Sorelianism

Sorelianism is advocacy for or support of the ideology and thinking of French revolutionary syndicalist Georges Sorel. Sorelians oppose bourgeois democracy, the developments of the 18th century, the secular spirit, and the French Revolution, while supporting classical tradition.[1] A revisionist interpretation of Marxism,[1] Sorel believed that the victory of the proletariat in class struggle could be achieved only through the power of myth and a general strike.[2] To Sorel, the aftermath of class conflict would involve rejuvenation of both the bourgeoisie and the proletariat.[3]

With the seeming failure of syndicalism, in 1910 he announced his abandonment of socialist literature and claimed in 1914, using an aphorism of Benedetto Croce that "socialism is dead" due to the "decomposition of Marxism".[1] Sorel became a supporter of Maurrassian integral nationalism beginning in 1909, which he considered as having similar moral aims to syndicalism despite being enemies materially.[1] In this sense, Sorelianism is considered to be a precursor to fascism.[4] However, he became disillusioned with these ideas with World War I, and from 1918 until his death in 1922 he would be a supporter of the then Russian Revolution and communism, which he considered a revival of syndicalism.[5]

Concepts

General strike and syndicalist society

Rejecting the Marxist elevation of history as determined, Sorel considered the challenge of the new social sciences to be new moral criterion.[6] Proudhon had believed that a just society could only come about through action, and in particular opposition to an enemy;[7] following this line Sorel believed that class war between the proletariat and the bourgeoisie would result from a general strike,[8] which, together with the betterment of living conditions, he considered distinct from the mere aim of state distribution, and as the material and moral essence of Marxism and Socialism.[9]

However, he had problems with Proudhon, and Sorel seems to have sought to detach it of its idealism, as Proudhon had detached justice from power play; that is, from class relations.[10] Otherwise only minimally influencing him, in admiration of Nietzsche Sorel held that an imperialist working class would establish a new aristocracy, "organizing relations among men for the benefit of its sovereignty" and as a sole source of law.[11][8] However, he believed that proletarian violence would strengthen the bourgeoisie,[12] and focused on the moral regeneration of society and the rescue of civilization rather than only the working-class, considering socialism a means for revolutionary transformation of society rather than a movement of the proletariat or a movement with a specific social structure.[13]

Individualism and myth

Sorel believed there to be a close relation between conflict and freedom.[12] Inspired by liberal institutions and the pluralist writings of William James, Sorel denounced imitation of the military corps, extolling a warrior-individualism which he compared to the "American spirit", "animated with the spirit of liberty." He opposed the "splendid isolation" of totalitarian movements connecting all activities to party fronts.

Sorel considers the myth of the general strike a social basis for authority providing coherence to syndicalism. Against Nietzsche's Superman he compares the general strike with the "apocalyptic myths" or "Yankee Protestantism" of the practical, individualistic American settler ready for any venture. He considered that neither the former nor the latter impinge upon the freedom of the individual.

Against the idea of centralized Imperium he espouses a Proudhonian balance and devotion to the weak based on family love, which he believed needed to be part of the warrior ethic. Combined with an ethic of labour, it was this that would enable freedom.[12]

Class conflict and class rejuvenation

Sorel advocated the separation of groups in society, including support of the syndicalist model of a society where the proletarian workers would be autonomous and separate from bourgeois industrialists.[8] Sorel refused the idea of negotiation between the classes during the period of struggle between the proletariat against the bourgeoisie.[8] However, Sorel believed that it was the proletariat's task to awaken the bourgeoisie from intellectual stupor to recover its morality, "productive energy", and "feeling of its own dignity" that Sorel claimed had been lost because of democratic ideals.[3]

Hence, Sorel believed that class conflict would in the end result in the rejuvenation of both the bourgeoisie and the proletariat.[3]

Revision of Marxism, claims of "decomposition of Marxism" by Blanquism and positivism

Sorel focused on the ethical dimension of Marxism, claiming its utility for historical analysis and a means for transforming society.[13] However, Sorel criticized the deterministic, materialist, and mechanist components of Marxism.[13] Sorel criticized vulgar interpretations of Marxism for being unfaithful to Marx's real intentions.[13] Sorel claimed that Marx was not materialist at all, noting that Marx did not regard psychological developments of people as part of the economic process.[14] Sorel noted that Marx described the necessary ideological superstructure of societies: law, the organization of the state, religion, art, and philosophy.[14] As a result, Sorel claimed that "no great philosophy can be established without being based on art and on religion".[14]

