has come under fire from a \u201cLeft realism,\u201d as she calls it, which &#8220;has taken hold of a certain northern, western, US-European left. At the site of a re-thought humanist, culturalist, post-structuralist post-Marxism is the foreclosure of revolution and the reduction of politics to critique, resignification, subversion, reform, resistance, and work on the self.\u201d Part of this dimension of critique is a marking of the Western working class as a privileged class \u2013 a class that benefits from imperialism, racism, sexism, and homophobia \u2013 and which prevents it from being truly radical. Furthermore, critique within this Western leftist thought pushes back against the viability of party politics \u2013 indeed a rejection of communist parties and any party \u2013 at the very moment when neoliberalism takes root in the West. An immense part of this project of rejecting revolution and a revolutionary party has also been identity politics, grounded in a rejection of any political claim, organization, party, or slogan that is <em>universal <\/em>as the universal, it is said, ignores important differences in race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, ability, and so on. We see this clearly today as liberals, including those who might consider themselves the left, tell us that it was because of our racism and sexism that we did not vote for Kamala Harris and thus we are left with the Trump fascist regime, completely ignoring the many continuities between the various Democratic regimes of the recent past, especially on the question of Palestine.\u00a0<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>A critique of party formation is deeply tied to assumptions and nightmarish fantasies, that have been intentionally manufactured, about historical revolutions \u2013 not just their failures (already a fantasy) but also their <em>evil. <\/em>Liberal historians \u2013 the most extreme of which is perhaps Timothy Snyder, but this group includes many others and I would argue most U.S. and European historians of the Soviet Union \u2013 have produced a colloquial understanding of the Soviet Union that seems to completely ignore the ways in which the Soviet Union fought and defeated the Nazis in WWII. Discussions of Germany\u2019s or Italy\u2019s atrocities during WWII by U.S. and European historians almost always includes a discussion of \u201cRussian atrocities.\u201d Stalin becomes a figure of horror and hate alongside Hitler. See, for instance, Timothy Snyder\u2019s <a href=\"https:\/\/www.google.com\/books\/edition\/On_Tyranny\/06E8DgAAQBAJ?hl=en&amp;gbpv=1&amp;dq=timothy+snyder&amp;printsec=frontcover\"><em>On Tyranny<\/em><\/a><em>, <\/em>which skips no beat between Hitler\u2019s genocides and Communist rule, which according to Synder did not differ at all from Nazi expansionist projects, or at least he makes no attempt to distinguish these. Readers are, thus, left with a monolith anti-civilization assemblage that includes fascists and communists with no complex relation to one another or to ideology. Indeed, for an extreme liberal like Snyder, communist ideology is always suspect as a \u201cmonopoly on reason.\u201d<em> <\/em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.google.com\/books\/edition\/The_Russian_Revolution\/vm_nDwAAQBAJ?hl=en&amp;gbpv=1&amp;dq=walter+rodney&amp;printsec=frontcover\">Walter Rodney<\/a> once pointed out the deeply subjectivist language and framework with which histories of the Russian Revolution were depicted within Western bourgeois history, with the regular use of language like \u201cmob,\u201d \u201cviolent,\u201d \u201canarchists,\u201d \u201cdictatorship\u201d and \u201cterror\u201d to characterize the Bolsheviks against a backdrop of vague notions that the Russian Revolution cast aside, like \u201cdemocracy\u201d and even \u201cthe Russian people.\u201d Even beyond the Soviet Union as a site of revolution gone completely wrong, Cuba, China, and perhaps especially North Korea are colored in extremely subjectivist language \u2013 \u201cnefarious,\u201d \u201cwicked,\u201d \u201cuncouth,\u201d <em>etc<\/em>. The Revolutions of the 20<sup>th<\/sup> century, within this hypernormalized rhetoric, are filled with pure terror. Communists, and any Communist Party, have never desired anything other than tyranny, hate, and violence. As a scholar of the post-Soviet region, I have rarely ever picked up any text written in the English language about this region that has not embodied this sensibility in some form or another. Even some more forgiving authors of Soviet history \u2013 Sheila Fitzpatrick, Ronald Suny, Mary Matossian \u2013 at times fall prey to the characterization of the Russian Revolution, Bolshevism, and the decades of development that the USSR underwent in subjectivist language that is uncharacteristic of scholarship writ large.