{"id":1,"date":"2010-03-01T00:00:57","date_gmt":"2010-03-01T05:00:57","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/?p=1"},"modified":"2021-11-18T13:58:57","modified_gmt":"2021-11-18T18:58:57","slug":"hello-world","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/chriscutrone.platypus1917.org\/?p=1","title":{"rendered":"Gillian Rose&#8217;s &#8220;Hegelian&#8221; critique of Marxism"},"content":{"rendered":"<h2>Book review: Gillian Rose, <em>Hegel Contra Sociology.<\/em> London: Verso, 2009.<\/h2>\n<h2>Chris Cutrone<\/h2>\n<div id=\"attachment_11\" style=\"width: 208px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><a href=\"http:\/\/chriscutrone.platypus1917.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/04\/rosegillian.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-11\" class=\"size-full wp-image-11 \" title=\"rosegillian\" src=\"http:\/\/chriscutrone.platypus1917.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/04\/rosegillian.jpg\" alt=\"Gillian Rose\" width=\"198\" height=\"149\" srcset=\"https:\/\/chriscutrone.platypus1917.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/04\/rosegillian.jpg 330w, https:\/\/chriscutrone.platypus1917.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/04\/rosegillian-300x226.jpg 300w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 198px) 100vw, 198px\" \/><\/a><p id=\"caption-attachment-11\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Gillian Rose (1947-1995)<\/p><\/div>\n<p>GILLIAN ROSE\u2019S <em>MAGNUM <\/em><em>OPUS<\/em> was her second book, <em>Hegel Contra Sociology <\/em>(1981).[<a name=\"rose_return1\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_note1\">1<\/a>] Preceding this was <em>The Melancholy Science: An Introduction to the Thought of Theodor W. Adorno<\/em> (1978), a work which charted Rose\u2019s approach to the relation of Marxism to Hegel in <em>Hegel Contra Sociology<\/em>.[<a name=\"rose_return2\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_note2\">2<\/a>] Alongside her monograph on Adorno, Rose published two incisively critical reviews of the reception of Adorno\u2019s work.[<a name=\"rose_return3\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_note3\">3<\/a>] Rose thus established herself early on as an important interrogator of Adorno\u2019s thought and Frankfurt School Critical Theory more generally, and of their problematic reception.<\/p>\n<p>In her review of <em>Negative Dialectics<\/em>, Rose noted, \u201cAnyone who is involved in the possibility of Marxism as a mode of cognition <em>sui generis<\/em> .\u00a0.\u00a0. must read Adorno\u2019s book.\u201d[<a name=\"rose_return4\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_note4\">4<\/a>] As she wrote in her review of contemporaneous studies on the Frankfurt School,<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>Both the books reviewed here indict the Frankfurt School for betraying a Marxist canon; yet they neither make any case for the importance of the School nor do they acknowledge the question central to that body of work: the possibility and desirability of defining such a canon. As a result both books overlook the relation of the Frankfurt School to Marx for which they are searching. .\u00a0.\u00a0. They have taken the writings [of Horkheimer, Benjamin and Adorno] literally but not seriously enough. The more general consequences of this approach are also considerable: it obscures instead of illuminating the large and significant differences within Marxism.[<a name=\"rose_return5\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_note5\">5<\/a>]<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Rose\u2019s critique can be said of virtually all the reception of Frankfurt School Critical Theory.<\/p>\n<p>Rose followed her work on Adorno with <em>Hegel Contra Sociology<\/em>. The book\u2019s original dust jacket featured a blurb by Anthony Giddens, Rose\u2019s mentor and the <em>doyen<\/em> of sociology, who called it \u201c<em>a very unusual piece of work<\/em> .\u00a0.\u00a0. whose significance will take some time to sink in.\u201d As Rose put it in <em>The Melancholy Science<\/em>, Adorno and other thinkers in Frankfurt School Critical Theory sought to answer for their generation the question Marx posed (in the 1844 <em>Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts<\/em>), \u201cHow do we now stand as regards the Hegelian dialectic?\u201d[<a name=\"rose_return6\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_note6\">6<\/a>] For Rose, this question remained a standing one. Hence, Rose\u2019s work on the problem of \u201cHegelian Marxism\u201d comprised an important critique of the Left of her time that has only increased in resonance since then.<\/p>\n<p>Rose sought to recover Hegel from readings informed by 20th century neo-Kantian influences, and from what she saw as the failure to fully grasp Hegel\u2019s critique of Kant. Where Kant could be seen as the bourgeois philosopher <em>par excellence<\/em>, Rose took Hegel to be his most important and unsurpassed critic. Hegel provided Rose with the standard for critical thinking on social modernity, whose threshold she found nearly all others to fall below, including thinkers she otherwise respected such as Adorno and Marx.<\/p>\n<p>Rose read Marx as an important disciple of Hegel who, to her mind, nevertheless, misapprehended key aspects of Hegel\u2019s thought. According to Rose, this left Marxism at the mercy of prevailing Kantian preoccupations. As she put it, \u201cWhen Marx is not self-conscious about his relation to Hegel\u2019s philosophy .\u00a0.\u00a0. [he] captures what Hegel means by actuality or spirit. But when Marx desires to dissociate himself from Hegel\u2019s actuality .\u00a0.\u00a0. he relies on and affirms abstract dichotomies between being and consciousness, theory and practice, etc.\u201d (230\u2013231). In offering this Hegelian critique of Marx and Marxism, however, Rose actually fulfilled an important desideratum of Adorno\u2019s Marxist critical theory, which was to attend to what was \u201cnot yet subsumed,\u201d or, how a regression of Marxism could be met by a critique from the standpoint of what \u201cremained\u201d from Hegel.