Trotsky’s Stalin – a Marxist
masterpiece
Written by Alan WoodsFriday, 20 May 2016
On August 20th 1940 Trotsky’s life was
brutally ended when a Stalinist agent brought an ice pick crashing down on his
defenceless head. Among the works left unfinished was the second part of Stalin.
Trotsky’sStalin.This work is probably unique in Marxist literature in
that it attempts to explain some of the most decisive events of the 20th century,
not just in terms of epoch-making economic and social transformations, but in
the individual psychology of those who appear as protagonists in a great
historical drama.
The relationship between individual psychology and
historical processes provides a fascinating theme for students of history and
forms the basis of the present work. How did it come about that Stalin, who
began his political life as a revolutionary and a Bolshevik, ended up a tyrant
and a monster? Was this something pre-ordained, whether by genetic factors or
childhood upbringing?
There are some circumstances in Stalin’s early life,
painstakingly analysed by Trotsky, that suggest certain tendencies towards
revengefulness, envy and a cruel, even sadistic streak. Taken in isolation,
however, these tendencies cannot have a decisive significance. Not every child
who is abused by a drunken father becomes a sadistic dictator, just as not
every unsuccessful artist, resentful at his rejection by Viennese society,
becomes Adolf Hitler.
For such transformations to occur, great historic
events and social convulsions are necessary. In the case of Hitler it was
Germany’s economic collapse following the Wall Street Crash that provided him
with an opportunity to lead a mass movement of the ruined petty bourgeois and
de-classed lumpen-proletariat. In the case of Stalin it was the ebb of the
movement that followed the Russian Revolution, the exhaustion of the masses
following the great exertions of the War, Revolution and Civil War and the
isolation of the Revolution in conditions of frightful backwardness and poverty
that led to the rise of a privileged bureaucracy.
The millions of officials that elbowed the workers
aside hardened into a privileged caste. These upstarts needed a leader who
would defend their interests. But this leader had to be a man with
revolutionary credentials – a Bolshevik with a solid pedigree: “Cometh the
moment, cometh the man.” The Soviet bureaucracy found its representative in
Joseph Djughashvili, known to us as Stalin.
At first sight, Stalin would not seem an obvious
choice to step into Lenin’s shoes. Stalin had no ideology, other than to gain
power and hold onto it. He had a tendency towards suspicion and violence. He
was a typical apparatchik – narrow-minded and ignorant, like
the people whose interests he represented. The other Bolshevik leaders spent
years in Western Europe and spoke foreign languages fluently, and participated
personally in the international workers’ movement. Stalin spoke no foreign
languages and even spoke Russian poorly with a thick Georgian accent.
This paradox is explained by Trotsky. A revolutionary
epoch demands heroic leaders, great writers and orators, bold thinkers who are
able to put into words the unconscious or semi-conscious aspirations of the
masses to change society, translating them into timely slogans. It is an age of
giants. But a counter-revolutionary period is one of ebb, retreat and
demoralization. Such a period does not require giants but people of a far
smaller stature. It is the age of the opportunist, the conformist and the
apostate.
In such circumstances, bold visionaries and heroic
individuals are no longer required. The mediocrity rules supreme, and Stalin
was the supreme mediocrity. Of course, this definition does not exhaust his
qualities, or he would never have succeeded in elevating himself above the
heads of people who were in every respect his superiors. He also possessed an
iron will and determination, a stubborn, indomitable thirst for power and
personal advancement and an innate skillfulness in manipulating people, exploiting
their weak side, manoeuvring and intriguing.
Such qualities in the context of an advancing
revolution are of only third-rate importance. But in the ebb-tide of the
revolution, they can be utilised to great effect. The way in which this applied
in Stalin’s case is explained by Trotsky with a mass of carefully assembled
material drawn both from his personal archives and many other sources,
including the memoirs of Bolsheviks, Stalinists, Mensheviks and particularly
Georgian revolutionaries who knew the man intimately.
The role of the individual
The attempt to reduce great historic events to
individual personalities is superficial and usually reflects an inability to
approach history from a scientific point of view. Historical materialism finds
the mainspring of history in the development of the productive forces. But this
by no means denies the role of the individual in history. On the contrary, the
historical process can only be expressed through the agency of men and women.
To discover the complex interplay between the
particular and the general, between personalities and social processes, is a
difficult task. But it can be done. Marx dealt with this aspect brilliantly in The
Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte, where he shows how, under certain
historical circumstances, a mediocrity, like the man Victor Hugo called Napoléon
le Petit (‘Napoleon the Little’), can come to power. The precise way
in which the individual interacts with objective processes has never been so
painstakingly examined.
Did the personality of Stalin determine the fate of
the USSR? It is sufficient to pose the question to expose its complete
hollowness. The defeat of the European Revolution meant that the regime of
workers’ democracy established by the October Revolution could not survive.
