Friday, July 18, 2025

A Much-Needed Polemic on Imperialism - Symposium on Domenico Losurdo, "Western Marxism: How It was Born, How It Died, How It can be Reborn"

Domenico Losurdo, Western Marxism: How It was Born, How It Died, How It can be Reborn. New York: Monthly Review Press, 2024.


ON A MUCH-NEEDED POLEMIC ON THE PRIORITIZATION OF ANTI-IMPERIALISM

 by

STEVE ELLNER

 

The most conspicuous revolutionary struggles in the century following the French revolution in 1789 contrast in fundamental ways with those of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. What most caught the attention of Marx and Engels were the Jacobin years of the French revolution, the June Days in 1848 and the French Commune in 1871, and in all three the urban popular sectors were the central protagonists. Since then, the most prominent revolutionary struggles have been ones in which the Left gained power with the support of broader sectors of the population as opposed to proletariat-based revolutions. In Western Marxism, Domenico Losurdo points out that imperialism has been the “principal contradiction” (80), and that anti-imperialism and anti-colonialism have been the main drivers behind revolutionary movements that have achieved state power. Examples include the October Revolution of 1917 (largely in reaction to an inter-imperialist war), the Chinese revolution (what Losurdo calls “the greatest anticolonialist revolution in history” [102]), and, of course, third-world movements of national liberation since 1945 (Losurdo, 2015: 319-320).[1]

       Losurdo rejects the utopianism and purism displayed by the harshest leftist critics of actually existing socialism. He may have possibly asked the question: What would the modern world look like if we accept the notion of those on the left who characterized the USSR as state capitalist, placed China in the category of “eastern totalitarianism” (143), and label Nicolás Maduro and Evo Morales neoliberal sell-outs? Putting aside the glorious triumph of the Soviet revolution in 1917, the Cuban revolution in its early years and the high point of the presidency of Hugo Chávez, all the nations that set out on a socialist path reverted back to their previous state of class exploitation and autocratic rule. According to this line of thinking, the only encouraging sign is the consciousness raising of social movement struggles over the longue durée, as envisioned by E. P. Thompson, which upon reaching a certain threshold will lead to revolutionary situations.

 

Losurdo’s Arguments in Brief

 

Anti-imperialism is at the center of Losurdo’s analysis. He argues that Western Marxism and critical theory writers have failed to correctly analyze anti-imperialism in the Global South. In some cases, they play down or ignore its importance, as in the works of David Harvey as well as those of Michel Foucault in which “colonial peoples… are historically absent” (164) and Ernst Bloch, who “scolded Lenin for giving excessive importance to the colonial question” (69). Others show disdain, such as Slavoj Žižek who claims that anti-imperialist struggles “distract[s] us from overthrowing capitalism” (231). In the worst of cases, exponents of critical theory like Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer displayed racism, failed to “show any sympathy for the victims of the West and its expansionist march” (117), and equated “nationalism of the so-called underdeveloped countries” (121) with fascism. Unlike Perry Anderson’s assertion that Western Marxism arose as a result of the Soviet failure to ignite socialist revolutions to its west in the early 1920s, Losurdo claims that Western Marxism was a continuation of the chauvinistic positions and Eurocentrism of the Second International.

       After the Left comes to power in the Global South, the anti-imperialist struggle enters a “second stage.” In these cases, attempts at regime change undertaken by capitalist powers have been tantamount to colonialism or imperialist expansion with a racist imprint. Thus, for instance, in 1941 Hitler “unleashed the greatest colonial war in history to build his continental empire in Eastern Europe” (156). Losurdo takes issue with those “Western Marxists,” such as Jean-Paul Sartre, who displayed “empathy” and “solidarity” (135) for the oppressed of the Global South but had little to say about them when they attained power, thus manifesting a condescending attitude at best. Losurdo writes: “We can be sympathetic … only so long as they are oppressed, humiliated, and without any power” (202). He concludes, “Western Marxists are “addicted to the role of the opposition” (p. 200).