Sorel claimed that although Marx had initially denounced Pierre-Joseph Proudhon while supporting Blanquism, that Marx later synthesized ideas from both Blanquism and Proudhonism together.[15] Sorel claimed that Marxism had undergone a crisis in the 1880s and the 1890s when major socialist parties were being founded in France.[15] Sorel viewed non-Proudhonian socialism as being wrong-headed and corrupt, as being inherently oppressive.[15] Sorel claimed that a "decomposition of Marxism", as referring to the major goals and themes of the ideology, was being caused by Marx's Blanquist elements and Engels' positivist elements.[15]

Proudhonism was in Sorel's view, more consistent with the goals of Marxism than Blanquism which had become popular in France, and Sorel claimed that Blanquism was a vulgar and rigidly deterministic corruption of Marxism.[15]

Sorelianism and French integral nationalism

Interest in Sorelian thought arose in the French political right, particularly by French nationalist Charles Maurras of Action Française and his supporters.[16] While Maurras was a staunch opponent of Marxism, he was supportive of Sorelianism for its opposition to liberal democracy.[16] Maurras famously stated "a socialism liberated from the democratic and cosmopolitan element fits nationalism well as a well made glove fits a beautiful hand".[17] In the summer of 1909, Sorel endorsed French integral nationalism and praised Maurras.[1] Sorel was impressed by the significant numbers of "ardent youth" that enrolled in Action Française.[18] Sorel's turn to nationalism resulted in his disregarding of Marx in favour of the views of Pierre-Joseph Proudhon.[19] In 1910, Sorel along with Action Française nationalists Édouard Berth and Georges Valois agreed to form a journal titled La Cité française that would promote a form of national-socialism, however this was abandoned.[20] Afterwards, Sorel supported another nationalist newspaper, L'Indépendence and began writing anti-Semitic content claiming that France was under attack from "Jewish invaders".[21] In 1911, on the issue of Sorelian syndicalism, Valois announced to the Fourth Congress of Action Française that "It was not a mere accident that our friends encountered the militants of syndicalism. The nationalist movement and the syndicalist movement, alien to another though they may seem, because of their present positions and orientations, have more than one common objective."[16]

During his association with French nationalism, Sorel joined Valois in the Cercle Proudhon, an organization that Valois declared to provide "a common platform for nationalists and leftist antidemocrats".[22] The organization recognized both Proudhon and Sorel as two great thinkers who had "prepared the meeting of the two French traditions that had opposed each other throughout the nineteenth century: nationalism and authentic socialism uncorrupted by democracy, represented by syndicalism".[22] Cercle Proudhon announced that it supported the replacement of bourgeois ideology and democratic socialism with a new ethic of an alliance of nationalism with syndicalism, as those "two synthesizing and convergent movements, one at the extreme right and the other at the extreme left, that have begun the siege and assault on democracy".[22] Cercle Proudhon supported the replacement of the liberal order with a new world that was "virile, heroic, pessimistic, and puritanical—based on the sense of duty and sacrifice: a world where the mentality of warriors and monks would prevail".[23] The society would be dominated by a powerful avant-garde proletarian elite that would serve as an aristocracy of producers, and allied with intellectual youth dedicated to action against the decadent bourgeoisie.[24]

Sorelianism and Italian Fascism

Upon Sorel's death, an article in the Italian Fascist doctrinal review Gerarchia edited by Benito Mussolini and Agostino Lanzillo, a known Sorelian, declared "Perhaps fascism may have the good fortune to fulfill a mission that is the implicit aspiration of the whole oeuvre of the master of syndicalism: to tear away the proletariat from the domination of the Socialist party, to reconstitute it on the basis of spiritual liberty, and to animate it with the breath of creative violence. This would be the true revolution that would mold the forms of the Italy of tomorrow."[25]

Notable adherents

Aside from Sorel himself, there were a number of adherents of Sorelianism in the early 20th century. Sorel was a mentor to Hubert Lagardelle who, like Sorel, supported the segregation of social classes and who despised the bourgeoisie, democracy, democratic socialism, parliamentarism, social democracy, and universal suffrage.[26] Antonio Gramsci was influenced by the Sorelian views of social myth.[27] Based on influence from Sorel, Gramsci asserted that Italy and the West have suffered from crises of culture and authority due to the "wave of materialism" and the inability of liberalism to achieve consensus and hegemony over society.[28] Sorel influenced Greek philosopher Nikos Kazantzakis in Kazantzakis' belief of strife as being creative while viewing peace as decadent.[29] José Carlos Mariátegui was a Sorelian who claimed that Vladimir Lenin was a Sorelian and Nietzschean hero.[30]

