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Social Anarchism or Lifestyle Anarchism

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By: Murray Bookchin via: Social Anarchism or Lifestyle Anarchism – An Unbridgeable Chasm


For some two centuries, anarchism — a very ecumenical body of anti-authoritarian ideas — developed in the tension between two basically contradictory tendencies: a personalistic commitment to individual autonomy and a collectivist commitment to social freedom. These tendencies have by no means been reconciled in the history of libertarian thought. Indeed, for much of the last century, they simply coexisted within anarchism as a minimalist credo of opposition to the State rather than as a maximalist credo that articulated the kind of new society that had to be created in its place.

Which is not to say that various schools of anarchism did not advocate very specific forms of social organization, albeit often markedly at variance with one another. Essentially, however, anarchism as a whole advanced what Isaiah Berlin​ has called ‘negative freedom,’ that is to say, a formal ‘freedom from,’ rather than a substantive ‘freedom to.’ Indeed, anarchism often celebrated its commitment to negative freedom as evidence of its own pluralism, ideological tolerance, or creativity — or even, as more than one recent postmodernist celebrant has argued, its incoherence.

Anarchism’s failure to resolve this tension, to articulate the relationship of the individual to the collective, and to enunciate the historical circumstances that would make possible a stateless anarchic society produced problems in anarchist thought that remain unresolved to this day. Pierre Joseph Proudhon​, more than many anarchists of his day, attempted to formulate a fairly concrete image of a libertarian society. Based on contracts, essentially between small producers, cooperatives, and communes, Proudhon’s vision was redolent of the provincial craft world into which he was born. But his attempt to meld a patroniste, often patriarchal notion of liberty with contractual social arrangements was lacking in depth. The craftsman, cooperative, and commune, relating to one another on bourgeois contractual terms of equity or justice rather than on the communist terms of ability and needs, reflected the artisan’s bias for personal autonomy, leaving any moral commitment to a collective undefined beyond the good intentions of its members.

Indeed, Proudhon’s famous declaration that ‘whoever puts his hand on me to govern me is an usurper and a tyrant; I declare him my enemy’ strongly tilts toward a personalistic, negative freedom that overshadows his opposition to oppressive social institutions and the vision of an anarchist society that he projected. His statement easily blends into William Godwin​’s distinctly individualistic declaration: ‘There is but one power to which I can yield a heartfelt obedience, the decision of my own understanding, the dictates of my own conscience.’ Godwin’s appeal to the ‘authority’ of his own understanding and conscience, like Proudhon’s condemnation of the ‘hand’ that threatens to restrict his liberty, gave anarchism an immensely individualistic thrust.

Compelling as such declarations may be — and in the United States they have won considerable admiration from the so-called libertarian (more accurately, proprietarian) right, with its avowals of ‘free’ enterprise — they reveal an anarchism very much at odds with itself. By contrast, Michael Bakunin​ and Peter Kropotkin​ held essentially collectivist views — in Kropotkin’s case, explicitly communist ones. Bakunin emphatically prioritized the social over the individual. Society, he writes, ‘antedates and at the same time survives every human individual, being in this respect like Nature itself. It is eternal like Nature, or rather, having been born upon our earth, it will last as long as the earth. A radical revolt against society would therefore be just as impossible for man as a revolt against Nature, human society being nothing else but the last great manifestation or creation of Nature upon this earth. And an individual who would want to rebel against society . . . would place himself beyond the pale of real existence.’

Bakunin often expressed his opposition to the individualistic trend in liberalism and anarchism with considerable polemical emphasis. Although society is ‘indebted to individuals,’ he wrote in a relatively mild statement, the formation of the individual is social:

‘even the most wretched individual of our present society could not exist and develop without the cumulative social efforts of countless generations. Thus the individual, his freedom and reason, are the products of society, and not vice versa: society is not the product of individuals comprising it; and the higher, the more fully the individual is developed, the greater his freedom — and the more he is the product of society, the more does he receive from society and the greater his debt to it.’

Kropotkin, for his part, retained this collectivistic emphasis with remarkable consistency. In what was probably his most widely read work, his Encyclopaedia Britannica essay on ‘Anarchism,’ Kropotkin distinctly located the economic conceptions of anarchism on the ‘left-wing’ of ‘all socialisms,’ calling for the radical abolition of private property and the State in ‘the spirit of local and personal initiative, and of free federation from the simple to the compound, in lieu of the present hierarchy from the center to the periphery.’ Kropotkin’s works on ethics, in fact, include a sustained critique of liberalistic attempts to counterpose the individual to society, indeed to subordinate society to the individual or ego. He placed himself squarely in the socialist tradition. His anarchocommunism, predicated on advances in technology and increased productivity, became a prevailing libertarian ideology in the 1890s, steadily elbowing out collectivist notions of distribution based on equity. Anarchists, ‘in common with most socialists,’ Kropotkin emphasized, recognized the need for ‘periods of accelerated evolution which are called revolutions,’ ultimately yielding a society based on federations of ‘every township or commune of the local groups of producers and consumers.’

