Antony Few, Emeritus Professor of Philosophy, University of Reading, England. has written an excellent review of Geore Watson's The Lost Literature of Socialism. I blog it because I have received much criticism for my claim that Hitler was a socialist. This has not sat well with the left, who have persuaded the whole educational establishment, it seems, that Hitler was a right wing, capitalist loving, monster. On this see my 2005 blog here. The review also is interesting for underlining Watson's examination of the literature of socialism. As once a democratic socialist, I grew up on this literature, and Few's review brings back memories of that. Here is the review:
The literature of socialism is lost only in the sense of not having been read for a very long time. George Watson has been re-reading this literature as a professional literary critic, with strong interests in both political affairs and the history of ideas. Many of his findings are astonishing. Perhaps for readers today the most astonishing of all is that “In the European century that began in the 1840s, from Engels’ article of 1849 down to the death of Hitler, everyone who advocated genocide called himself a socialist and no conservative, liberal, anarchist or independent did anything of the kind.” (The term “genocide” in Watson’s usage is not confined to the extermination only of races or of ethnic groups, but embraces also the liquidation of such other complete human categories as “enemies of the people” and “the Kulaks as a class.”)
Although Watson himself unfortunately never defines the key word “socialism,” he is apparently following throughout the usage of the old British Labour Party. From its foundation, it proclaimed itself a socialist party and stated its aim in Clause IV of its constitution—thereafter printed on every membership card—as being “the public ownership of all the means of production, distribution and exchange.”
Watson distinguishes three periods in the history of this socialist idea. The first, the Age of Conception, runs from the 1840s to the Bolshevik coup of 1917; the second, the Age of Fulfilment, continues until the Communist seizure of power in China in 1949; the third, the Age of Decline, continues until the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989.
During the Age of Conception, many were attracted to socialism precisely because they already saw it as what Watson calls a “Tory project,” a project necessarily involving rule by an irresponsible elite. Some of these elitists, such as the science fiction writer H.G. Wells and the dramatist Bernard Shaw, lived long enough into the Age of Fulfilment to welcome this aspect of the realization in the USSR of the socialist vision. Before World War I, other socialists, such as the novelist Jack London and the psychologist Havelock Ellis, saw socialism as leading both fortunately and necessarily to the triumph of the white races over the black and the brown.
For those of us born before World War II, the most interesting section of the book is that dealing with the intellectual relations between the teachings of Adolf Hitler and those of Marx and his professed followers among Hitler’s contemporaries. In his autobiography, and in recorded conversations with intimates among his own followers, Hitler said such things as, “I have learned a great deal from Marxism, as I do not hesitate to admit,” that “the whole of National Socialism is based on Marx,” and that without racist commitments his own political movement “would really do nothing more than compete with Marxism on its own ground.”
Hitler was not in these statements saying that he either was or ever had been a Marxist. From his first political activity, he had always been opposed to communism, but that was not because it was socialist, but because it was internationalist. Hitler, although born and raised in Austria, had always been a dedicated German nationalist.
Even those who are aware that Hitler’s party was the National Socialist German Workers’ Party have doubted the sincerity of its socialist professions. This is in part because Hitler, upon coming to power, refrained for tactical reasons from launching an immediate and extensive program of state takeovers of private industries, and in part because these skeptics have not enjoyed the benefits of Watson’s re-readings of the lost literature of socialism.
His chapter on “Marx and the Holocaust” begins by telling us that Rudolf Hoess, commandant of the infamous Auschwitz death camp, recalled in his memoirs that even at the height of the Nazi-Soviet war of 1941-45, his colleagues had respected the socialist example of an exterminatory program based on forced labor. Watson then proceeds to deploy further evidence of Soviet influence on the Nazis and to cite other relevant passages from the works of Marx, Engels, Lenin, and other socialist luminaries, all presenting candidates for or possible methods of genocide. The connection between socialism and genocide could hardly be made any clearer.
From all this, Watson concludes that “it is becoming ever more probable that it was not just the idea of genocide that the Nazis owed to Marx and the Marxists, but its detailed practice too, not excluding camps and gas chambers. The shadow of the socialist idea grows longer and longer.”
6 comments:
I don't think the Committe of Union and Progress who were behind the armenian genocide was socilists. But maybe they didn't talk about it, maybe they just did it....
It was the 19th century and early 20th century. There were people of all ideological orientations who directly or indirectly supported genocide and imperialism, amongst them Marx and other marxists.
Hitler I beleive was a socialist,but needed the capitalist on side to hold power.
He did this well until madness and greed became his ruler,then the capitalist took control and used Hitler and his party as their puppet.
Like Adam Smith stated "it is the Capitalist who dicides who eats and who starves"
Yes, Hitler was a socialist and he got early help from capitalist who were afraid of the internal communist threat. But once in power, and given the right to rule by decree by a subservient Reichstadt, he purged the communist and took control of all major businesses. Wages, prices, production, and what was to be produced was all determined by the Nazi Party. Capitalism then was under socialist rule, rather than the other way around.
Great post! But I wanted to alert you to a typo. You have Anthony Few, but it's really Antony Flew.
What a remarkable distortion of history.You wouldn't accept that a KKK member who expressed Christian beliefs meant that Christians therefore were racist murderers!To tie two disparate facts..Socialism and the Nazi Genocide by such a tenuos link defies credibility.The Communists have their own crimes and can be judged for them, but to lay the genesis of the Nazi extermination program on Marx and Lenin is as far fetched as linking Attilla The Hun to the Vietnam War.Revisionist history is marching on..no doubt we can look forward to volumes on..The Chinese being responsible for the Atomic bomb attacks on Japan because they were the originators of gunpowder..or the Negroes being resonsible for slavery because the didn't grant equal rights to everyone in the 18th Century.Ridiculous?..it sure is..and about as realistic as the Professor's proposition on Socialism/Holocaust.
Post a Comment