Looks back at George Lichtheim

Cohen, Michael

RECONS I DE RAT I ONS The Other George Lichtheim on Imperialism Mitchell Cohen GEoRcE LIcHTHEIM is missing. You may not have noticed, especially if you don't peruse political jour­nals...

...Attacks on Lichtheim for "anticommunism" were predictable and missed the point...
...Its younger relative `postcolo­nialism' seems ever more elastic...
...Conservatives fostered young pun­dits and funded think tanks and journals-and all this as the world was poised for a commu­nications revolution...
...Faced with this, social demo­cratic thought (liberalism, in America's context) stuttered...
...There may be a time, Lichtheim conjec­tured, "when China feels able to get along with­out Maoism...
...DISSENT I Winter 2009...
...He studied law at Heidelberg and militated to­ward independent radical groupings before fleeing Hitler...
...Instead, I found political claims made chiefly through literary criticism-by address­ing fiction and nothing but fiction . Actually I sympathized with many of the political points ; and I think literature can be useful in explor­ing politics...
...He did not foresee the coming crisis of the wel­fare state (and of social democracy) or the re­surgence of hard liberalism-that Milton Friedman-economic theology translated into political alchemy via Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan...
...Beijing, quaking from the Cultural Revolu­tion, was denouncing Moscow's "imperialism ." Left groupuscules whirled about within the Western left, and Lichtheim believed Marxism "too important to be left to the post-Leninist sects-tiny, ferocious creatures devouring each other in a drop of water...
...At some stage a writer has to decide whether the discussion is to be about the po­litical realm ordinarily so called, or about the most general principles regulating human be­havior...
...Do they include the medieval Aristotelians who no longer had a polis to reflect upon...
...Hegemony is the key, that is, power and its justification...
...Lichtheim insisted that German 98 . DISSENT I Winter 2009 and Japanese calculations were not economic or utilitarian-or else, "they did their sums wrong...
...ideology-Americans picked up where the dismantling British Empire left off­he asks if it made "economic sense after 1949 for the U.S...
...Another book (on Europe) was also in preparation, but this was the appropriate conclusion to his writings about the left even if it is not his best work...
...Of course . Does Bush come from Texas oil country...
...However, "colonialism is being used just as variously and contentiously as imperi­alism ever was...
...Would Bush have concurred...
...Was this autodidact telling readers to historicize his own writings...
...Weber argued for the impossi­bility of explaining an economic system, capi­talism, by economics alone, and so pointed to the Protestant ethic as its precondition . Lichtheim argues for the impossibility of un­derstanding imperialism by economic dynam­ics alone, even in the capitalist era, and points to the influence of nationalism . (But Lichtheim's book might have been better­served had he considered the historicity of such terms as nation, nationalism, and patriotism .) L ICHTHEIM DIDN'T write out of the least sympathy for imperialism, but because he was out of sympathy with the clichés (and the political implications of the clichés) espoused by Maoists or third-worldists, Trotskyists or neo-Marxists, neo-Leninists or neo-this-isis and neo-that-isis...
...Lichtheim-re­call it is 1970-simply asks : "What economic damage has the `loss' of China done to Amen­can capitalism since 1950 or to Soviet State Socialism since 1960...
...The owners were satisfied with the status quo and only asked to be left in peace so that they might digest their con­quests...
...He proclaimed, "The Chi­nese People has stood up ." Lichtheim does, however, point out that Maoism identified China as a "proletarian nation ." (This notion, he notes, has a heritage in fascist explanations of Italy's "backwardness" and its need to stand up...
...But I also recalled a sentence in George Lichtheim's Imperialism : "Propagan­dists use words like flags...
...Of course (again...
...To some people it's an all-purpose label for the entire state of the contemporary world . To others it's just a tag for a few professors of English Liter­ature, their books and courses . . . [A] recent book of literary studies is rather mind-bend­ingly entitled The Postcolonial Middle Ages ." My mind bent a bit recently when I read some literature devoted to "postcolonial theory" I found in it virtually no discussion of history, of the impact of struggles for independence on postcolonial political systems, of political cul­ture, of changes in social authority patterns following independence, of the transformation of postcolonial economies or their relation to the "developed" world...
...If we pose Lichtheim-like questions, this becomes comic book neo-Le­ninism...
...In other words, they didn't distin­guish ideology from reality...
...Young George was at­tracted to Hegel, Marx, Heine, and the quirky (then) left-wing thinker Franz Borkenau...
...cold war literature" and simplified "to the point of absurdity...
...Thus, Mao's revolutionary nationalism was truly popular...
