Foundations of Modern Progressive Thought:
From Social Justice, Woke, Intersectionality to Identity Politics.
1. The long march through the institutions
In the annals
of revolutionary thinkers, few match the impact of Antonio Francesco Gramsci,
who lived between January 2, 1891, and April 27, 1937. Notably, as a founder
and once the leader of the Italian Communist Party, he became an emblematic
figure who symbolized resolute resistance to Benito Mussolini's fascism. While
imprisoned by the authoritarian regime from 1926 until his death in 1937, he
penned what can be considered his magnum opus – the “Prison Notebooks” - more
than 3,000 pages filled with a seductive blend of history and political theory.
It would be a
tragic oversimplification to think that Gramsci simply stood in opposition to
bourgeois values. Rather, he sought to convey that these values were not the
quintessential or default values for a society. Lenin, with his pragmatic
focus, believed culture was a mere sidebar to the larger political game.
However, for Gramsci, culture wasn't a side act; it was the headline show. In
his eyes, achieving cultural hegemony was paramount to obtaining genuine power.
He keenly observed that a class could not gain dominance solely through
pursuing economic ambitions or through unbridled force. A more sophisticated
method was necessary: a class had to ascend by showcasing intellectual and
moral leadership, crafting alliances, and yes, even making compromises.
Borrowing a term from Georges Sorel, Gramsci termed this alliance of societal
forces a "historic bloc". This bloc, in essence, was the linchpin
that ensured the continuous reproduction of the hegemony of the prevailing
class through a web of institutions, relationships, and ideologies.
Gramsci's
focus on the political and ideological superstructure is a crucial mechanism in
maintaining and breaking the chains of the economic foundation. He vociferously
contended that to truly challenge the capitalist stronghold, it was paramount
to erect a counter-hegemony. This wasn't about sheer opposition; it was about
crafting an alternative, a counter-narrative to the prevailing bourgeois
ideology. The peculiar nature of Russian societal structures, according to
Gramsci, exempted them from this process since their ruling elite did not
exercise genuine hegemonic power.
In a
proclamation that would echo through the annals of history, Gramsci
articulated, "Socialism is precisely the religion that must overwhelm
Christianity. … In the new order, Socialism will triumph by first capturing the
culture via infiltration of schools, universities, churches, and the media by
transforming the consciousness of society." It's essential to note
that his proclamation, describing the current state of culture in 2023, was
penned during his confinement from 1926 to 1937.
Fast forward
to 1967, German sociologist and political student activist Rudi Dutschke coined
the phrase "the long march through the institutions". A strategic
blueprint for initiating revolutionary conditions, it aimed to dismantle
capitalist society's grasp by permeating various societal institutions.
Dutschke promoted working against the
established institutions while working within them, but not simply by 'boring
from within', rather by 'doing the job', learning (how to program and read
computers, how to teach at all levels of education, how to use the mass media,
how to organize production, how to recognize and eschew planned obsolescence,
how to design, et cetera), and at the same time preserving one's own
consciousness in working with others. The term "long march"
wasn't mere rhetoric; it was an ode to the prolonged endeavors of the Chinese
communists, epitomized by their literal march across China.
Interestingly,
while many draw parallels between Dutschke's "long march" and
Gramsci's "war of position", concrete evidence linking Dutschke's
familiarity with Gramsci remains elusive. Despite countless references to other
revolutionary figures like György Lukács, Che Guevara, and Mao Zedong in
Dutschke's writings, a conspicuous absence of Gramsci looms large.
The strategies
laid down by figures like Gramsci and Dutschke remain a testament to the
multifaceted nature of the communist manifestos – they do not merely intend
to change governments but instead attempt to transform the very soul of
societies.
2.
Critical Theory
Amid the ocean
of intellectual movements of the 20th century, none perhaps remains as poignant
and provocative as the Frankfurt School, more rigorously referred to as
Critical Theory. Originating from the proverbial corridors of the Institute for
Social Research, affixed to Frankfurt's Goethe University in Germany, this
movement was conceived in 1923, borne out of Felix Weil's munificence, and
aimed to kindle the fires of Marxist analysis within German academia. But, with
the Nazi regime's tightening noose in 1933, this intellectual bastion found
refuge across the Atlantic, settling within the esteemed walls of Columbia
University in New York City.
The luminaries of this philosophical force included figures like Max Horkheimer, Theodor Adorno, and the potent Herbert Marcuse, to name but a few. By the time the 1970s dawned, a new guard, spearheaded by Jürgen Habermas, commenced, casting the Frankfurt School's intellectual net beyond its original confines, influencing scholarly methods across the European continent. During this metamorphosis, the American academic realm was not untouched. Richard Bernstein, a philosophical contemporary of Habermas, fervently adopted Critical Theory's agenda, infusing its essence into the academia, starting notably from the New School for Social Research in New York.