       In the second stage, productivity becomes a major imperative. Contrary to the thinking of Western Marxists, the communists in power in the USSR, China, Vietnam, and Cuba have been obliged by circumstances to accept private production and markets. The governments in these nations made concessions to the national bourgeoisie, “whose entrepreneurial and managerial competence is needed” (p. 139), and to the international bourgeoisie to access advanced technology. For Losurdo, the anti-imperialist revolution is a “new type of revolution led by the proletariat” and consists of a broad alliance of classes, though it is “fundamentally bourgeois-democratic” (85). Expediency in these situations has been preferable to the adherence to abstract principles of democracy since the avoidance of re-colonialization “could only be accomplished by sacrificing, to a greater or less degree, the exigencies of democracy” (125).

       There is no place in the thinking of Losurdo for ultra-leftism and mechanical Marxism, both of which underpin the arguments on the left against actually existing socialism. He points to Max Horkeimer’s ludicrous criticism of the Soviet government for its “lack of attention to the problem of the abolition of the state” (87) at the moment in which Nazi troops were approaching Moscow. Equally absurd were the Western Marxists who saw the Chinese revolution as leading to the “abolition of work” and in doing so would “abolish class domination” (132). Another manifestation of utopianism was the banner of world revolution of Leon Trotsky, who according to Losurdo “eminently represented Western Marxism” (68). Taking into account the untenable nature of these positions, Losurdo attributes the ebbing of Marxism’s influence at the turn of the century as much to the errors of Western Marxism as to the collapse of the Soviet Union.

 

The Chinese Model

 

Losurdo’s thesis is aligned with a political current that has emerged on the left since China’s rise as a global power, particularly under Xi Jinping. The attraction of China should not be surprising given the Chinese Communist success in resisting Washington’s hope-for scenario in which the Tiananmen Square protest in 1989 would initiate the type of color revolution that toppled socialist governments in Eastern Europe. China’s success stands in sharp contrast with the failure of the organized Left in the Global North, accentuated by the dramatic inroads of the far right.

       The pro-China position reconciles the thinking of two leaders who were previously considered antithetical: Mao Zedong and Deng Xiaoping. Despite obvious contrasts between the two, there were common denominators. Before and shortly after reaching power (until 1952), Mao was an advocate of the Comintern strategy of cementing unity with the progressive members of the national bourgeoisie. This position represented a precedent for the market reforms promoted by Deng after Mao’s death in 1976. Losurdo does not see the Cultural Revolution as marking a definitive break in the thinking of the two leaders, even though it resulted in Deng’s loss of power and his humiliation. Losurdo points out that the Western Marxists who viewed the Cultural Revolution as the beginning of the withering away of the state ignored that Mao envisioned the event as part of a strategy to “promote production” (249), always one of his principal concerns and that of Deng as well. 

       The adherents to the new pro-China position classify the USSR throughout its 75 years as a genuine socialist state, though they view it in a critical light (PSL, 2007; Desai, 2023, 72-73). Losurdo defends this opinion, at the same time that he condemns Khrushchev’s 1956 denunciation of Stalin (Losurdo, 2011, 25-54) and accuses Gorbachev of “surrender” (243; Desai, 2023, 57). 

       One key issue of debate behind Losurdo’s thesis on China’s vanguard role in the world today is the extent to which there is a Chinese economic model that serves as a blueprint for building socialism. Two pro-China tendencies of the international Left, whose representatives were formerly identified with a variety of leftist currents (as in the cased of Losurdo who from 1960 until his death in 2018 belonged to several Communist parties in Italy), are reflected in the book. One position is formulated by the former Trotskyist leader and China specialist John Ross, who defends Deng’s model of market socialism, which he alleges is rooted in Marx's writing. Ross argues that Deng’s reforms have proven more effective than the command economy and other “ultra-leftist” policies implemented by Mao and Stalin. He also maintains that Deng’s promotion of international commerce and international division of labor, which to a degree contrasted with Mao’s emphasis on self-reliance, accorded with Marx’s views. Nevertheless, Ross is not anti-Mao and credits him with social achievements that were “the greatest in any country in human history” (Ross, 2021: 15).

