A panel was hosted by the Platypus Affiliated Society on February 17, 2015 at NYU.
Audio Recording
Panelists
Boris Kagarlitsky: Transnational Institute
Mel Rothenberg: Chicago Political Economy Group*
Christoph Lichtenberg: International Bolshevik Tendency
Description
Last year marked the 25 anniversary of the 1989 revolutions – the ‘Autumn of Nations’ in the Soviet bloc. For an entire generation now of age, the USSR and the Cold War are only historical relics. 1989 is largely remembered as a decisive close to the Cold War contest between communism and capitalism – with the victory of the latter casting a seemingly damning verdict against Marxism as a form of politics. The planned economies based on collectivized property of these states were indicted as failures, and their totalitarian regimes called into question the very notion of working class rule. The fall of communism thus profoundly affected the Left’s ability to imagine the overcoming of capitalism, and the possibility of a classless society beyond it. But in passing into history, the meaning of 1989 can also be reconsidered.
The Platypus Affiliated Society wants to use this anniversary to reassess the question of how 1989 weighs on the present. What is the significance of 1989 in its historical context, and what is its relevance for Left politics today?