...People equipped with this kind of perspective no longer need a theory: practice grows out of populist sloganeering, as power is supposed to grow from a gun barrel . I would add this: studying Chinese history may tell you much more about Maoism than a theory of totalitarianism that imposes neat catDISSENT I Winter 2009 . 99 egories on multí-textured and many-hued his­tory and on varied political culture . Lichtheim pointed out that Maoism asserted the unity of "the people" in an overwhelmingly agrarian land, but gave "the people" a mostly urban lead­ership championing national interests . The re­sult was unrecognizable as "authentic socialism," at least of any Marxist variety...
...We read at the end of Imperialism that "changes of this magnitude are rarely accomplished peacefully...
...Perhaps it is time to lower the flags (or their substitutes) when we think of these things-of empire or imperial­ism or colonialism or post-colonialism-in our unsteady twenty-first century...
...Or readJacques Derrida's Specters of Marx together with Lichtheim's Marxism and ask which text teaches you more about the left, its problems, and, indeed, Marx . Not that the intellectual right can gain suc­cor from Lichtheim-at least not candidly...
...Nowa­days, it's "Empire versus Multitude .") "The ideological frenzy of the 1950s-re­inforced by Stalinist psychopathology on the one hand and Dullesian drivel on the other­is taken literally by these writers," says Lichtheim...
...he didn't seek to display theoretical acumen by spry style and self-congratulating "irony...
...It has rather freed the su­perpowers of the tiresome obligation to provide development funds for China, thus throwing an additional burden on the Chinese people ." His targets were bad intellectual habits, and it is unfortunate that they are still with us . For instance, how often do we hear that oil was the sole issue in the Iraq War and that Presi­dent George Bush was nothing but the hand­maiden of Texas Oil...
...Armies massed on the Sino-Soviet bor­der...
...Lichtheim's studies of the left are not equally satisfying...
...For him, recent anti-imperialist "neo-Marxist" theory presented new world-historical protagonists, national lib­erators, by means (again) of bad rhymes . He writes, This nationalism is identified with socialism, the peasantry with the proletariat, anti-im­perialism with anti-capitalism, until all the distinctions painfully elaborated in Marxist literature for a century are cast overboard in favor of a simple dichotomy between West­ern imperialism versus the starving masses of the Third World...
...The trouble was started by newcom­ers who did not possess an empire : Germany and Japan . Once this has been grasped, we can stop arguing over the meaning of "empire ." Imperialist powers are not by definition obliged to own large tracts of land inhabited by conquered peoples...
...As to peace . . . it's safer to predict the past, as the old cliché has it . We are now three-and-a-half decades beyond Lichtheim's world...
...it does argue against facile formulas in making sense of com­plicated and dangerous matters . IcHTHEIM TRACES imperialism's plural ideological and historical meanings from ancient Rome-"imperium" firstt meant Roman rule over Romans and then later over others-through Mao...
...Read his much-cited essay on "Ideology and State Ap­paratuses" along with Lichtheim's "The Con­cept of Ideology" and think about which one makes you smarter...
...It is no use asserting that this distinc­tion was overcome once and for all by Aristotle and his successors . (Who are they...
...It is worth rereading because "imperialism" and "empire" are again prominent in the left's vo­cabulary, even though Marxism's hold on in­tellectual precincts, so strong when he wrote, is now gone . When Lichtheim wrote Imperialism, decolonization was pretty much complete, Brit­ish and French empires mostly dismantled . The cold war still chilled, and the Vietnam War still raged...
...These days, Louis Althusser, the French com­munist philosopher and proponent of "theoreti­cal anti-humanism" is being reprinted...
...Lichtheim surveyed all the theories with a useDISSENT I Winter 2009 .97 ful, critical eye, but intended his book to be "a contribution to an ongoing political discussion ." Some of his most striking contributions were plain but inopportune questions that upset some common assumption...
...Toward the end of his book, Lichtheim points out sadly, but with irritation, that the word "imperialism" had turned into a source of endless confusion . As "imperialist" became a catchall epithet, a new Subject of History was distilled from some of those ripples...
...DISSENTI Winter 2009.95 Well, it wasn't a very good century, the twentieth, and he certainly knew that . Lichtheim was born in Berlin in 1912 . His fa­ther was a leading German Zionist whose poli­tics were on the center-right, although he had Kantian sympathies...
...In other words, imperialism then was a popular ideology based significantly on nation­alist sentiment . It was not "merely a conspiracy got up in secret to enrich a few monopolists," and its popularity extended genuinely to the working classes . Lichtheim found little persua­sive in Lenin's attempt to demonstrate how imperialism born of finance capital accounted for World War I and the failure of Europe's workers to fulfill Marx's predictions . It is un­said, but Lichtheim's account of imperialism does something akin to MaxWeber's treatment of capitalism...