       Losurdo agrees that Deng, with his long-time militance in the Communist Party, was a strategist who sought to defend and reinforce Chinese socialism and to avoid the dismal fate of other left-leaning nations of the South that opened their doors to foreign capital and markets.

Losurdo, like Ross, views Deng’s policies as part of a long-term strategy designed to strengthen the socialist system, which contrasted with the defensive nature of Lenin’s New Economic Policy, designed “to find some way out of an economically hopeless situation” (Losurdo, 2022).

       A second tendency views post-Mao governments as socialist but subject to sharp contradictions. Some of their policies ran the risk of facilitating capitalist restoration, while others helped lay the basis for socialist construction. The writing in this vein mirrors Nicos Poulantzas’ metaphor of the state as a “battlefield.” This is the case of the position of the Party of Socialism and Liberation (PSL), which has become possibly the largest pro-China leftist party in the U.S. Prior to Xi’s assumption of power and his partial reversal of policies initiated by Deng (such as in the area of foreign policy), PSL’s leading spokesman Brian Becker (2007) wrote: "The basic trend toward more entrenched capitalist class relations has only deepened since 1978. This process is, however, unfinished. As long as the Communist Party of China retains its hold on political power, there is a possibility that this trend can still be reversed.” In addition to viewing the Chinese Communist Party as a bulwark against capitalist restoration, Becker (2007;  PSL, 2007) pointed to the nation’s national bourgeoisie as a positive factor in resisting penetration by global capitalism since that class fraction “resents the intrusion of imperialism because it desires to be the exploiter of its home markets rather than being run roughshod over by foreign imperialism.”  

       In line with the second tendency, Losurdo diverges from some of Ross’ positions. In the words of Jennifer Ponce de León and Gabriel Rockhill in the book’s introduction, Losurdo does not “idolize[s] Deng or simplistically champion[s] him over Mao” (Ponce de León and Rockhill, 2024, 29), as Ross does. Furthermore, while Ross claims that Deng undertook the “systematic application” of Marx’s theories and achieved a perfect “balance of private and public” (Clegg, 2022), Losurdo characterizes the Chinese government’s ongoing experience as a “‘process of learning,’” including learning from its own mistakes (Ponce de León and Rockhill, 2024, 29).

       One major shortcoming of Western Marxism is that it fails to explore the differences between these two tendencies, nor does it analyze the implications of both. Most important, the book fails to grapple with the issue of capitalist restoration, which the second tendency (that of Becker), unlike the first (which is the position of the Communist Party of China), considers a real possibility. After all, capitalism was restored in the Soviet Union, whose economic system was more socialist than that of twenty-first century China, with its more than 400 billionaires who, as of 2002, have been allowed to join the Communist Party. Capitalist restoration disproves the linear view of history that Losurdo also rejects, at least in theory.

       Losurdo’s nearly exclusive focus on top leaders beginning with Deng, who Ross calls “the world’s greatest economist” (Clegg, 2022) leaves the impression that a steady advance toward socialism is underway, and that capitalist restoration from within is unlikely. In contrast, Becker (2007) views the Communist Party as a powerful actor that could check the retrograde influence of the nation’s supreme leaders and the possibility of a return to capitalism. This position left the PSL open to criticism on the left for lacking a bottom-up focus and for viewing workers as “passive,” as opposed to “Marx's idea that the emancipation of the working class must be the act of the working class itself” (Chretien, 2009; see also Laibman, 2020, 196-197). At issue, in the case of both opinions, is the role of the Communist Party as an institution and that of the working class in halting the reemergence of capitalism in China, a course that is implicitly ruled out by those who place their faith in the nation’s top leaders such as Deng and Xi. If capitalist restoration in China, as well as in other actually existing socialist countries, is a real possibility, then the need for rigorous debate on the left around the policies of those governments is compelling.

 

A Misleading Binary

 

In his polemic against Western Marxism, Losurdo casts too wide a net. Many of his targets are ex-Marxists who moved in a rightist direction. Losurdo dedicates 19 pages to Hannah Arendt, who never came close to being a Marxist. Michel Foucault receives 18 pages even though his principal association with Marxism was his three-year stint as a non-active member of the French Communist Party when he was in his 20s. Adorno, Horkheimer, and Antonio Negri, all of whom strayed far from the basic premises of Marxism, also receive considerable attention.  