With the emergence of anarchosyndicalism and anarcho-communism in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, the need to resolve the tension between the individualist and the collectivist tendencies essentially became moot. Anarcho-individualism was largely marginalized by mass socialistic workers’ movements, of which most anarchists considered themselves the left wing. In an era of stormy social upheaval, marked by the rise of a mass working-class movement that culminated in the 1930s and the Spanish Revolution​, anarchosyndicalists and anarchocommunists, no less than Marxists, considered anarcho-individualism to be petty-bourgeois exotica. They often attacked it quite directly as a middle-class indulgence, rooted far more in liberalism than in anarchism.

The period hardly allowed individualists, in the name of their ‘uniqueness,’ to ignore the need for energetic revolutionary forms of organization with coherent and compelling programs. Far from indulging in Max Stirner​’s metaphysics of the ego and its ‘uniqueness,’ anarchist activists required a basic theoretical, discursive, and programmatically oriented literature, a need that was filled by, among others, Kropotkin’s The Conquest of Bread​ (London, 1913), Diego Abad de Santill’n's El organismo econ’mico de la revoluci’n (Barcelona, 1936), and G. P. Maximoff’s The Political Philosophy of Bakunin (English publication in 1953, three years after Maximoff’s death; the date of original compilation, not provided in the English translation, may have been years, even decades earlier). No Stirnerite ‘Union of Egoists,’ to my knowledge, ever rose to prominence — even assuming such a union could be established and survive the ‘uniqueness’ of its egocentric participants.

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  • http://yearemany.wordpress.com/ jamayla

     One problem I’ve always had with this piece is that I’m not exactly sure what specific strain(s) of thought Bookchin was critiquing. He takes aim at a random hodgepodge of anarchists (Goldman, Zerzan, Stirner) without ever offering a detailed definition of ‘lifestyle anarchism’ beyond vague noises about self-centered, individualist ‘autonomy’ vs. broader social ‘freedom’ (which is a false dichotomy if there ever was one).

     There are certainly critiques to be made of some self-styled ‘anarchists’ who pay lip service to ‘individual freedom’ without engaging in any serious analysis of how broader coercive hierarchies restrict seemingly ‘free’ choices (here, I’m primarily thinking of ‘voluntaryists’ and ancaps); and of airheads whose anarchism is restricted to facile dabblings in counterculture (and here, I’m primarily thinking of the 20-something crustpunk set whose anti-consumerist, ‘hobo chic’ lifestyle is subsidized by their mommy & daddy’s participation in a capitalist system they claim to loathe). However, Bookchin certainly isn’t making them.

    His treatment of anti-civ anarchism is particularly bizarre, as he stuffs the entire philosophy into the ‘lifestyle-ism’ box. It seems Bookchin doesn’t know the difference between “anarchist thought that doesn’t perfectly overlap with mine” and “lifestyle-ism” – I’m not sure why anti-capitalist thought concerned with ending worker exploitation is valid, while anti-civ thought concerned with ending human enslavement of other animals & the ecosystem is just ‘individualist’ tosh.

     Bookchin qualifies his anti-primitivist critique with the small concession that civilization isn’t an ‘unmitigated blessing’; but to him, it’s a ‘blessing’ nonetheless. His overemphasis on technology’s benign uses & (seeming) benefits reminds me of ‘free market’ ideologues who pooh-pooh Wal-Mart hatred with, “Wal-Mart is totally great for poor people! Look at all these LOW prices, man!” without wondering for one moment about the real cost of ‘low prices’. Yes, I can go buy an enormous stack of Super-Meaty Cheeseburger Bacon pizzas for less than $10, but at what cost to workers, non-human animals, and the ecosystem? Bookchin’s treatment of post-industrial civilization is similar. I am not a primitivist, nor am I hostile to all technology (I agree with Bookchin on the usefulness of labor-saving technology in an socialist context); but there needs to be some more substantive analysis here than, “Y’know, sometimes humans do nasty things like nuclear weapons and mountaintop removal, but WOOHOO for civilization in general!”

     Furthermore, just as a Godwin must pop up in almost any political debate, pretty much any critique of primitivist thought has to include, “If you hate technology so much, WHY ARE YOU ON THE COMPUTER?!”

     Disappointingly (or perhaps not; I don’t expect much of most people), Bookchin does this, as well.:

     

    Denouncing an advanced technology while using it to generate
    antitechnological literature is not only disingenuous but has
    sanctimonious dimensions: Such ‘hatred’ of computers seems more like the
    belch of the privileged, who, having overstuffed themselves with
    delicacies, extol the virtues of poverty during Sunday prayers.

    …which could easily be amended to read, “Denouncing capitalist systems while using them to generate anti-capitalist literature is not only disingenuous but…” You get the picture – asking a primitivist why she uses a computer to share her ideas is as asinine as asking a communist why she uses money & boss-controlled markets to share hers. Just as capitalism has eliminated alternative ways of being, post-industrial society has greatly eroded alternative means of communication.
     