...You may not have noticed, especially if you don't peruse political jour­nals from the 1950s, 1960s, and early 1970s (or didn't read them back then) . You may have noticed if the history of the left matters to you . If you don't know his work and the future of the left is of concern to you, you should miss him too...
...Now consider Lichtheim's approach to Maoism and third worldism...
...L IcHTHEIM PROTESTED that multiple meanings of imperialism were bandied about and blurred into each other...
...Likewise, consider his question about the Maoist-flavored contention, popular in some academic circuits, that third world "underde­velopment" is the Siamese twin of "depen­dence" on industrial superpowers (the United States and the Soviet Union...
...Nobody, left or right, imagined 1989...
...And all these seemed to have become interchangeable with discriminatory trade structures that benefited richer lands at the expense of poorer ones . 'By running these different meanings together one can achieve startling rhetorical effects," observed Lichtheim, "without coming any closer to a genuine theory of imperialism...
...Could Sad­dam and the oil companies have reached a mutually profitable agreement in about, oh, twenty minutes...
...Or that he was out of synchrony with his own century, and especially its intellectuals...
...It could mean the dominance by pre-1914 em­pires (Austria-Hungary, Russia) of national mi­norities...
...RECONS I DE RAT I ONS The Other George Lichtheim on Imperialism Mitchell Cohen GEoRcE LIcHTHEIM is missing...
...Or it might mean the mix of colonialism and mercantilism exemplified by Britain's early dominance of India . Then there was "liberal imperialism," that is, the British and later American quest to secure markets for Western capital...
...His histories of socialism and Marxism are among the most intelligent that we have . They are works of learning, insight, critical engage­ment...
...C MINA DID LEAVE Maoism behind . Cer­tainly, there are new balances of power in today's world...
...One phrase here-"At some stage a writer has to decide . . ."-finds its way over and again into Lichtheim's works, in one way or another...
...MITCHELL COHEN has co-edited Dissent maga­zine in New York since 1991 . He is professor of political science at Baruch College and the Graduate Center of the City University...
...he was out of sympathy with the simplified, scientized Marx promoted by Engels and beloved by one too many Marx­ists and Leninists...
...For one example, he wrote a book on Georg Lukács that is so obsessed with the unattractive features of this Marxist's career, which were plentiful enough, that the interesting aspects of Lukács's thought go out of focus...
...From there he wrote for the Post (renamed the Jerusalem Post after Israel's birth) and became an editor for Commentary (this was long before that maga­zine plunged into the neo-depths-or, rather, shallows) . Lichtheim covered the Nuremburg Trials, and in the next two-and-a-half decades he wrote, sometimes under the pen name G.L...
...The Chinese Communist Party still rules, but it fosters market econom­ics...
...For instance, when he discusses the devel­opment of free trade as a chief tenet of post­1945 U.S...
...Perhaps while intellectuals argued ideology, power-holders acted on entirely dif­ferent bases . Those who thought in the 1990s that history had just ended because the liberal idea vanquished the totalitarian idea might want to glance at pre-1917 relations between Russia and Georgia before discussing current commotions in light of 1989...
...Obviously, yes...
...Consider an observation on Hannah Arendt...
...Obviously, not...
...He went to Britain, where he had spent some time in the 1920s, and found himself working for Marks and Spencer­surely a good subject for a Tom Stoppard play...
...The latter seemed to go no­where beyond rapprochement with liberalism, a useful move, but limited . In the meantime, the West seemed to rest increasingly on technocratic laurels and a sturdy-enough welfare state, able to withstand occasional tremors . Lichtheim, though not a devotee of social democrats, thought classical liberalism had been put to historical rest...
...Read his essay "Happy Birthday"-ít was the Bolshe­vik Revolution's fiftieth-and you'll detect his appreciation of Julius Martov, the Menshevik leader who fought as a Marxist for a democratic Russia, first against an autocratic old regime headed by a czar, and then against a new one­party state headed by his onetime comrade Lenin . The Martovs like the Lichtheims-they are not alone-seem to have vanished from left-wing recall, and if the left is ever to renew itself intellectually, it wí11 need to ask why...
...I take details about Lichtheim's life mostly from Laqueur's accounts of ít .) Lichtheim's prose did not glitter, or it did so rarely...