베니토 무솔리니(Benito Mussolini)는 마르크스주의자 시절, 때때로 소렐리아니즘을 향한 다양한 입장을 견지했다. 무솔리니는 1904년 이탈리아 총파업 중에 신디칼리스트가 되었다고 진술했다. 그의 신디칼리스트와의 긴밀한 접촉은 1902년으로 거슬러 올라간다.[31] 무솔리니는 1909년 소렐의 '폭력에 대한 반성'을 검토하고 소렐의 의식을 오랜 투쟁의 한 부분으로 보는 관점을 지지했는데, 소렐은 고대의 영웅들과 비슷한 고양과 자기 희생적인 덕목을 보여준다.[32] 무솔리니는 또한 혁명에서의 폭력의 필요성에 대한 소렐리아인의 견해를 지지했다.[32] 그는 소렐을 따라 혁명적 사회주의자개혁적 사회주의자와 부르주아 민주주의자 사이의 인도주의와 타협을 비난했다.[32] 1909년까지 무솔리니는 엘리트주의와 반의회주의를 지지했고, '재생의 폭력'[32]을 이용한 선전가가 되었다. 1911년 소를리아인들이 처음에 민족주의와 군주주의로 자신을 확인하는데 근접하기 시작했을 때, 무솔리니는 그러한 연합이 사회주의자로서의 그들의 신뢰를 무너뜨릴 것이라고 믿었다.[33]

참조

인용구

  1. ^ a b c d e 스턴헬 외, 78페이지
  2. ^ 스턴헬 외, 76페이지
  3. ^ a b c 크리스텐슨 외, 페이지 18.
  4. ^ 스턴헬 외, 페이지 90.
  5. ^ 스탠리 1981, 페이지 20.
  6. ^ 스탠리 1981, 페이지 22.
  7. ^ 스탠리 1981, 14페이지, 22페이지
  8. ^ a b c d 미들라스키, 페이지 93.
  9. ^ 스탠리 1981, 페이지 17.
  10. ^ 스탠리 1981, 페이지 14.
  11. ^ 스탠리 1981년, 54페이지, 244페이지.
  12. ^ a b c 스탠리 1981, 페이지 245.
  13. ^ a b c d 스턴헬, 17페이지
  14. ^ a b c 스탠리 1981, 페이지 206.
  15. ^ a b c d e 스탠리 1981, 페이지 106.
  16. ^ a b c 스턴헬 외, 82페이지
  17. ^ 홈즈, 페이지 60.
  18. ^ 스턴헬 외, 페이지 80.
  19. ^ 스튜어트, 페이지 149.
  20. ^ 스턴헬 외, 83페이지
  21. ^ 스턴헬 외, 85페이지
  22. ^ a b c 스턴헬, 페이지 11.
  23. ^ 스턴헬, 11-12페이지.
  24. ^ 스턴헬, 페이지 12.
  25. ^ 스턴헬 외, 93페이지.
  26. ^ 헬먼, 페이지 35
  27. ^ 길, 페이지 19.
  28. ^ 코헨 & 아라토 144쪽
  29. ^ 비엔나, 7페이지
  30. ^ 슈트, 페이지 39.
  31. ^ 스턴헬 외, 페이지 33.
  32. ^ a b c d 그레고르 96쪽
  33. ^ 그레고르, 페이지 123.

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  • 한스담 크리스텐슨, 외이스테인 하르트, 닐스 마럽 옌센. 전쟁 사이의 예술을 재고하는 것: 예술 역사의 새로운 관점. 덴마크의 아르후스: 2001년 투스쿨라눔 프레스 박물관
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  • 스티븐 길. 새로운 세계 질서의 힘과 저항. 뉴욕: Palgrave Macmillan, 2003.
  • 버클리 캘리포니아 대학교의 앤서니 제임스 그레고르. 젊은 무솔리니와 파시즘의 지적 기원. 버클리 및 캘리포니아 로스앤젤레스: 1979년 캘리포니아 대학교 출판부.
  • 존 헬먼. 공산주의적 제3의 방법: 알렉산드르 마르크의 서드르 누보, 1930-2000년. 맥길 퀸 대학 출판부, 2002.
  • 더글러스 R. 홈즈 통합 유럽: 빠른 자본주의, 다문화주의, 신파시즘. 뉴저지 주 프린스턴: 프린스턴 대학 출판부, 2000년.
  • 마누스 1세 미들라스키. 정치적 극단주의의 기원: 20세기와 그 이상의 집단 폭력. 케임브리지 대학 출판부, 2011.
  • 오필리아 슈테 라틴 아메리카 사상의 문화적 정체성과 사회적 해방. 올버니, 뉴욕: 뉴욕 프레스 주립 대학교, 1993.
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  • Stanley, John (1981). The Sociology of Virtue: The Political & Social Theories of George Sorel. University of California Press. p. 20.
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