Wildcat Preface: Beverly Silver, ‘Forces of Labor’
Comrades from Wildcat have just published the German
translation of Beverly Silver’s book ‘Forces of Labor’. (See special dossier on wildcat-website for more.) The book
analyzes the development of workers’ struggles on a world-wide scale in
the past 140 years, its relation to the expansion and re-location of
industries, the political intervention of states and war, and develops
concepts for a better understanding of struggles, e.g. the material
basis of workers’ power in certain industries and the political impact
on capitalist strategies. So if you haven’t read the book yet, get a
copy and join the discussion! [Beverly J. Silver, Forces of Labor.
Worker’s movements and Globalization since 1870, Cambridge University
Press, 2002]
Why we have translated ‘Forces of Labor’ ...
When
the book was published in summer 2003 we emphasized its importance in a
first enthusiastic review saying that it “provides a new basis for the
discussions about the future of historical capitalism” (wildcat 67,
October 2003). We knew that a translation into German could promote the
debate on the book’s theses. The book’s “grand narrative” and its many
small narratives are excitingly written workers’ and world history that
will produce interest far beyond academic circles. At the same time
this new vision on history provides new impetus for the - in the past
few years newly inflamed - debates on war, globalization, capitalism
and class struggle.
The book’s particular strength is telling the
(hi)story from the perspective of workers in struggle. Not literally
because the description and summary of 150 years of global (working)
class history inevitably relies on a bird’s eye view. But Forces of
Labor elaborates on the connection between struggles from below and
their effects on ruling class actions and, therefore, capitalism’s
development as a world system. Workers’ struggles chase capital around
the globe and from one industrial product to the next. And with every
new cycle of hegemonial power, pressure from below had more impact on
the shape of the world order (Beverly J. Silver presented this
long-term finding in Chaos and Governance in the Modern World System, a
book she published together with Giovanni Arrighi in 1999).
This
approach in Forces of Labor shows many parallels with an unorthodox
Marxist current in Italy that later became known as “operaism”
(workerism). Its early texts strongly influenced the formation of our
own theory. The label “operaism” gained some new fame through the
political bestseller “Empire” by Hardt and Negri but this theoretical
renewal of the sixties has already become ideology again. The early
sixties’ texts and inquiries written and conducted from around the
magazine “Quaderni Rossi” were a critique of bourgeois industrial
sociology and to the same extent, a critique of an orthodox Marxism
that had lost sight of the workers.[1] Their aim was to renew Marx’s
critique, long forgotten within Marxism, of the despotism of capitalist
production by starting concrete projects of inquiry.
Instead of
using a schematic and identity-based concept of working class,
“Quaderni Rossi” focused on certain forms of production and how they
lead to historically specific forms of “class composition” and
associated “forms of rebellion”. The organization of production and
technology was decoded as “petrified class struggle”, as the reactions
of capital to open and often hidden resistance against work (Silver
calls that fixes). At the same time they worked out the dialectic of
capital encountering workers’ resistance only by a further
socialization of labor through division of work and new machinery -
sooner or later the basis of new workers’ power.
In Forces of Labor
we find again what Mario Tronti at that time had called a “strategic
turn” within Marxism: Instead of assuming a “determination by inner
laws” of capital, capital’s new movements are understood as a constant
confrontation with class struggle. Instead of mystifying capital as a
thing or the world system as a predetermined structure, the driving
force is seen in society’s contradictions: the “endemic” class
relations, the insurmountable antagonism in the sphere of production.
Tronti called this the “workers’ standpoint”.
On a microcosmic as
well as a macrocosmic level Forces of Labor provides us with important
impetuses for a renewal of the “operaist” perspective - or in Steve
Wright’s terms let’s call it the “school of class composition” to avoid
confusions with the ideological “multitude-operaism”. In Forces of
Labor the way in which some capitalist sectors are investigated in
order to grasp their importance for workers’ power sharply contrasts
with the reckless triumphalism Hardt, Negri and others show while
conjuring new subjects out of a hat.
Silver does not use new
capitalist ideologies like the “information society” and its
“immaterial labor” but critically and carefully examines the several
new “post-fordisms” and takes a close look at the production process
and the changes within. She does not come up with definite answers on
the presumable development of workers’ power - and in a
world-historical turning-point phase like today that is probably not
possible either. As long as new central sectors and workers’ figures
fail to show up either within the accumulation of capital or within the
class struggles, any choice of “new” sectors carries a certain
arbitrariness. But Silver shows us how further inquiries can be
developed, what they have to look for, which comprehensive connections
have to be taken into account. The book gives plenty of detailed hints
and suggestions, asking for more collective efforts.
The macrocosmic
suggestions for an expanding and updating of the workers’ position are
apparent: the historical extension to here 150 years, in ‘Chaos and
Governance’ even 500 years and an associated world-historical
perspective. That this approach and the consideration of class struggle
and workers’ subjectivity in history just originates in the
“world-system school” might surprise some people, for this school has
legitimately been criticized for its structuralism. In the first
chapter Silver discusses this problem, arguing that the whole
research-project emerged from a critique of a certain world-system
school “steamroller”-structuralism.
This emergence of the project
has the great advantage in that from the very beginning the relation
between workers’ struggles and the world-system of capitalist and state
power is taken into account. In many discussions about “imperialism”
the social antagonisms between the classes and the political-military
antagonisms between states are being treated as exclusionary
perspectives - the “anti-imperialist position sacrifices social
emancipation for “national liberation”, the “social-revolutionary”
position vice versa tends to ignore the antagonisms within the global
system of states. In Forces of Labor the connections and inter-relation
of both levels are analyzed. War and, above all, world wars are seen as
integral parts of the - on a world-scale politically effective - class
antagonism of capitalism.
This constitutes the book’s
distinctiveness. The view over several centuries allows identification
of the general character as well as the historical novelty of the
situation we find ourselves in today. The question is not what happens
again and again but what kind of shifts occur during historical cycles.
Where does the systems’ development leave previous, apparently
established pathways, where are they blown apart? This concerns the
dialectic of war and class struggle in particular: Will it be possible
once again to cover up - at least temporarily - the social
contradictions through world-war or a world-wide “war against terror”
and block emancipatory struggles? Or does the world-wide power of the
proletarianized - for the first time in history - open up a new
possibility. Can it already influence the decay of the prevailing
world-order in a way preventing another decades-long period of war and
mass murder - characteristic of any global change in governance and
hegemony so far? Forces of Labor is a stimulus and an invitation to
tackle these topics theoretically and practically.
[1]
On the history of this current see “Renaissance des Operaismus” in
Wildcat no. 64, 1995 (see the website www.wildcat-www.de [English
translation of that article available soon]) and more detailed in:
Steve Wright. Storming Heaven. Class composition and struggle in
Italian Autonomist Marxism. 2002. London/Sterling: Pluto Press. [German
translation: Steve Wright. Den Himmel stürmen. Eine Theoriegeschichte
des Operaismus. 2005. Berlin: Assoziation A.]
[prol-position news #2, 5/2005]