<\/p>\n<p>In his deliberate recovery of what Rose characterized as Marx\u2019s \u201ccapturing\u201d of Hegel\u2019s \u201cactuality or spirit,\u201d Adorno was preceded by the \u201cHegelian Marxists\u201d Georg Luk\u00e1cs and Karl Korsch. The \u201cregressive\u201d reading proposed by Adorno[<a name=\"rose_return7\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_note7\">7<\/a>] that could answer Rose would involve reading Adorno as presupposing Luk\u00e1cs and Korsch, who presupposed the revolutionary Marxism of Lenin and Luxemburg, who presupposed Marx, who presupposed Hegel. Similarly, Adorno characterized Hegel as \u201cKant come into his own.\u201d[<a name=\"rose_return8\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_note8\">8<\/a>] From Adorno\u2019s perspective, the Marxists did not need to rewrite Marx, nor did Marx need to rewrite Hegel. For Adorno the recovery of Marx by the Marxists \u2014 and of Hegel by Marx \u2014 was a matter of further specification and not simple \u201cprogress.\u201d This involved problematization, perhaps, but not overcoming in the sense of leaving behind.[<a name=\"rose_return9\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_note9\">9<\/a>] Marx did not seek to overcome Hegel, but rather was tasked to advance and fulfill his concerns. This comports well with Rose\u2019s approach to Hegel, which she in fact took over, however unconsciously, from her prior study of Adorno, failing to follow what Adorno assumed about Marxism in this regard.<\/p>\n<p>Two parts of <em>Hegel Contra Sociology <\/em>frame its overall discussion of the challenge Hegel\u2019s thought presents to the critical theory of society: a section in the introductory chapter on what Rose calls the \u201cNeo-Kantian Marxism\u201d of Luk\u00e1cs and Adorno and the concluding section on \u201cThe Culture and Fate of Marxism.\u201d The arguments condensed in these two sections of Rose\u2019s book comprise one of the most interesting and challenging critiques of Marxism. However, Rose\u2019s misunderstanding of Marxism limits the direction and reach of the rousing call with which she concluded her book: \u201cThis critique of Marxism itself yields the project of a critical Marxism. .\u00a0.\u00a0. [P]resentation of the contradictory relations between Capital and culture is the only way to link the analysis of the economy to comprehension of the conditions for revolutionary practice\u201d (235). Yet Rose\u2019s critique of Marxism, especially of Luk\u00e1cs and Adorno, and of Marx himself, misses its mark.<\/p>\n<p>One problem regarding Rose\u2019s critique of Marxism is precisely her focus on Marxism as a specifically \u201cphilosophical\u201d problem, as a problem more of thought than of action. As Luk\u00e1cs\u2019s contemporary <a href=\"http:\/\/chriscutrone.platypus1917.org\/?p=109\">Karl Korsch pointed out in \u201cMarxism and Philosophy\u201d (1923)<\/a>, by the late 19th century historians such as Dilthey had observed that \u201cideas contained in a philosophy can live on not only in philosophies, but equally well in positive sciences and social practice, and that this process precisely began on a large scale with Hegel\u2019s philosophy.\u201d[<a name=\"rose_return10\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_note10\">10<\/a>] For Korsch, this meant that \u201cphilosophical\u201d problems in the Hegelian sense were not matters of theory but practice. From a Marxian perspective, however, it is precisely the problem of capitalist society that is posed at the level of practice. Korsch went on to argue that \u201cwhat appears as the purely \u2018ideal\u2019 development of philosophy in the 19th century can in fact only be fully and essentially grasped by relating it to the concrete historical development of bourgeois society as a whole.\u201d[<a name=\"rose_return11\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_note11\">11<\/a>] Korsch\u2019s great insight, shared by Luk\u00e1cs, took this perspective from Luxemburg and Lenin, who grasped how the history of Marxism was a key part, indeed the crucial aspect, of this development, at the time of their writing in the first years of the 20th century.[<a name=\"rose_return12\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_note12\">12<\/a>]<\/p>\n<p>The most commented-upon essay of Luk\u00e1cs\u2019s collection <em>History and Class Consciousness<\/em> (1923) is \u201cReification and the Consciousness of the Proletariat,\u201d written specifically as the centerpiece of the book, but drawing upon arguments made in the book\u2019s other essays. Like many readers of Luk\u00e1cs, Rose focused her critique in particular on Luk\u00e1cs\u2019s argument in the second part of his \u201cReification\u201d essay, \u201cThe Antinomies of Bourgeois Thought,\u201d neglecting that its \u201cepistemological\u201d investigation of philosophy is only one moment in a greater argument, which culminates in the most lengthy and difficult third part of Luk\u00e1cs\u2019s essay, \u201cThe Standpoint of the Proletariat.\u201d But it is in this part of the essay that Luk\u00e1cs addressed how the Marxist social-democratic workers\u2019 movement was an intrinsic part of what Korsch had called the \u201cconcrete historical development of bourgeois society as a whole,\u201d in which its \u201cphilosophical\u201d problem lived. The \u201cphilosophical\u201d problem Korsch and Luk\u00e1cs sought to address was the \u201cdialectic\u201d of the political practice of the working class, how it actually produced and did not merely respond to the contradictions and potentially revolutionary crisis of capitalist society. It is because of Rose\u2019s failure to grasp this point that her criticism of Marx, Luk\u00e1cs, and Adorno amounts to nothing more than an unwitting recapitulation of Luk\u00e1cs\u2019s own critique of what he called \u201cvulgar Marxism,\u201d and what Adorno called \u201cpositivism\u201d or \u201cidentity thinking.\u201d Luk\u00e1cs and Adorno, following Lenin and Luxemburg, attempted to effect a return to what <a href=\"http:\/\/chriscutrone.platypus1917.org\/?p=109\">Korsch <\/a>called \u201cMarx\u2019s Marxism.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>In examining Rose\u2019s critique of Luk\u00e1cs, Adorno, and Marx, and in responding to Rose\u2019s Hegelian interrogation of their supposed deficits, it becomes possible to recover what is important about and unifies their thought. Rose\u2019s questions about Marxism are those that any Marxian approach must answer to demonstrate its necessity \u2014 its \u201cimproved version,\u201d as Luk\u00e1cs put it, of the \u201cHegelian original\u201d dialectic.