The
term ‘COMMUNISM’
was first used in modern times to
designate a specific economic doctrine (or regime), and a
political creed intending to introduce such a regime, by the
French lawyer Etiénne Cabet in the late 1830s; his works,
especially the utopia L'Icarie, were influential among
the Paris working class before the revolution of 1848. In 1840
the first ‘communist banquet’ was held in Paris - banquets
and banquet speeches were a common form of political protest
under the July monarchy. The term spread rapidly, so that Karl
Marx could entitle one of his first political articles of 16
October 1842 ‘Der Kommunismus und die Augsburger Allgemeine
Zeitung’. He noted that ‘communism’ was already an
international movement, manifesting itself in Britain and
Germany besides France, and traced its origin to Plato. He
could have mentioned ancient Jewish sects and early Christian
monasteries too.
In
fact, some of the so-called ‘utopian socialists’, in the
first place the German Weitling, called themselves communists
and spread the influence of the new doctrine among German
itinerant handicraftsmen all over Europe, as well as among the
more settled industrial workers of the Rhineland. Under the
influence of Marx and Engels, the League of the Just (Bund des
Gerechten) they had created, changed is name to the Communist
League in 1846. The League requested the two young German
authors to draft a declaration of principle for their
organisation. This declaration would appear in February 1848
under the title Communist Manifesto, which would make
the words ‘communism’ and ‘communists’ famous the
world over.
Communism,
from then on, would designate both a classes society without
property, without ownership - either private or nationalised -
of the means of production, without commodity production,
money or a state apparatus separate and apart from the members
of the community, and the social-political movement to arrive
at that society. After the victory of the Russian October
revolution in 1917, that movement would tend to be identified
by and large with Communist parties and a Communist
International (or at least an ‘international communist
movement’), though there exists a tiny minority of
communists, inspired by the Dutch astronomer Pannekoek- who
are hostile to a party organisation of any kind (the so-called
‘council communists’, Rätekommunisten).
The
first attempts to arrive at a communist society (leaving aside
early, medieval and more modern christian communities) were
made in the United States in the 19th century, through the
establishment of small agrarian settlements band upon
collective property, communally organised labour and the total
absence of money inside their boundaries. From that point of
view, they differed radically from the production
co-operatives promoted for example by the English
industrialist and philanthropist Robert Owen. Weitling himself
created such a community, significantly called Communia.
Although they were generally established by a selected group
of followers who shared common convictions and interests,
these agrarian communities did not survive long in a hostile
environment. The nearest contemporary extension of these early
communist settlements are the kibbutzim in Israel.
Rather
rapidly, and certainly after the appearance of the Communist
Manifesto, communism came to be associated less with small
communities set up by morally or intellectually selected
elites, but with the general movement of emancipation of the
modern working class, if not in its totality at least in its
majority, encompassing furthermore the main countries
(wealth-wise and population-wise) of the world. In the major
theoretical treatise of their younger years, The German
Ideology, Marx and Engels stated emphatically:
Empirically,
communism is only possible as the act of dominant peoples ‘all
at once’ and simultaneously, which presupposes the universal
development of productive forces and the world intercourse
bound up with them. . . . The proletariat can thus only exist
world-historically, just as communism, its activity, can only
have a ‘world-historical’ existence.
And,
earlier in the same passage:
This
development of productive forces (which at the same time
implies the actual empirical existence of men in their world-historical,
instead of local, being) is an absolutely necessary practical
premise, because without it privation is merely made general,
and with want the struggle for necessities would begin
again, and all the old filthy business would necessarily be
restored . . . (1845-6, p. 49).
That
line of argument is to-day repeated by most orthodox Marxists
(communists), who find in it an explanation of what ‘went
wrong’ in Soviet Russia, once it was isolated in a capital
environment as a result of the defeat of revolution in other
European countries in the 1918-23 period. But many ‘official’
Communist Parties still stick to Stalin's particular version
of communism, according to which it is possible to
successfully complete the building of socialism and communism
in a single country, or in a small number of countries.
The
radical and international definition of a communist society
given by Marx and Engels inevitably leads to the perspective
of a transition (transition period) between capitalism
and communism, Marx and Engels first, notably in their
writings about the Paris Commune - The Civil War in
France - and in their Critique of the Gotha Programme
(of the German social-democratic party), Lenin later -
especially in his book State and Revolution - tried to
give at least a general sketch of what that transition would
be like. It centres around the following ideas:
The
proletariat, as the only social class radically opposed to
private ownership of the means of production, and likewise as
the only class which has potentially the power to paralyse and
overthrow bourgeois society, as well as the inclination to
collective co-operation and solidarity which are the motive
forces of the building of communism, conquers political
(state) power. It uses that power (‘the dictatorship of the
proletariat’) to make more and more ‘despotic inroads’
into the realm of private property and private production,
substituting for them collectively and consciously (planned)
organised output, increasingly turned towards direct
satisfaction of needs. This implies a gradual withering away
of market economy.
The
dictatorship of the proletariat, however, being the instrument
of the majority to hold down a minority, does not need a heavy
apparatus of full-time functionaries, and certainly no heavy
apparatus of repression. It is a state sui generis, a
state which starts to wither away from its inception, i.e. it
starts to devolve more and more of the traditional state
functions to self-administrating bodies of citizens, to
society in its totality. This withering away of the state goes
hand in hand with the indicated withering away of commodity
production and of money, accompanying a general withering away
of social classes and social stratification, i.e. of the
division of society between administrators and administrated,
between ‘bosses’ and ‘bossed over’ people.
That
vision of transition towards communism as an essentially
evolutionary process obviously has preconditions: that the
countries engaged on that road already enjoy a relatively high
level of development (industrialisation, modernisation,
material wealth, stock of infrastructure, level of skill and
culture of the people, etc.), created by capitalism itself;
that the building of the new society is supported by the
majority of the population (i.e. that the wage-earners already
represent the great majority of the producers and that they
have passed the threshold of a necessary level of socialist
political class consciousness); that the process encompasses
the major countries of the world.
Marx,
Engels, Lenin and their main disciples and co-thinkers like
Rosa Luxemburg, Trotsky, Gramsci, Otto Bauer, Rudolf
Hilferding, Bukharin et al. - incidentally also Stalin until
1928 - distinguished successive stages of the communist
society: the lower stage, generally called ‘socialism’, in
which there would be neither commodity production nor classes,
but in which the individual’s access to the consumption fund
would still be strictly measured by his quantitative labour
input, evaluated in hours of labour; and a higher stage,
generally called ‘communism’, in which the principle of satisfaction
of needs for everyone would apply, independently of any
exact measurement of work performed. Marx established that
basic difference between the two stages of communism in his Critique
of the Gotha Programme, together with so much else. It
was also elaborated at length in Lenin’s State and Revolution.
In the
light of these principles, it is clear that no socialist or
communist society exists anywhere in the world today. It is
only possible to speak about ‘really existing socialism’
at present, if one introduces a new, ‘reductionist’
definition of a socialist society, as being only identical
with predominantly nationalised property of the means of
production and central economic planning. This is obviously
different from the definition of socialism in the classical
Marxist scriptures. Whether such a new definition is
legitimate or not in the light of historical experience is a
matter of political and philosophical judgement. It is in any
case another matter altogether than ascertaining whether the
radical emancipators goals projected by the founders of
contemporary communism have been realised in these really
existing societies or not. This is obviously not the case.