\u00a0<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Now, readers here might object that if all scholars agree on the content of this history, perhaps it is because this is how it really happened. Here I will respond with two points. First, as <a href=\"https:\/\/www.google.com\/books\/edition\/Silencing_the_Past\/qNkBDlueIxUC?hl=en&amp;gbpv=1&amp;dq=michel-rolph&amp;printsec=frontcover\">Michel-Rolph Troiullot<\/a> has pointed out, history is not just made up of events as they really happened and\/or what is said to have happened. There is a third element in history: the production of history itself is also a part of history \u2013 pointing to production as a political-economic process that is tied up in relations of power. Here, we can return to Rodney\u2019s analysis of bourgeois histories of the Russian Revolution, which includes the linking of these subjectivist conceptualizations within bourgeois history to the actual structures of funding in which centers of Russian studies are embedded \u2013 the Guggenheim, Rockefeller, and Carnegie Foundations, connected to capital \u2013 as well as with established ties to <em>\u00e9migr\u00e9s <\/em>from the Soviet Union from whom Western historians learn about the evils of the Revolution. Today\u2019s postsocialist equivalence lies in late-Soviet \u201cdissidents\u201d who romanticized liberalism, weaponizing it against Soviet political-economic reality. In other words, much of what is written about the Soviet Union as well as other actually-existing socialist worlds is funded and organized by anti-Soviet and anti-communist forces. A very far cry from objective history.\u00a0<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Second, it becomes clear within much of this ink spilled on the Soviet Union \u2013 often with the intention to discredit it \u2013 that the facts and the analysis seem mismatched \u2013 in other words, that while there seems to be a desire to discredit revolutionary accomplishments, the facts indicate realities that deserve great credit. Take, for instance, Mary Matossian\u2019s book, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.google.com\/books\/edition\/The_Impact_of_Soviet_policies_in_Armenia\/3-AFEQAAQBAJ?hl=en&amp;gbpv=1&amp;dq=the+impact+of+soviet+policies+on+armenia&amp;printsec=frontcover\"><em>The Impact of Soviet Policies on Armenia<\/em><\/a><em>, <\/em>which carefully details the first four decades of Communist Party rule in the Soviet Republic of Armenia. While Matossian lays out the clear social benefits of Soviet policies on the Republic in the South Caucasus \u2013 massive development which led to the improvement of everyday life; full employment; near complete literacy rates, including for women; the education of the masses; and egalitarian structures that did lead to the disintegration of the classes that held privilege and power through land tenure \u2013 she ultimately leads to various <em>other<\/em> conclusions that represent Soviet policy as the \u201cCommunist assault\u201d on the traditional family, village, and Church. While she lays out these clear benefits to the population of Soviet Armenia, she concludes that this meant that the masses were now under \u201cCommunist manipulation.\u201d While she concedes that the levels of education, specialization, and complete literacy were \u201cremarkable achievements\u201d, she ends up arguing that this process meant that \u201cthe leadership of Armenian society was passing into the hands of young Armenians who had been subjected from early childhood to Soviet indoctrination and were familiar only with Soviet life.\u201d When it came to the question of Armenian nationalism and Soviet policies that both worked with and against nationalist fervor, Matossian concludes that \u201cboth the encouragement and repression of Armenian nationalism were but differing means of manipulating the Armenian people to work for Communist goals.\u201d Missing entirely from this unhinged analysis \u2013 stating facts then doing some bizarre things with them \u2013 is credit those actual Communist goals that led to such profound achievements.