[<a name=\"rose_return13\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_note13\">13<\/a>]<\/p>\n<h2>The problem of Marxism as Hegelian \u201cscience\u201d<\/h2>\n<p>In the final section of <em>Hegel Contra Sociology<\/em>, in the conclusion of the chapter \u201cWith What Must the Science End?\u201d titled \u201cThe Culture and Fate of Marxism,\u201d Rose addresses Marx directly. Here, Rose states that,<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>Marx did not appreciate the politics of Hegel\u2019s presentation, the politics of a phenomenology [logic of appearance] which aims to re-form consciousness .\u00a0.\u00a0. [and] acknowledges the actuality which determines the formation of consciousness. .\u00a0.\u00a0. Marx\u2019s notion of political education was less systematic than [Hegel\u2019s]. (232\u2013233)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>One issue of great import for Rose\u2019s critique of Marxism is the status of Hegel\u2019s philosophy as \u201cspeculative.\u201d As Rose wrote,<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>Marx\u2019s reading of Hegel overlooks the discourse or logic of the speculative proposition. He refuses to see the lack of identity in Hegel\u2019s thought, and therefore tries to establish his own discourse of lack of identity using the ordinary proposition. But instead of producing a logic or discourse of lack of identity he produced an ambiguous dichotomy of activity\/nature which relies on a natural beginning and an utopian end. (231)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Rose explicated this \u201clack of identity in Hegel\u2019s thought\u201d as follows:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>Hegel knew that his thought would be misunderstood if it were read as [a] series of ordinary propositions which affirm an identity between a fixed subject and contingent accidents, but he also knew that, like any thinker, he had to present his thought in propositional form. He thus proposed .\u00a0.\u00a0. a \u201cspeculative proposition.\u201d .\u00a0.\u00a0. To read a proposition \u201cspeculatively\u201d means that the identity which is affirmed between subject and predicate is seen equally to affirm a lack of identity between subject and predicate. .\u00a0.\u00a0. From this perspective the \u201csubject\u201d is not fixed: .\u00a0.\u00a0. Only when the lack of identity between subject and predicate has been experienced, can their identity be grasped. .\u00a0.\u00a0. Thus it cannot be said, as Marx, for example, said [in his <em>Critique of Hegel\u2019s \u201cPhilosophy of Right\u201d<\/em> (1843)], that the speculative proposition turns the predicate into the subject and therefore hypostatizes predicates, just like the ordinary proposition hypostatizes the subject. .\u00a0.\u00a0. [Hegel\u2019s] speculative proposition is fundamentally opposed to [this] kind of formal identity. (51\u201353)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Rose may be correct about Marx\u2019s 1843 critique of Hegel. She severely critiqued Marx\u2019s 1845 \u201cTheses on Feuerbach\u201d on the same score (230). What this overlooks is Marx\u2019s understanding of the historical difference between his time and Hegel\u2019s. Consequently, it neglects Marx\u2019s differing conception of \u201calienation\u201d as a function of the Industrial Revolution, in which the meaning of the categories of bourgeois society, of the commodity form of labor, had become reversed.<\/p>\n<p>Rose\u2019s failure to register the change in meaning of \u201calienation\u201d for Marx compromised her reading of Luk\u00e1cs:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>[M]aking a distinction between underlying process and resultant objectifications[,] Luk\u00e1cs was able to avoid the conventional Marxist treatment of capitalist social forms as mere \u201csuperstructure\u201d or \u201cepiphenomena;\u201d legal, bureaucratic and cultural forms have the same status as the commodity form. Luk\u00e1cs made it clear that \u201creification\u201d is the specific capitalist form of objectification. It determines the structure of all the capitalist social forms. .\u00a0.\u00a0. [T]he process-like essence (the mode of production) attains a validity from the standpoint of the totality. .\u00a0.\u00a0. [Luk\u00e1cs\u2019s approach] turned .\u00a0.\u00a0. away from a logic of identity in the direction of a theory of historical mediation. The advantage of this approach was that Luk\u00e1cs opened new areas of social life to Marxist analysis and critique. .\u00a0.\u00a0. The disadvantage was that Luk\u00e1cs omitted many details of Marx\u2019s theory of value. .\u00a0.\u00a0. As a result \u201creification\u201d and \u201cmediation\u201d become a kind of shorthand instead of a sustained theory. A further disadvantage is that the sociology of reification can only be completed by a speculative sociology of the proletariat as the subject-object of history. (30\u201331)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>However, for Luk\u00e1cs the proletariat is not a Hegelian subject-object of history but a Marxian one.[<a name=\"rose_return14\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_note14\">14<\/a>] Luk\u00e1cs did not affirm history as the given situation of the possibility of freedom in the way Hegel did. Rather, following Marx, Luk\u00e1cs treated historical structure as a problem to be overcome. History was not to be grasped as necessary, as Hegel affirmed against his contemporaries\u2019 Romantic despair at modernity. Rose mistakenly took Luk\u00e1cs\u2019s critique of capital to be Romantic, subject to the <em>aporiae<\/em> Hegel had characterized in the \u201cunhappy consciousness.\u201d Rose therefore misinterpreted Luk\u00e1cs\u2019s revolutionism as a matter of \u201cwill\u201d:[<a name=\"rose_return15\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_note15\">15<\/a>]<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>Luk\u00e1cs\u2019s <em>History and Class Consciousness<\/em> is an attempt to give [Marx\u2019s] <em>Capital<\/em> a phenomenological form: to read Marx\u2019s analysis of capital as the potential consciousness of a universal class. But Luk\u00e1cs\u2019s emphasis on change in consciousness as <em>per se<\/em> revolutionary, separate from the analysis of change in capitalism, gives his appeal to the proletariat or the party the status of an appeal to a .