But it's Herbert Marcuse, the German-born philosopher, who deserves closer scrutiny. Associated intrinsically with the Frankfurt School's philosophy, Marcuse championed the New Left in 1960s America. His critiques often pierced the heart of conventional liberalism, most controversially via his "Repressive Tolerance" hypothesis published in 1965. Marcuse argued that the liberal concept of tolerance, which allowed for the free expression of all ideas and opinions, actually served to reinforce the existing power structure and maintain the status quo.
According to
Marcuse, in a society where there is unequal distribution of power and wealth,
the notion of "equal" or "neutral" tolerance simply
perpetuates the dominant ideology and represses the oppressed. He believed that
the ruling class, with the help of the media and other institutions, used the
idea of tolerance to maintain their power and control over the masses, while
suppressing any dissenting voices that threatened their authority.
In Marcuse's
view, therefore, true freedom could only be achieved through "liberating
tolerance," which would actively promote and encourage alternative,
dissenting viewpoints, while challenging the dominant ideology. This would
involve a form of "discriminatory tolerance," in which the oppressed
were given more latitude to express their views than the oppressors, in order
to redress the power imbalance.
His hypothesis
captivated many, not least his most famous student, Angela Davis, who echoed
Marcuse’s sentiments in her preface to “The New Left and the 1960s”:
While
Marcuse's ideas were controversial and attracted criticism from some quarters,
they were influential in the development of the New Left movement and continue
to be discussed and debated in political and philosophical circles today. Marcuse engaged with the civil rights
movement and the emerging feminist, environmental, gay and lesbian, and other
oppositional social movements of the era.
Critical
theory encourages dissidents to demand that society accept their changes in vocabulary
and also to demand more latitude to express their views than their opponents.
3.
Postmodernism
During the
1970s, the intellectual salons of France bore witness to an emerging
philosophical storm. Taking inspiration from the likes of Nietzsche,
Kierkegaard, and Heidegger, a maverick group of thinkers, led by luminaries
like Jacques Derrida, Michel Foucault, Jean-François Lyotard, and Jean
Baudrillard, began to radically dismantle the established paradigms of modern
philosophy. By the time the 1980s rolled around, these audacious ideas had not
only traversed the Atlantic to find a haven in America with thinkers like
Richard Rorty but had garnered a global resonance.
This
intellectual movement, branded as "postmodernism," ventured where few
had dared to tread. It was a brazen challenge to the very edifice of
Enlightenment rationalism, an intellectual legacy that had held sway since the
17th century. Postmodernism is
associated with relativism and a focus on the role of ideology in the
maintenance of economic and political power.
Postmodernists are "skeptical of explanations which claim to be
valid for all groups, cultures, traditions, or races, and instead focuses on
the relative truths of each person".
It considers "reality" to be a mental construct.
Postmodernism rejects the possibility of unmediated reality or objectively
rational knowledge, asserting that all interpretations are contingent on the
perspective from which they are made; claims to objective fact are dismissed as
naive realism.
Deeply influenced by strains of critical theory, postmodernists viewed knowledge and moral systems through a lens of contingency, describing those systems as products of political, historical, or cultural discourses and hierarchies. Accordingly, postmodern thought is broadly characterized by tendencies to self-referentiality, epistemological and moral relativism, pluralism, and irreverence. Postmodernism is often associated with schools of thought such as deconstruction and post-structuralism. Postmodernism relies on critical theory, which considers the effects of ideology, society, and history on culture. Postmodernism and critical theory commonly criticize universalist ideas of objective reality, morality, truth, human nature, reason, language, and social progress. Schools of thought like deconstruction and post-structuralism found their lineage in the postmodernist canon. In essence, postmodernism, coupled with critical theory, presents a scathing critique of any pretense to an objective reality, immutable truths, or the infallibility of reason.
An essential
figure in this intellectual tableau was Richard McKay Rorty. A product
of institutions like the University of Chicago (BA and MA) and Yale (Phd),
Rorty's academic sojourns spanned the hallowed halls of Princeton, the
University of Virginia, and Stanford.
Rorty rejected
the long-held idea that correct internal representations of objects in the
outside world is a necessary prerequisite for knowledge. Rorty argued instead
that knowledge is an internal and linguistic affair; knowledge only relates to
our own language. Rorty argues that
language is made up of vocabularies that are temporary and historical and
concludes that "[...] since vocabularies are made by human beings, so are
truths."
4.
Conclusion: The Accumulated Results
The long march
through the institutions has been underway for over 100 years. It is apparent that the collectivists have
gained control of all institutions in society including but not limited to:
Elementary
schools.
High Schools.
Universities.
Government
agencies and bureaucrats.
Elected officials.
Corporate
management.
News media of
all types.
Entertainment
of all types.
Religious
organizations.
The family.
Having control
of the institutions provides the collectivists with
the opportunity to control public discourse using the methods prescribed by critical
theory. Propaganda favoring the collectivist
doctrine is promoted throughout all institutions and opposition to collectivist
doctrine is censored and labeled misinformation or disinformation. Finally, collectivists are able to redefine the
vocabulary using postmodernist methods to define long held beliefs as false and
new and unimaginable concepts to be true.