...The tempera­ment is not that of the 1960s, and it is not postmodern: the point of writing is the subject matter not the writing subject (whole, frag­mented, constructed, conjunctural, whatever) . "I trust I have learned something from modern scholarship and from the literature of the past four decades," he wrote not long before his sui­cide in 1973, "but my instinctive sympathies lie with the representative thinkers of the age that ended in 1914...
...It is quite enough . . . if they are animated by a political wí11 to bring about a forcible rearrangement of the global system controlled by their rivals . Nationalism, then, was essential to this new "mentality...
...It was always straightforward, but there were acerbic riffs, and sometimes he just ran out of patience...
...If the point is to change the world, then your thinking must be a function of the world...
...Are his economic views and energy pol­icies appalling...
...That done, third worldism and anti-imperialism together became for nens the alternative to the superpowers . Their minds still worked through apocalyptic bifurcations . Here's another way of putting it : cold warriors, both intellectuals and power-holders, ought not to have been taken at their words, let alone their shouts...
...Lichtheim would never have hit a delete but­ton on those continental intellectual traditions that gave us the best in socialist thought . Yes, neoconservatives may want to claim him in some way as they have the other George (Orwell, that is...
...Arnold, on European and intellectual affairs for an array of journals ranging from Partisan Re­view, Dissent, the New Leader and Encounter to the Times Literary Supplement and the New York Review of Books . He began to publish wide-ranging works on intellectual history and the left, including Marxism (which made him well known in 1961), The Origins of Socialism, and A Short History of Socialism . Hegelianism marked his mindset...
...They often make you say, "That should have been obvious...
...Instead, they in­verted the world depicted by "standard U .S...
...And he answers, "Plainly, none at all...
...L ICHTHEIM's BOOKS and essays provide synthetic understanding rather than reaching originality He was not known for intellectual modesty...
...Counsel against eco­nomic determinism speckles his pages : "if one is determined to make imperialism rhyme with capitalism, one wí11 have to ignore all empires save those that were built overseas by the na­tion-states of Western Europe in the age of their maritime predominance...
...Lichtheim was an independent intellectual spirit-the real thing, not the self-announced sort...
...But they wí11 be able to do so only with their usual intellectual means-not ham-handed, but ham-headed . A lesson of Lichtheim: dislike of Leninism or Stalinism was 96 . DISSENT I Winter 2009 (and ís) not the private property of neoconservatives...
...What nearsighted intellectuals perceived as world-ideological struggles of "cap­italist democracy versus communist totalitari­anism" or alternatively, "imperialism versus liberation," might really have been neosuper­structures of older kinds of geopolitical con­flict...
...He wasn't right entirely Ferocious, yes, but from drops come ripples . They never came close to making up a majority within the West­ern left except in the obsessed minds of liber­als about to become neoconservatives . Yet they did sometimes function a bit too much like the larger left's superego-a little like the more ex­treme "anti-globalization" militants sometimes do today...
...In his essay entitled "Two Revolutions," Lichtheim wrote that in her book on Revolution she shows an inclination to discuss political top­ics in philosophical terms, and vice versa, until the distinction between metaphysics and poli­tics is lost or dimmed in a twilight zone where it no longer seems to matter whether we are dealing with actual events, contemporary be­liefs about these events, or subsequent reflec­ tions upon them by thinkers motivated by con­victions and interests quite foreign to the par­ticipants...
...In the meantime, there is an academic in­dustry addressing "postcolonialism ." A reader of Lichtheim's Imperialism who wants some updating would do well to look at Stephen Howe's Empire (Oxford, 2002) . This judi­cious, very brief text doesn't harbor the same ambitions as Lichtheím's essay, but it also dis­tinguishes among ideology, intellectual postur­ing, junk scholarship, and thoughtful treat­ments of its subject...
...In the 1960s he paid sym­pathetic and increasing attention to Jurgen Habermas's writings...
...The third world would save Marxism from the obvious fact that the proletariat had obstinately not become history's universal class . Reformist talk on the left­some of it quite smart-of market socialism and "feasible socialism" was swept aside . And postmodernism and/or excitement about "new social movements" displaced a lot of traditional socialist theory...
...But when the British-dominated system of free trade began to falter in the latter nineteenth century, this was because Britain's competitors refused to play "the game" according to the old rules: One must decide what one is talking about . There grew up in the nineteenth century a British empire in India, a Russian empire in central Asia, and a French empire in Africa . These empires were not obliged to clash, and in fact never did...
...Government to boycott mainland China instead of entering trade relations with ít...
...If your life is devoted to saving Marxism as a doc­trine, as the explanation of everything, well, that is something else...
...Then it becomes obvious that a cri­tique of classical "bourgeois" society is inad­equate once that society is gone-and it was...