\u00a0.\u00a0. will. (233)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Nonetheless, Rose found aspects of Luk\u00e1cs\u2019s understanding of Marx compelling, in a \u201cHegelian\u201d sense:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>The question of the relation between <em>Capital<\/em> and politics is thus not an abstract question about the relation between theory and practice, but a phenomenological question about the relationship between acknowledgement of actuality and the possibility of change. This is why the theory of commodity fetishism, the presentation of a contradiction between substance and subject, remains more impressive than any abstract statements about the relation between theory and practice or between capitalist crisis and the formation of revolutionary consciousness. It acknowledges actuality and its misrepresentation as consciousness. (233)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>What is missing from Rose\u2019s critique of Luk\u00e1cs, however, is how he offered a dialectical argument, precisely through forms of misrecognition (\u201cmisrepresentation\u201d).[<a name=\"rose_return16\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_note16\">16<\/a>]<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>This is why the theory of commodity fetishism has become central to the neo-Marxist theory of domination, aesthetics, and ideology. The theory of commodity fetishism is the most speculative moment in Marx\u2019s exposition of capital. It comes nearest to demonstrating in the historically specific case of commodity producing society how substance is ((mis-)represented as) subject, how necessary illusion arises out of productive activity. (232)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>However, the contradiction of capital is not merely between \u201csubstance and subject,\u201d but rather a self-contradictory social substance, value, which gives rise to a self-contradictory subject.[<a name=\"rose_return17\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_note17\">17<\/a>]<\/p>\n<h2>Rose\u2019s critique of the \u201csociological\u201d Marxism of Luk\u00e1cs and Adorno<\/h2>\n<p>Rose\u2019s misconstrual of the status of proletarian social revolution in the self-understanding of Marxism led her to regard Luk\u00e1cs and Adorno\u2019s work as \u201ctheoretical\u201d in the restricted sense of mere analysis. Rose denied the dialectical status of Luk\u00e1cs and Adorno\u2019s thought by neglecting the question of how a Marxian approach, from Luk\u00e1cs and Adorno\u2019s perspective, considered the workers\u2019 movement for emancipation as itself symptomatic of capital. Following Marx, Luk\u00e1cs and Adorno regarded Marxism as the organized historical self-consciousness of the social politics of the working class that potentially points beyond capital.[<a name=\"rose_return18\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_note18\">18<\/a>] Rose limited Luk\u00e1cs and Adorno\u2019s concerns regarding \u201cmisrecognition,\u201d characterizing their work as \u201csociological\u201d:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>The thought of Luk\u00e1cs and Adorno represent two of the most original and important attempts .\u00a0.\u00a0. [at] an Hegelian Marxism, but it constitutes a neo-Kantian Marxism. .\u00a0.\u00a0. They turned the neo-Kantian paradigm into a Marxist sociology of cultural forms .\u00a0.\u00a0. with a selective generalization of Marx\u2019s theory of commodity fetishism. (29)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>But, according to Rose, this \u201csociological\u201d analysis of the commodity form remained outside its object:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>In the essay \u201cReification and the Consciousness of the Proletariat\u201d in <em>History and Class Consciousness<\/em>, Luk\u00e1cs generalizes Marx\u2019s theory of commodity fetishism by making a distinction between the total process of production, \u201creal life-processes,\u201d and the resultant objectifications of social forms. This notion of \u201cobjectification\u201d has more in common with the neo-Kantian notion of the objectification of specific object-domains than with an \u201cHegelian\u201d conflating of objectification, human praxis in general, with alienation, its form in capitalist society. (30)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Rose thought that Luk\u00e1cs thus undermined his own account of potential transformation: \u201cLuk\u00e1cs\u2019s very success in demonstrating the prevalence of reification .\u00a0.\u00a0. meant that he could only appeal to the proletariat to overcome reification by apostrophes to the unity of theory and practice, or by introducing the party as <em>deus ex machina<\/em>\u201d (31). In this respect, Rose failed to note how Luk\u00e1cs, and Adorno following him, had deeply internalized the Hegelian problematic of Marxism, how Marxism was not the (mis)application but the reconstruction of the Hegelian dialectic under the changed social-historical conditions of capital. For Rose, Luk\u00e1cs\u2019s concept of \u201creification\u201d was too negative regarding the \u201ctotality\u201d of capital, which she thought threatened to render capital non-dialectical, and its emancipatory transformation inconceivable. But Rose\u2019s perspective remains that of Hegel \u2014 pre-industrial capital.<\/p>\n<h2>Hegel contra sociology \u2014 the \u201cculture\u201d and \u201cfate\u201d of Marxism<\/h2>\n<p>Just before she died in 1995, Rose wrote a new Preface for a reprint of <em>Hegel Contra Sociology<\/em>, which states that,<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>The speculative exposition of Hegel in this book still provides the basis for a unique engagement with post-Hegelian thought, especially postmodernity, with its roots in Heideggerianism. .\u00a0.\u00a0. [T]he experience of negativity, the existential drama, is discovered at the heart of Hegelian rationalism. .\u00a0.\u00a0. Instead of working with the general question of the dominance of Western metaphysics, the dilemma of addressing modern ethics and politics without arrogating the authority under question is seen as the ineluctable difficulty in Hegel. .\u00a0.