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Bakunin and the Historians
"Mikhail Alexandrovich Bakunin, the anarchist, was a political thinker;
his reputation, based partly on his appetite for action and partly on
unsympathetic historiography, obscures this..." Robert Cutler opens the
introduction to his anthology of Bakunin's writings with these words.
Another historian, Nunzio Pernicone, deplores the modern fashion of
"Bakunin-bashing." And Arthur Lehning, in a 1978 review of the historical
literature, refers to a conspiracy of silence, suggesting that studying
Bakunin inevitably raises basic questions confronting working-class
movements - dictatorship vs. liberty, centralism vs. federalism,
self-organization vs. a domineering political party.
When Lehning wrote, only the Marxist E.H. Carr's 1937 biography was
available in English (aside from historical sketches in pamphlets,
journals, and collections of Bakunin's work) and few of Bakunin's writings
had been translated into English. But today a substantial number of
biographical works, at least compared to the paucity of Bakunin's own
writings, are available in English. In addition to E.H. Carr's dated but
still standard biography, reissued in 1975, readers have been subjected to
two popular biographies (Masters, Mendel), a new scholarly biography by
Aileen Kelly, a very useful look at Bakunin's pivotal role in organizing
the Italian socialist movement (Ravindranathan), and Thomas' rather
intriguing examination of the way in which Marx borrowed his ideas from,
and shaped his arguments in response to, anarchist thinkers including
Bakunin and Proudhon.
Masters', Mendel's and Kelly's biographies are quite poor, especially
when compared to Carr. Mendel argues (unconvincingly, and on the basis of
remarkably few sources) that Bakunin's revolutionary career and ideas were
fundamentally authoritarian and resulted from deep-seated psychological
problems. Masters is friendlier to his subject (but sees anarchism as at
best a beautiful but impractical dream), but draws almost entirely upon
English-language sources, especially Carr, and is written more in the
style of a novel than a work of history.
Aileen Kelly's biography, the newest of the three, purports to be an
intellectual biography but (in Cutler's words) "treats Bakunin as a case
study in the social psychology of millenarianism" (p. 234). Kelly is
unabashedly hostile, painting Bakunin as an ill- meaning buffoon,
misrepresenting key aspects of his life and thought, and disguising
missing evidence with circular footnotes. Although historians of Spanish
(Esenwein) and Italian (Ravindranathan) anarchism point to the
organizational and propagandistic skills Bakunin displayed in those
settings, Kelly refuses to allow the historical record to stand in the way
of her thesis.
Ravindranathan, however, has written an outstanding book focussing on
one of Bakunin's most productive efforts during his ten years or so as an
anarchist (for most of his revolutionary career, Bakunin was a
pan-Slavist). Bakunin played a key role in disabusing the nascent Italian
revolutionaries of patriotic illusions, and persuaded them that a social,
not merely a political, revolution was necessary. As the American
Historical Review's (Dec. 1990, pp. 1576-77) reviewer put it, "Thankfully,
Ravindranathan does not indulge in the Bakunin-bashing that has become so
fashionable in recent years. Although he does not hesitate to note
[indeed, to exaggerate-jb] the Russian's ideological inconsistencies and
personal failings, Ravindranathan portrays Bakunin as a serious and
devoted revolutionary, an acute thinker capable of extraordinary
insights... and a master propagandist."
Kelly and Mendel attribute responsibility for Nechaev's Catechism to
Bakunin, even though it has been proven that Bakunin not only did not
write it, but vigorously denounced it. (Carr, writing before the evidence
was in, makes the same argument on the basis of stylistic similarities and
turns of phrase, apparently never considering the fact that authors borrow
from, and are influenced by, one another. Avrich's collection of Anarchist
Portraits contains an essay reviewing the evidence on this, and another
which attacks Bakunin on scant evidence indeed.) Aside from Carr, the
biographies focus their attention on Bakunin's pre- anarchist period,
whether because it was the greater part of his life (though it is his
anarchist years for which Bakunin is best remembered, and that account for
the continuing historical interest) or because it enables biographers to
indulge in their pet theories about why Bakunin turned out so badly.
And make no mistake about it, in the eyes of his biographers (at least
his English-language biographers) Bakunin turned out very badly indeed.
For Carr, Bakunin is a tragic-comic figure, albeit very human. Masters
suggests a greater degree of grandeur in his rewriting of Carr's work. For
Mendel, Bakunin is a villain of the highest order, with an egomaniacal
will to dominate and to destroy. Kelly softens this portrait somewhat,
leaving Bakunin quite inscrutable. For if he were truly the ineffectual
buffoon she describes, he would surely have long since passed into
obscurity.
Readers interested in learning the details of Bakunin's life would do
better to look at Guillaume's highly partisan account, which opens
Dolgoff's anthology, or Shatz's briefer biographical sketch in the
Introduction to his edition of Statism and Anarchy. While Carr is by no
means friendly to anarchism, his account too is worth reading. But
Ravindranathan's account, while covering Bakunin's life from 1814 through
1863 (Bakunin moved to Italy in 1864) in just 16 pages, offers the best
book-length English- language biography, covering the years when Bakunin
developed and began to propagate his anarchist ideas. Despite its focus on
Italy, Bakunin & The Italians illustrates both Bakunin's methods and his
ideas during this vital period (Bakunin retired in ill health in 1874, his
final two years receive little attention).
