June 4, 2011 discussion of Mike Macnair’s critique of Platypus for the Communist Party of Great Britain in The Weekly Worker (see links below to articles under discussion, especially the May 19 article by Macnair, “Theoretical dead end”).
Audio Recording
Description
“Platypus: Is it a sect? Is it an academic grouping? Is it a theoretical dead end?”
The Communist Party of Great Britain’s Mike Macnair’s critique of Platypus in their paper The Weekly Worker is based on a conception of Marxism as practical politics that we don’t share.
Macnair’s critique provides an opportunity for clarifying and further developing the self-understanding of our organized project in Platypus.
While Macnair shares our priority of learning from the history of Marxism in the era of the 2 International 1889-1914, Macnair challenges our philosophy of history, following Lukács, Korsch, Benjamin and Adorno, of the “crisis of Marxism” 1914-19 and subsequent “regression.”
The question is not whether Platypus has a political “line” or program, but rather whether Platypus is, like other “Marxist” organizations, a “propaganda group.”
Macnair, for instance, divides political activity into 2 broad tags: 1.) propaganda (“many ideas to few people”); and 2.) agitation (“few ideas to many people”). In such a characterization of this distinction, Platypus would be more propagandistic than agitational. In either sense, however, there is the assumption of our project being political at all.—Are we, as many on the “Left” suspect, evading matters in insisting that our project is “pre-political?” Macnair thinks that we are thus evading responsibility. Or, “to not have a line is to have a line” (of tacitly supporting the status quo, i.e., “imperialism”).
In what way is Platypus a political project? And, if political, how “propagandistic?” For in either case, it is not a matter of whether (we are political and propagandistic), but how are we so? And why would we be political and propagandistic in ways different from the CPGB, RCP, ISO, Marxist-Humanists, Spartacist League, et al.?—Not simply by avoiding taking a “line” or not formulating a “program.”
Marxism could be considered (today, and perhaps also in the past) as either:
1.) a guide to action; or
2.) a guide to history
We would pose the latter, Marxism as a guide to history, against the typical sectarian “Left” rationale for (or, e.g., anarchist or liberal, rejection of) Marxism as a guide to action, due to both the nature and character of our project in our own, present historical moment.
There is possible disagreement or at least tension within Platypus between:
1.) treating our project (of “hosting the conversation”) as being necessitated by our historical moment in a largely negative sense, as the lack of possibility for doing otherwise (what else could we do, now?); or
2.) treating the necessity, possibility, and (importantly) desirability of our project in a more “positive” sense, according to our sense that what we are trying to do was not only possible and necessary but also would have been desirable in previous historical moments.—In other words, the nature and character of our project is not (merely) unfortunate.
We would, indeed, maintain (controversially) that Marxism has always been primarily a “guide to history” rather than a “guide to action,” or, more precisely, that it has only been a guide to action through being a guide to history.
There are to be considered 2 different conceptions of what we do, either: 1.) “hosting the conversation” is a means towards the end of promulgating our own ideas; or, alternatively, 2.) there is the idea of “provoking and organizing the pathology [symptomology] of the Left” through hosting the conversation. In either case, Platypus serves an educative function.
The question is whether Platypus is primarily about teaching or learning. Teaching would be about the former, an essentially propagandistic task; learning would be about the latter, meaning providing the possibility for our own as well as others’ learning how to grasp the present through engaging it symptomatically.—How can the conversation we host be critically transformative? How could our project be made to advance beyond itself?
Hence, Macnair’s critique of Platypus is a good occasion for us to clarify and deepen our sense of the raison d’etre of Platypus as an organized project.
Mike Macnair’s articles
Macnair’s articles and letters in response as a PDF.
May 12: “No need for party?” by Mike Macnair
May 19: “Theoretical dead end”by Mike Macnair
June 2: “The study of history and the Left’s decline” by Mike Macnair
Platypus letters and article in response
May 19: “Platypus” by Chris Cutrone; and “De rigueur” by Watson Ladd
May 26: “Fish nor fowl” by Chris Cutrone
June 3: “The philosophy of history” by Chris Cutrone