\u00a0. This book, therefore, remains the core of the project to demonstrate a nonfoundational and radical Hegel, which overcomes the opposition between nihilism and rationalism. It provides the possibility for renewal of critical thought in the intellectual difficulty of our time. (viii)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Since the time of Rose\u2019s book, with the passage of Marxist politics into history, the \u201cintellectual difficulty\u201d in renewing critical thought has only gotten worse. \u201cPostmodernity\u201d has not meant the eclipse or end, but rather the unproblematic triumph, of \u201cWestern metaphysics\u201d \u2014 in the exhaustion of \u201cpostmodernism.\u201d[<a name=\"rose_return19\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_note19\">19<\/a>] Consideration of the problem Rose addressed in terms of the Hegelian roots of Marxism, the immanent critique of capitalist modernity, remains the \u201cpossibility\u201d if not the \u201cactuality\u201d of our time. Only by facing it squarely can we avoid sharing in Marxism\u2019s \u201cfate\u201d as a \u201cculture.\u201d For this \u201cfate,\u201d the devolution into \u201cculture,\u201d or what Rose called \u201cpre-bourgeois society\u201d (234), threatens not merely a form of politics on the Left, but humanity: it represents the failure to attain let alone transcend the threshold of Hegelian modernity, whose concern Rose recovered.&nbsp;|&nbsp;<strong>\u00a7<\/strong><\/p>\n<blockquote><p><em>Originally published in <\/em><strong>The Platypus Review<\/strong><em> #21 (March 2010).<\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<hr size=\"1\" \/>\n<p style=\"text-indent: 12px;\"><a name=\"rose_note1\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_return1\">1<\/a>. <a href=\"http:\/\/www.versobooks.com\/books\/nopqrs\/r-titles\/rose_gillian_hegel_contra_sociology_RT4.shtml\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Gillian Rose, <em>Hegel Contra Sociology<\/em> (London: Verso, 2009)<\/a>. Originally published by Athlone Press, London in 1981.<\/p>\n<p><a name=\"rose_note2\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_return2\">2<\/a>. Rose, <em>The Melancholy Science<\/em> (London: Macmillan, 1978).<\/p>\n<p><a name=\"rose_note3\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_return3\">3<\/a>. See Rose\u2019s review of the English translation of Adorno\u2019s <em>Negative Dialectics <\/em>(1973) in <em>The American Political Science Review<\/em> 70.2 (June, 1976), 598\u2013599; and of Susan Buck-Morss\u2019s <em>The Origin of Negative Dialectics: Theodor W. Adorno, Walter Benjamin and the Frankfurt Institute<\/em> (1977) and Zolt\u00e1n Tar\u2019s <em>The Frankfurt School: The Critical Theories of Horkheimer and Adorno<\/em> (1977) in <em>History and Theory<\/em> 18.1 (February, 1979), 126\u2013135.<\/p>\n<p><a name=\"rose_note4\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_return4\">4<\/a>. Rose, Review of <em>Negative Dialectics<\/em>, 599.<\/p>\n<p><a name=\"rose_note5\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_return5\">5<\/a>. Rose, Review of <em>The Origin of Negative Dialectics<\/em> and <em>The Frankfurt School<\/em>, 126, 135.<\/p>\n<p><a name=\"rose_note6\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_return6\">6<\/a>. Rose, <em>The Melancholy Science<\/em>, 2.<\/p>\n<p><a name=\"rose_note7\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_return7\">7<\/a>. See, for instance, Adorno, \u201cProgress\u201d (1962), and \u201cCritique\u201d (1969), in <em>Critical Models: Interventions and Catchwords<\/em>, trans. Henry W. Pickford (New York: Columbia University Press, 1998), 143\u2013160 and 281\u2013288.<\/p>\n<p><a name=\"rose_note8\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_return8\">8<\/a>. Adorno, \u201cAspects of Hegel\u2019s Philosophy,\u201d in <em>Hegel: Three Studies<\/em>, trans. Shierry Weber Nicholsen (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1994), 6.<\/p>\n<p><a name=\"rose_note9\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_return9\">9<\/a>. See Georg Luk\u00e1cs, Preface (1922), <em>History and Class Consciousness: Studies in Marxist Dialectics<\/em> (1923), trans. Rodney Livingstone (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1971):<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>The author of these pages .\u00a0.\u00a0. believes that today it is of practical importance to return in this respect to the traditions of Marx-interpretation founded by Engels (who regarded the \u201cGerman workers\u2019 movement\u201d as the \u201cheir to classical German philosophy\u201d), and by Plekhanov. He believes that all good Marxists should form, in Lenin\u2019s words \u201ca kind of society of the materialist friends of the Hegelian dialectic.\u201d But Hegel\u2019s position today is the reverse of Marx\u2019s own. The problem with Marx is precisely to take his method and his system <em>as we<\/em> <em>find them <\/em>and to demonstrate that they <em>form<\/em> <em>a coherent unity that must be preserved<\/em>. The<em> <\/em>opposite is true of Hegel. The task he imposes is to separate out from the complex web of ideas with its sometimes glaring contradictions all the <em>seminal elements <\/em>of his thought and rescue them as a <em>vital intellectual force for<\/em> <em>the present<\/em>. (xlv)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p style=\"text-indent: 12px;\"><a name=\"rose_note10\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_return10\">10<\/a>. Karl Korsch, \u201cMarxism and Philosophy\u201d (1923), in <em>Marxism and Philosophy<\/em> trans. Fred Halliday (New York: Monthly Review Press, 1970 and 2008), 39.<\/p>\n<p><a name=\"rose_note11\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_return11\">11<\/a>. Korsch, \u201cMarxism and Philosophy,\u201d 40.