     Overall, I think Bookchin is full of crap here – like I said, there are
    critiques to be made of actual, well-defined trends amongst
    self-described ‘anarchists’; but this divisive
    sectarianism isn’t helping anybody.

      in closing, here is a useful critique of Bookchin’s critique, from one of those derided as ‘lifestyle’ anarchists. There are some personal jabs & internecine bickering in the Black piece, but nothing lower than the level to which Bookchin already stooped.

  • Anonymous

    Great comments Jamayla… I’ve kinda grown tired taking pimp slaps from the collectivists. I’m an individualist after the style of Warren/Tucker/Spooner. Bullies have attempted to subjugate me to them all my life based on my supposed “obligations” to them. In school I was bullied by bands of asshole kids. No one did anything to help because it would have been a hassle to the collective, so I was expected to quit whining and “take it” because it was for the “good of the whole”. At home I was constantly stepped on by my own immediate family, because I was the youngest and that was my supposed “role”.  Now as a grown man, I am regularly attacked in my professional life? Why? Because I don’t “play ball”. It’s not that I don’t pull my weight, or that I don’t help out in group projects.

    “You eat your lunch in your cubicle.”

    “You don’t smile enough.”

    “Your eyes look  too intense.”

    “You don’t tell us enough about yourself. You seem stuck up/standoffish.”

    For these “horrible” offenses, people have tried to chase me out of the places I’ve worked for before. Why? Because apparently I am not fulfilling my obligations to the “community”.

    So in other words, I am expected  to live in a constant, shit-your-pants level of stress with my blood pressure at 160/100 while I attempt to contort my face into unnatural positions, while being mindful of blinking enough times per minute, lest I violate my “obligation” to the emotional well-being of those who don’t like my facial expression or my “intense” eyes. In addition I am to stay in a social setting surrounded by crowds of people pressing on me to the point to where I feel strangled and still be able to digest my food properly. Furthermore “the community” is entitled to the most personal of information about me, including medical procedures I’ve undergone, how many siblings I have, how much my (now ex) wife weighs, and who I’ve had sex with.  If  I don’t, persecution against me is “justified” and they come running with their torches and pitch forks.

    Yes this stuff actually happens to me. I am not making any of this up.

    People reading this are probably very skeptical and say, “no one has ever done this to me.”

    Obviously not, and that’s precisely my beef with collectivism.

    I believe it is part of human nature to for groups of people to single out individuals and very tiny minorities for abuse. This tendency is a social activity engaged in by members of the “community”, though it is not consciously thought of that way. The social cost is negligible due to the tiny percentage of victims, and the social psychic benefit to the rest of of the community is great.  Since the community decides what is considered “mistreatment of others”, victims are dismissed as “whiners” and ignored, or dismissed as “biased” because of their life experiences (how the fuck else is one supposed to pick up on it?). Sorry to have to invoke Murray Rothbard, but I believe the hypothetical scenario of “Rothbard’s Redheads” is something that not only actually happens in society but the illustration has many more applications than Rothbard’s attempt to refute free market utilitarianism.

    Being an individualist does not make me “petty bourgeois”. I don’t place a high value on having “stuff”, I prefer the functional over the ornate, and I don’t care if the technology is my home is the latest craze or not. I have no interest in being a boss, a leader or “taking charge” of anything. I have no interest in climbing “ladders”. In fact I fucking hate power, and am out to take assholes down a peg. Non-judgmental people who have taken the time know me in person would consider me someone who has a generous, servant spirit, and a high social consciousness. I give away my possessions when I see someone has greater need of them than I do.  I give good tips to the people who wait on my table at the restaurant, because I know they are among the most abused by capitalism. I get depressed when I see the carcass of an animal that has been hit by a car.

    Long story short, I know individualism can be twisted into something perverse and authoritarian. That’s how we got “anarcho”-capitalism, isn’t it? But I also believe collectivism is not without it flaws, and that one of those flaws is a tendency towards a utilitarian mindset if one is not careful….once that tendency takes hold, all manner of wicked oppression can be justified as “obligations to society”.  Anything can be twisted into anything. The fault lies with the perverts, not the genuine articles.

    I know many will read this comment with a dismissive attitude, but this exactly my point. A society is only as good as its respect for the individuals within it, and regardless of how much lip service I hear paid to this concept, I constantly notice collectivists being dismissive of minorities unless those minorities can be used for the types of social change said collectivists desire.  There is no greater minority than the individual (sorry to sound like Rand).

    What life has taught me is that in the end, there is only me.

    People help. People betray, hurt and wound.  People love, people break hearts. People give, people take. People contract, people flake out. People come, people  go.

    What always remains is me.

    I am alone. I was born alone, I will die alone.

    I am the most trustworthy person on earth to myself, a society of one. I desire to take nothing from no one, only to live and let live.

    I am an individual.