In order to read Bakunin himself, one still often needs to be
proficient in French or Russian (preferably both), but there are now four
widely-available English-language anthologies of Bakunin's writings
(Dolgoff, Cutler, Lehning and Maximoff), alongside the long-available God
and the State (published by Dover in 1970) and Marshall Shatz's new
translation of Statism and Anarchy - one of Bakunin's few more-or-less
completed books, and his last major theoretical work. (An earlier
translation of Statism and Anarchy by C.H. Plummer was published in 1976
by the Revisionist Press. I have been unable to locate a copy, but it is
reputedly much inferior.) Also available in English is an annotated
edition of The Confession of Mikhail Bakunin (written from a Russian
prison), and excerpts in several anthologies and pamphlets.
These translations and anthologies fall into two broad categories:
scholarly editions (Cutler, Shatz), and more popular translations
(Dolgoff, Maximoff; Lehning falls somewhere in between) intended to
present Bakunin's ideas to contemporary readers. The popular editions
often delete references to often obscure controversies or persons Bakunin
was responding to and seek to simplify his often difficult prose in order
to make it more accessible to modern readers. The resulting works are
generally more readable than are their scholarly counterparts, though some
readers prefer (or need) the deleted material in order to place Bakunin's
writings in their specific, historical context, which often shaped not
only the concerns addressed but also the form they took.
Dolgoff's anthology is the most useful and comprehensive, although
Cutler has unearthed several interesting texts. Maximoff is useful
primarily as a concordance - he has organized very brief excerpts by
subject, in order to enable readers to readily ascertain, say, Bakunin's
views on human nature. But while translators such as Cutler and Schatz
tend to present Bakunin's writings as historical artifacts, Dolgoff sets
out to illustrate the basic themes of Bakunin's anarchist philosophy, and
has carefully selected his texts "in order to enable the reader to grasp
the essence of Bakunin's views" (p. 21).
(For readers interested in comparing different translations, Cutler
[pp. 32-33] provides a useful list of the editions and pages upon which
other English-language translations of the same works can be found.
Similarly, compare Dolgoff's 25 pages of excerpts from Statism and Anarchy
to Shatz's 218 page translation. Dolgoff extracts the core of Bakunin's
devastating critique of Marxism and his discussion of the preconditions
for social revolution; while it is certainly useful to have the complete
work available, it is largely devoted to a detailed analysis of
contemporary political currents which adds relatively little - with some
exceptions, most notably the "Appendix" and its discussion of
revolutionary strategy - to our understanding of Bakunin's
philosophy.)
Sadly, many anarchists know little more of Bakunin than a few aphorisms
(the urge to destroy is also a creative urge, "I shall continue to be an
impossible person so long as those who are now possible remain possible")
and perhaps a general sense of his critique of, and battle against,
Marxism. For example, a writer in The Raven recently argued, on the basis
of her reading of God and the State, that Bakunin was uninterested in the
liberation of women. Clearly she was unfamiliar with Bakunin's "Manifesto
of the Russian Revolutionary Association to the Oppressed Women of Russia"
(excerpted in Dolgoff), of his defense of his sister's right to escape a
love-less marriage, etc. Similarly, recent writers in the anarchist press
have attributed a wide variety of conflicting economic views to Bakunin.
Without doubt, Bakunin had many faults and inconsistencies - even during
the years when he was developing anarchism as a political philosophy. But
he played a vital role in the evolution of our movement and our ideas, and
deserves to be better, and more accurately, remembered.
Works Cited:
Paul Avrich, Anarchist Portraits. Princeton, NJ: Princeton
University Press, 1988. (Reviewed LLR 7)
Michael Bakunin, Statism and Anarchy (Introduced and Edited by
Marshall Shatz). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1990.
E.H. Carr, Michael Bakunin (Revised Edition). New York: Octagon
Books, 1975.
Robert Cutler (translator and editor), From out of the Dustbin:
Bakunin's Basic Writings, 1869-1871. Ann Arbor, MI: Ardis Publishers,
1985. (Reviewed LLR 2)
Sam Dolgoff (editor), Bakunin on Anarchism (Expanded edition).
Montreal: Black Rose Books, 1980.
George Esenwein, Anarchist Ideology and the Working Class Movement
in Spain. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1989. (Reviewed
this issue)
Aileen Kelly, Mikhail Bakunin: A Study in the Psychology and
Politics of Utopianism. Oxford, UK: Clarendon Press, 1982.
Arthur Lehning, Michel Bakounine et les historiens. Geneva:
C.I.R.A., 1979.
----- (editor), Michael Bakunin: Selected Writings (Translated
by Steven Cox and Olive Stevens). London: Jonathan Cape, 1973.
Anthony Masters, Bakunin: The Father of Anarchism. New York:
E.P. Dutton, 1974.
G.P. Maximoff (translator and editor), The Political Philosophy of
Bakunin: Scientific Anarchism. Glencoe, IL: Free Press, 1953.
Arthur Mendel, Michael Bakunin: Roots of Apocalypse. New York:
Praeger, 1981.
T.R. Ravindranathan, Bakunin and the Italians. McGill-Queen's
University Press (3430 McTavish St., Montreal, Quebec H3A 1X9), 1989.
Paul Thomas, Karl Marx and the Anarchists. London: Routledge and
Kegan Paul, 1980.
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