<\/p>\n<p><a name=\"rose_note12\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_return12\">12<\/a>. See, for instance: Rosa Luxemburg, <em>Reform or Revolution? <\/em>(1900), in which Luxemburg pointed out that all reforms aimed at ameliorating the crisis of capital actually exacerbated it; Vladimir Lenin, <em>What is to be Done? <\/em>(1902), in which Lenin supposed that overcoming reformist \u201crevisionism\u201d in international (Marxist) social democracy would amount to and be the express means for overcoming capitalism; and Leon Trotsky, <em>Results and Prospects<\/em> (1906), in which Trotsky pointed out that the various \u201cprerequisites of socialism\u201d not only developed historically independently but also, significantly, antagonistically. In <em>The State and Revolution <\/em>(1917), Lenin, following Marx, critiqued anarchism for calling for the \u201cabolition\u201d of the state and not recognizing that the necessity of the state could only \u201cwither away\u201d as a function of the gradual overcoming of \u201cbourgeois right\u201d whose prevalence would persist in the revolutionary socialist \u201cworkers\u2019 state\u201d long after the overthrow of the bourgeoisie: the state would continue as a symptom of capitalist social relations without capitalists<em> per se<\/em>. In <em>Literature and Revolution<\/em> (1924), Trotsky pointed out that, as symptomatic products of present society, the cultural and even political expressions of the revolution could not themselves embody the principles of an emancipated society but could, at best, only open the way to them. For Luk\u00e1cs and Korsch (and Benjamin and Adorno following them \u2014 see Benjamin\u2019s 1934 essay on \u201cThe Author as Producer,\u201d in <em>Reflections<\/em>, trans. Edmund Jephcott<em> <\/em>[New York: Schocken, 1986], 220\u2013238), such arguments demonstrated a dialectical approach to Marxism itself on the part of its most thoughtful actors.<\/p>\n<p><a name=\"rose_note13\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_return13\">13<\/a>. Luk\u00e1cs, <em>History and Class Consciousness<\/em>, xlvi. Citing Luk\u00e1cs in her review of Buck-Morss and Tar on the Frankfurt School, Rose posed the problem of Marxism this way:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>The reception of the Frankfurt School in the English-speaking world to date displays a paradox. Frequently, the Frankfurt School inspires dogmatic historiography although it represents a tradition which is attractive and important precisely because of its rejection of dogmatic or \u201corthodox\u201d Marxism. This tradition in German Marxism has its origin in Luk\u00e1cs\u2019s most un-Hegelian injunction to take Marxism as a \u201cmethod\u201d \u2014 a method which would remain valid even if \u201cevery one of Marx\u2019s individual theses\u201d were proved wrong. One can indeed speculate whether philosophers like Bloch, Benjamin, Horkheimer, and Adorno would have become Marxists if Luk\u00e1cs had not pronounced thus. For other Marxists this position spells scientific \u201csuicide.\u201d (Rose, Review of <em>The Origin of Negative Dialectics<\/em> and <em>The Frankfurt School<\/em>, 126.)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Nevertheless, Rose used a passage from Luk\u00e1cs\u2019s 1924 book in eulogy, <em>Lenin: A Study on the Unity of His Thought<\/em> as the epigraph for her essay: \u201c[T]he dialectic is not a finished theory to be applied mechanically to all the phenomena of life <em>but only exists as theory in and through this application<\/em>\u201d (126). Critically, Rose asked only that Luk\u00e1cs\u2019s own work \u2014 and that of other \u201cHegelian\u201d Marxists \u2014 remain true to this observation.<\/p>\n<p><a name=\"rose_note14\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_return14\">14<\/a>. See Luk\u00e1cs, \u201cReification and the Consciousness of the Proletariat,\u201d 171\u2013175:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>The <em>class meaning<\/em> of [the thoroughgoing capitalist rationalization of society] lies precisely in the fact that the bourgeoisie regularly transforms each new qualitative gain back onto the quantitative level of yet another rational calculation. Whereas for the proletariat, the \u201csame\u201d development has a different class meaning: it means the <em>abolition of the isolated individual<\/em>, it means that the workers can become conscious of the social character of labor, it means that the abstract, universal form of the societal principle as it is manifested can be increasingly concretized and overcome. .\u00a0.\u00a0. For the proletariat however, this ability to go beyond the immediate in search for the \u201cremoter\u201d factors means the <em>transformation of the objective nature of the objects of action<\/em>.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>The \u201cobjective nature of the objects of action\u201d includes that of the working class itself.<\/p>\n<p><a name=\"rose_note15\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_return15\">15<\/a>. Such misapprehension of revolutionary Marxism as voluntarism has been commonplace. Rosa Luxemburg\u2019s biographer, the political scientist J. P. Nettl, in the essay \u201cThe German Social Democratic Party 1890\u20131914 as Political Model\u201d (in <em>Past and Present<\/em> 30 [April 1965], 65\u201395), addressed this issue as follows:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>Rosa Luxemburg was emphatically not an anarchist and went out of her way to distinguish between \u201crevolutionary gymnastic,\u201d which was \u201cconjured out of the air at will,\u201d and her own policy (see her 1906 pamphlet on <em>The Mass Strike, the Political Party and the Trade Unions<\/em>). .\u00a0.\u00a0. [Later Communist historians have burdened her] with the concept of spontaneity. .\u00a0.\u00a0. [But her\u2019s] was a dynamic, dialectic doctrine; organization and action revived each other and made each other grow. .\u00a0.\u00a0. It may well be that there were underlying similarities to anarchism, insofar as any doctrine of action resembles any other. A wind of action and movement was blowing strongly around the edges of European culture at the time, both in art and literature as well as in the more political context of Sorel and the Italian Futurists. .\u00a0.\u00a0. [But] most important of all, Rosa Luxemburg specifically drew on a Russian experience [of the 1905 Revolution] which differed sharply from the intellectual individualism of Bakunin, [Domela-]Nieuwenhuis and contemporary anarchism. She always emphasized self-discipline as an adjunct to action \u2014 the opposite of the doctrine of self-liberation which the Anarchists shared with other European action philosophies. (88\u201389)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>The German Left evolved a special theory of action. .\u00a0.