\u00a0<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The achievements that Matossian describes are quite remarkable and deserve leftist attention worldwide. Indeed, anti-colonial movements and postcolonial states looked toward the Soviet Union as a model to emulate \u2013 how it was, in other words, that a conglomerate of largely peasant societies were, in just a few short decades, to become the most developed and educated internationalist society in the world as well as the nearest to social equality that modernity has ever seen. Walter Rodney, for instance, was invested in studying and understanding the Russian Revolution as an event that might teach African decolonizing nations lessons in revolutionary party-building, how to structure a revolutionary society, and how to deal with critical debates regarding urban development and urban parties in addressing peasant claims. The Soviet Union\u2019s <a href=\"https:\/\/www.cambridge.org\/core\/journals\/slavic-review\/article\/abs\/polish-economists-in-nehrus-india-making-science-for-the-third-world-in-an-era-of-destalinization-and-decolonization\/8AD3BFF13AFC7A1410B9EF63C197AAE0\">political-economic technicians were in high-demand in the postcolonial world<\/a>, sending out economic experts to various postcolonial countries to give consultation and advice on how to structure a revolutionary and anti-imperialist society, and advice on how to advocate and construct institutions that would provide critical social reproductive mechanisms toward women\u2019s equality. Actors in the decolonizing world, like <a href=\"https:\/\/www.google.com\/books\/edition\/Neo_Colonialism\/DUJkzwEACAAJ?hl=en\">Kwame Nkrumah<\/a> or <a href=\"https:\/\/www.google.com\/books\/edition\/Return_to_the_Source\/FqaUEAAAQBAJ?hl=en&amp;gbpv=1&amp;dq=amilcar&amp;printsec=frontcover\">Amilcar Cabral<\/a>, sought to emulate socialist policies of the Soviet Union toward building anti-imperialism and socialist policies in the Third World.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>While the decolonizing Third World regularly looked at the Soviet Union as a model of possibility for building a better and more just life, bourgeois politics as well as history have barred such imaginaries as well as any <em>knowledge <\/em>of this world from our vision. Today, save for a few pockets of leftists in the U.S. who are themselves gaslighted for being \u201cStalinist\u201d in orientation or for romanticizing the Russian Revolution, this memory of achievement has all but been forgotten. Certainly, we can critique these pasts. We can analyze and we can locate pitfalls and problems. But none of this should mean throwing out all potential insight and possibility.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I join Jodi Dean in her call for a leftist militant party in the U.S. And I call on this history of the Soviet Union to provide a possible model for what a society for which we advocate can look like. &nbsp;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>by Ynker Ashkhadavoruhi<\/p>\n<p>Here, we can return to Rodney\u2019s analysis of bourgeois histories of the Russian Revolution, which includes the linking of these subjectivist conceptualizations within bourgeois history to the actual structures of funding in which centers of Russian studies are embedded \u2013 the Guggenheim, Rockefeller, and Carnegie Foundations, connected to capital \u2013 as well as with established ties to \u00e9migr\u00e9s from the Soviet Union from whom Western historians learn about the evils of the Revolution.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":362,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[22,27,32,28,26],"tags":[49,50,52,51],"class_list":["post-361","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-politics","category-resisting-fascism","category-resisting-patriarchy","category-resisting-white-supremacy","category-theory","tag-armenia","tag-eastern-europe","tag-party-building","tag-post-socialism"],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"https:\/\/thepartisans.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/02\/armenia-e1740597023785.jpg","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"jetpack_likes_enabled":true,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/thepartisans.info\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/361","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/thepartisans.info\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/thepartisans.info\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/thepartisans.info\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/thepartisans.info\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=361"}],"version-history":[{"count":2,"href":"https:\/\/thepartisans.info\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/361\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":365,"href":"https:\/\/thepartisans.info\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/361\/revisions\/365"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/thepartisans.info\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/362"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/thepartisans.info\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=361"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/thepartisans.info\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=361"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/thepartisans.info\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=361"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}