Once the Revolution was isolated in conditions of frightful economic and
cultural backwardness, the rise of the bureaucracy was inevitable, with or
without the presence of Stalin. But one can say that the particularly horrific
nature of the regime, its sadistic methods and the monstrous scale of the
Terror were determined to a very great extent by Stalin’s character, his
paranoia and his unquenchable thirst for revenge.
Stalin is a fascinating study of the way in which the
peculiar character of an individual, his personal traits and psychology,
interacted with great events. For that very reason, it has had its detractors.
There have been many attempts to present Stalin as a work motivated
by Trotsky’s desire to discredit his enemy in the Kremlin, or at the very least
as an account in which factors of a personal or psychological nature rendered
an objective study impossible. Such a superficial judgement does a serious
injustice to the author. Trotsky already anticipated these criticisms when he
wrote:
“The point which I now occupy is unique. I therefore
feel that I have the right to say that I have never entertained a feeling of
hatred towards Stalin. In certain circles there is a lot said and written about
my so-called hatred for Stalin which apparently fills me with gloomy and
troubled judgements. I can only shrug my shoulders in response to all this. Our
ways have parted so long ago that whatever personal relationship there was between
us has long ago been utterly extinguished. For my part, and to the extent that
I am the tool of historical forces, which are alien and hostile to me, my
personal feelings towards Stalin are indistinguishable from my feelings towards
Hitler or the Japanese Mikado.”(Stalin, present edition, Chapter 14: ‘The
Thermidorian Reaction’; section: ‘The revenge of history’)
It is characteristic of academic historians to hide
behind a façade of what is supposed to be impartiality. But, in fact, every
historian writes from a particular viewpoint. This is particularly evident in
histories of the Russian Revolution – or even the French Revolution, if it
comes to that. As proof of this we can point to the flood of ‘learned’ books on
the Russian Revolution that is churned out every year, especially since the
fall of the Soviet Union, that claim to furnish incontrovertible proof that
Lenin and Trotsky were bloodthirsty monsters and the Soviet Union never
accomplished anything except the KGB and the Gulag.
One only has to scratch the surface for the mask of
academic objectivity to slip, revealing the ugly contorted features of an
anti-Communist fanatic. In contrast to the hypocritical pseudo-objectivity of
academic historians, Trotsky approaches the question of the Stalinist
counter-revolution as a Marxist and a revolutionist. Is there a contradiction
between having a passionate interest in changing society and at the same time
being capable of an objective appraisal of historical events and the role of
individuals in the historical process? Let Trotsky answer for himself:
“In the eyes of a philistine a revolutionary point of
view is virtually equivalent to an absence of scientific objectivity. We think
just the opposite: only a revolutionist – provided, of course, that he is
equipped with the scientific method – is capable of laying bare the objective
dynamics of the revolution. Apprehending thought in general is not
contemplative, but active. The element of will is indispensable for penetrating
the secrets of nature and society. Just as a surgeon, on whose scalpel a human
life depends, distinguishes with extreme care between the various tissues of an
organism, so a revolutionist, if he has a serious attitude toward his task, is
obliged with strict conscientiousness to analyse the structure of society, its
functions and reflexes.” (Trotsky, The
Chinese Revolution, 1938)
About the new edition
Nobody can ever claim to have produced the definitive
edition of Stalin. It was unfinished on the day of Trotsky’s
assassination and will remain unfinished for all time. What we can say without
fear of contradiction is that this is the most complete version of the book
that has ever been published.
There have been other editions of the book, they have
never been satisfactory, and some were even misleading. In preparing for this
project, we compared the translations of other versions, all of which were
inadequate in different ways. We have brought together all the material that
was available from the Trotsky archives in English and supplemented it with
additional material in Russian.
The new edition contains an additional 86,000 words.
That is an increase of approximately thirty percent over the book as a whole.
But in the second part, where almost all of the new material is to be found,
the text has been augmented by approximately ninety percent.
If Trotsky had lived, it is very clear that he would
have produced an infinitely better work. He would have made a rigorous
selection of the raw material. Like an accomplished sculptor he would have polished
it and then polished it again, until it reached the dazzling heights of a work
of art. We cannot hope to attain such heights. We do not know what material the
great man would have selected or rejected. But we feel we are under a historic
obligation at least to make available to the world all the material that is
available to us.
Despite all the difficulties, this work has been of
great educational value. We have found in many pieces that were discarded as
things of no interest fascinating insights into Trotsky’s thought. Like the
last works of Marx, Engels and Lenin, the writings of Trotsky’s last few years
are the products of a mature mind that was able to draw on a whole lifetime of
rich experience. Of particular interest are his observations about dialectics
and Marxist theory in the Appendix ‘Stalin as a Theoretician’, which, as far as
I know, have never been published before.
In making available for the first time a great deal of
material that was arbitrarily excluded from Stalin and hidden
in dusty boxes for three quarter of a century, we are discharging a debt to a
great revolutionary and simultaneously providing a wealth of new and valuable
material to the new generation that is striving to find the ideas and programme
to change the world. This is the only monument he would have ever wanted.
London 18
May 2016
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.