\u00a0. Where the German Left emphasized action against organization, Lenin preached organization as a means to action. But action was common to both \u2014 and it was this emphasis on action which finally brought the German Left and the Russian Bolsheviks into the same camp in spite of so many serious disagreements. In her review of the Bolshevik revolution, written in September 1918, Rosa Luxemburg singled out this commitment to action for particular praise. Here she saw a strong sympathetic echo to her own ideas, and analyzed it precisely in her own terms:<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>\u201cWith .\u00a0.\u00a0. the seizure of power and <em>the carrying forward <\/em>of the revolution the Bolsheviks have solved the famous question of a \u2018popular majority\u2019 which has so long oppressed the German Social Democrats .\u00a0.\u00a0. not through a majority to a revolutionary tactic, but through a revolutionary tactic to a majority\u201d (<em>The Russian Revolution<\/em>)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>With action as the cause and not the consequence of mass support, she saw the Bolsheviks applying her ideas in practice \u2014 and incidentally provides us with clear evidence as to what she meant when she spoke of majority and masses. In spite of other severe criticisms of Bolshevik policy, it was this solution of the problem by the Bolsheviks which definitely ensured them the support of the German Left. (91\u201392)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>The possibilities adumbrated by modern sociology have not yet been adequately exploited in the study of political organizations, dynamics, relationships. Especially the dynamics; most pictures of change are \u201cmoving pictures,\u201d which means that they are no more than \u201ca composition of immobilities .\u00a0.\u00a0. a position, then a new position, etc., <em>ad infinitum<\/em>\u201d (Henri Bergson). The problem troubled Talcott Parsons among others, just as it long ago troubled Rosa Luxemburg. (95)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>This was what Luk\u00e1cs, following Lenin and Luxemburg, meant by the problem of \u201creification.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><a name=\"rose_note16\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_return16\">16<\/a>. As Luk\u00e1cs put it in the Preface (1922) to <em>History and Class Consciousness<\/em>,<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>I should perhaps point out to the reader unfamiliar with dialectics one difficulty inherent in the nature of dialectical method relating to the definition of concepts and terminology. It is of the essence of dialectical method that concepts which are false in their abstract one-sidedness are later transcended (<em>zur Aufhebung gelangen<\/em>). The process of transcendence makes it inevitable that we should operate with these one-sided, abstract and false concepts. These concepts acquire their true meaning less by definition than by their function as aspects that are then transcended in the totality. Moreover, it is even more difficult to establish fixed meanings for concepts in Marx\u2019s improved version of the dialectic than in the Hegelian original. For if concepts are only the intellectual forms of historical realities then these forms, one-sided, abstract and false as they are, belong to the true unity as genuine aspects of it. Hegel\u2019s statements about this problem of terminology in the preface to the <em>Phenomenology <\/em>are thus even more true than Hegel himself realized when he said: \u201cJust as the expressions \u2018unity of subject and object\u2019, of \u2018finite and infinite\u2019, of \u2018being and thought\u2019, etc., have the drawback that \u2018object\u2019 and \u2018subject\u2019 bear the same meaning as when <em>they exist outside that unity<\/em><em>, so <\/em>that within the unity they mean something other than is implied by their expression: so, too, falsehood is not, <em>qua <\/em>false, any longer a moment of truth.\u201d In the pure historicization of the dialectic this statement receives yet another twist: in so far as the \u201cfalse\u201d is an aspect of the \u201ctrue\u201d it is both \u201cfalse\u201d and \u201cnon-false.\u201d When the professional demolishers of Marx criticize his \u201clack of conceptual rigor\u201d and his use of \u201cimage\u201d rather than \u201cdefinitions,\u201d etc., they cut as sorry a figure as did Schopenhauer when he tried to expose Hegel\u2019s \u201clogical howlers\u201d in his Hegel critique. All that is proved is their total inability to grasp even the ABC of the dialectical method. The logical conclusion for the dialectician to draw from this failure is not that he is faced with a conflict between different scientific methods, but that he is in the presence of a <em>social phenomenon <\/em>and that by conceiving it as a socio-historical phenomenon he can at once refute it and transcend it dialectically. (xlvi\u2013xlvii)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>For Luk\u00e1cs, the self-contradictory nature of the workers\u2019 movement was itself a \u201csocio-historical phenomenon\u201d that had brought forth a revolutionary crisis at the time of Luk\u00e1cs\u2019s writing: from a Marxian perspective, the working class and its politics were the most important phenomena and objects of critique to be overcome in capitalist society.<\/p>\n<p><a name=\"rose_note17\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_return17\">17<\/a>. See Moishe Postone, <em>Time, Labor and Social Domination: A Reinterpretation of Marx\u2019s Critical Theory<\/em> (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2003).<\/p>\n<p><a name=\"rose_note18\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_return18\">18<\/a>. See Adorno, \u201cReflections on Class Theory\u201d (1942), in <em>Can One Live After Auschwitz? A Philosophical Reader<\/em>, ed. Rolf Tiedemann (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2003), 93\u2013110:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>According to [Marxian] theory, history is the history of class struggles. But the concept of class is bound up with the emergence of the proletariat. .\u00a0.\u00a0. By extending the concept of class to prehistory, theory denounces not just the bourgeois .\u00a0.\u00a0. [but] turns against prehistory itself. .\u00a0.