...The combination seems more like Augusto Pinochet's dictatorship than pursuit of a class­less society...
...Its author discerns a problem like one la­mented by Lichtheim . "A minor oddity of mod­ern academic-and political-language," Howe writes, "ís that the word `imperialism' has undergone a sharp decline in popularity, while `colonialism' has zoomed up the citation charts...
...They might even want to re-contextualíze a good deal of cold war politics within the complicated history of Rus­sia's great power ambitions and its relations with its neighbors before and after commu­nism...
...I'll call them all "nens" for shorthand (admitting, readily, it's too short) . Influential nens such as Paul Baron, Paul Sweety, Harry Sweety, and those in com­parable orbits insisted on a necessary link­chain might be the better term-between capitalist exploitation of the third world and the third world's inability to "develop ." For Lichtheim, this is one formula substituting for another: "bourgeois versus proletariat" becomes "imperialist versus anti-imperialist...
...Of course...
...Europe's transition to political modernity was marked, in Lichtheim's view, not simply by capitalism remaking the world but by an emerging distinction in statecraft between eco­nomic aims and non-economic purposes (reli­gion, for example...
...This makes no argument for or against the war...
...Was oil a crucial factor...
...Although Lichtheim doesn't say it, his point is reinforced by a small fact : Mao did not an­nounce in 1949 that the world proletariat had cast off its chains...
...and it ought not to be accom­panied by histrionics or sneers whenever Marx's name is mentioned . ICHTHEIM WROTE his slim tract on Im­ perialism in 1970...
...But hard Marxists, especially Leninists, disliked Lichtheim for other reasons...
...There were really "imperial­isms," because imperialism varied in times and places . It was not reducible to capitalism . Moreover, earlier theorists of imperialism in the age of capitalism-Hobson and Schumpeter or Marxists like Hilferding, Luxembourg, and Lenin-made many distinctions that seemed to have dissolved in the heat of the late 1960s...
...I found nothing about what political scientists or sociologists or his­torians or economists in, say, India, can teach us about imperialism or the world after colo­nialism...
...nonetheless, he used first-person pronouns sparingly...
...Lichtheim left for Palestine, where he became a journalist and eventually foreign editor of the daily Palestine Post . He frequented intellectual circles in Jerusa­lem, where he befriended Gershom Scholem (and translated his Main Currents in Jewish Mysticism) as well asHansJonas .But he didn't find Zionism or Jewish philosophy compelling, and in 1946 went to London...
...It was, however, "fully integrated with Chinese nationalism and ethnocentrism...
...Foot­notes didn't frighten him . His friend Walter Laqueur reports an idiosyncratic but appeal­ing quality: Lichtheim would not quote a book he didn't own...
...Making reference to a current event (he writes in 1964), he explained that "the re­cent tentative rapprochement between the Vatican and the Kremlin cannot be sensibly discussed in terms of Thomist and Leninist philosophy, although it is a fact that both have a common source in Aristotle ." His point ought to elicit reflection by contemporary concocters of notions like "Islamo-Fascism...
...But its industrialization would be unlike that of the West and would be one part of a transformation of Asia that would al­ter, inevitably, the world's balance of power...
...Capitalist im­perialism won't help you understand the Ro­man Empire, the Holy Roman Empire, and certainly not Sino-Soviet clashes...
...And if we look at France and Britain, we find that "nationalism transformed itself into imperialism wherever the opportunity of­fered...
...Even if you would dispute him on some­thing or many things, you'll feel smarter for the disagreement . He didn't just gobble a few sec­ondary sources and then blurt "expertise...
...Lichtheim saw imperialism as "a relation­ship" between "a controlling power" and those "under its dominion," whether in a formal way or not...
...As holy warriors concluded their wars of religion-another of history's ends of ideology-and as local lords were subordi­nated to central powers, sovereign states arose . They could accommodate religious diversity and enhanced themselves by mercantilist means and overseas quests . Alliances between Catholic and Protestant kings became conceiv­able for a state's sake . This patriotism was driven by dynamics different from those of later capitalist expansion, that is, the imperialism and empires that came of industrial revolution and the ideology of free trade...
...Writers need to decide just what they are ad­dressing...
...This essay was written originally for Normblog . l00...
...He said things they did not want to hear . Marx, he thought, offered a brilliant theoretical re­sponse to the bourgeois phase of European in­dustrialization, but Marxism did not incarnate unalterable laws of history, let alone nature . Marx and his ideas also had to be historicized, not reified...

Vol. 56 • January 2009 • No. 1


 
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