\u00a0. By exposing the historical necessity that had brought capitalism into being, [the critique of] political economy became the critique of history as a whole. .\u00a0.\u00a0. All history is the history of class struggles because it was always the same thing, namely, prehistory. (93\u201394)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>This means, however, that the dehumanization is also its opposite. .\u00a0.\u00a0. Only when the victims completely assume the features of the ruling civilization will they be capable of wresting them from the dominant power. (110)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>This follows from Luk\u00e1cs\u2019s conception of proletarian socialism as the \u201ccompletion\u201d of reification (\u201cReification and the Consciousness of the Proletariat,\u201d in <em>History and Class Consciousness<\/em>):<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>The danger to which the proletariat has been exposed since its appearance on the historical stage was that it might remain imprisoned in its immediacy together with the bourgeoisie. With the growth of social democracy this threat acquired a real political organisation which artificially cancels out the mediations so laboriously won and forces the proletariat back into its immediate existence where it is merely a component of capitalist society and not <em>at the same time <\/em>the motor that drives it to its doom and destruction. (196)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>[E]ven the objects in the very centre of the dialectical process [i.e., the political forms of the workers\u2019 movement itself] can only slough off their reified form after a laborious process. A process in which the seizure of power by the proletariat and even the organisation of the state and the economy on socialist lines are only stages. They are, of course, extremely important stages, but they do not mean that the ultimate objective has been achieved. And it even appears as if the decisive crisis-period of capitalism may be characterized by the tendency to intensify reification, to bring it to a head. (208)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p style=\"text-indent: 12px;\"><a name=\"rose_note19\"><\/a><a href=\"#rose_return19\">19<\/a>. Rose\u2019s term for the post-1960s \u201cNew Left\u201d historical situation is \u201cHeideggerian postmodernity.\u201d Robert Pippin, as a fellow \u201cHegelian,\u201d in his brief response to the <em>Critical Inquiry<\/em> journal\u2019s symposium on \u201cThe Future of Criticism,\u201d titled \u201c<em>Critical Inquiry<\/em> and Critical Theory: A Short History of Nonbeing\u201d (<em>Critical Inquiry <\/em>30.2 [Winter 2004], 424\u2013428), has characterized this similarly, as follows:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>[T]he level of discussion and awareness of this issue, in its historical dimensions (with respect both to the history of critical theory and the history of modernization) has regressed. .\u00a0.\u00a0. [T]he problem with contemporary critical theory is that it has become insufficiently critical. .\u00a0.\u00a0. [T]here is also a historical cost for the neglect or underattention or lack of resolution of this core critical problem: repetition. .\u00a0.\u00a0. It may seem extreme to claim \u2014 well, to claim at all that such repetition exists (that postmodernism, say, is an instance of such repetition) \u2014 and also to claim that it is tied somehow to the dim understanding we have of the post-Kantian situation. .\u00a0.\u00a0. [T]hat is what I wanted to suggest. I\u2019m not sure it will get us anywhere. Philosophy rarely does. Perhaps it exists to remind us that we haven\u2019t gotten anywhere. (427\u2013428)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p style=\"text-indent: 12px;\">Heidegger himself anticipated this result in his \u201cOvercoming Metaphysics\u201d (1936\u201346), in <em>The End of Philosophy<\/em>, ed. and trans. Joan Stambaugh (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2003): \u201cThe still hidden truth of Being is withheld from metaphysical humanity. The laboring animal is left to the giddy whirl of its products so that it may tear itself to pieces and annihilate itself in empty nothingness\u201d (87). Elsewhere, in \u201cThe End of Philosophy and the Task of Thinking\u201d (1964), in <em>Basic Writings<\/em>, ed. David Farrell Krell (New York: HarperCollins, 1993), Heidegger acknowledged Marx\u2019s place in this process: \u201cWith the reversal of metaphysics which was already accomplished by Karl Marx, the most extreme possibility of philosophy is attained\u201d (433).<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Book review: Gillian Rose, Hegel Contra Sociology. London: Verso, 2009. Chris Cutrone GILLIAN ROSE\u2019S MAGNUM OPUS was her second book, Hegel Contra Sociology (1981).[1] Preceding this was The Melancholy Science: An Introduction to the Thought of Theodor W. Adorno (1978), a work which charted Rose\u2019s approach to the relation of Marxism to Hegel in Hegel [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[10,18,19,16,21,6],"class_list":["post-1","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-essays","tag-10","tag-adorno","tag-lukacs","tag-marxism","tag-postmodernism","tag-the-platypus-review"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/chriscutrone.platypus1917.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/chriscutrone.platypus1917.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/chriscutrone.platypus1917.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/chriscutrone.platypus1917.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/chriscutrone.platypus1917.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=1"}],"version-history":[{"count":36,"href":"https:\/\/chriscutrone.platypus1917.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":3233,"href":"https:\/\/chriscutrone.platypus1917.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1\/revisions\/3233"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/chriscutrone.platypus1917.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=1"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/chriscutrone.platypus1917.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=1"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/chriscutrone.platypus1917.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=1"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}