       Rockhill, the book’s editor, attributes the broadness of the Western Marxism category to the need of its leading representatives, who are mainly professors at prestigious universities, to “compete in the marketplace of ideas.” Academic imperatives force this “intellectual labor aristocracy” to formulate “singular and unique” ideas. Unlike Eastern and anti-imperialist Marxists “who are driven by use value,” these “opportunistic intellectuals” are “primarily invested in exchange value.” The common feature of the Western Marxists is “opposition to actually existing socialism in almost every shape and form.” Divorced from action, these academics seek “not to change the world, but interpret it.” Most important, Western Marxism is “severed from progressive, practical political struggle” and “a practical process of socialism” (Rockhill, (2024; 2023, 32)

       Rockhill’s explanation of its heterogeneity notwithstanding, Western Marxism, as interpreted by Losurdo, is too all encompassing. Losurdo, for example, views Louis Althusser’s thinking as in line with Western Marxism even though he recognizes that the French philosopher “followed with deep concern the struggle of peoples living under colonial conditions and looked with sympathy at China” (245). Losurdo disagrees with Althusser’s claim that humanism has no place in Marxism because it highlights moral indignation, a category which transcends classes and is thus contrary to scientific-based historical materialism. Losurdo’s response to Althusser is that the victims of capitalist barbarism are not confined to the proletariat and that “scientific rigor and moral indignation are closely intertwined” (242). The argument for going beyond a strictly proletariat-based class focus reinforces Losurdo’s central thesis that the epicenter of the struggle for socialism has until now been China, Russia, Vietnam, Cuba and other nations mainly of the South, where the anti-imperialist movement consists of multi-class alliances.

       Losurdo, however, overstates his case when, after questioning the plausibility of Althusser’s polemics against humanism, he criticizes the French philosopher for failing “apparently to grasp the theoretical significance of [anti-imperialist]…struggles” (245-246). In addition, Losurdo argues that Althusser’s “elaboration of historical materialism becomes a chapter of a history that takes place exclusively in the West” (245). Losurdo’s justification for these harsh statements would seem to be Althusser’s allegedly narrow focus on the proletariat of the global North and his failure to write in any detail about anti-imperialist and anti-colonial struggles throughout the world. While these criticisms may be valid, the rationale for placing Althusser in, or close to, the pejorative category of Western Marxism is not convincing.

       The book’s grouping of Marxists like Althusser, a near life-long active member of the pro-Soviet Communist Party of France, in the same category as non-Marxists and anti-Communists is disorienting. Losurdo is overcritical not only of Althusser but also his intellectual rival Jean-Paul Sartre, in both cases for failing to appreciate the anti-imperialist nature of the “second stage” of the anti-imperialist struggle, when the anti-imperialists are in power. Severe criticism of writers and activists for distancing themselves from, or underestimating the importance of, actually existing socialism is counterproductive, if not unfair. More important, the book devotes too much space to its analysis of intellectuals who have no pretense of being Marxist, but makes just passing reference to the positions of leftist parties, such as European Communist Parties. The reader is left wondering whether nearly all major leftist parties in the Global North get dismissed as being opportunist and responsible for the historic failure of the Left. On the other hand, if Western Marxism by definition refers only to European intellectuals, then Losurdo’s comparison is flawed in that it consists of two dissimilar categories: leftist theoreticians (Western Marxists) versus leftist political movements (Eastern Marxists).

       In addition, the harshness of the Western Marxist label, which appears to be synonymous with opportunism, may not be justified when it is applied to some Western Marxists who question the legitimacy of actually existing socialism. Personal attacks against fellow leftists in these cases do nothing to further the leftist cause. Losurdo and Rockhill exaggerate when they assign a large part of the responsibility for the Left’s disappointing performance to Western Marxists as a whole. A more nuanced explanation for the Left’s failures is in order, at the same time that distinctions need to be made between individual “Western Marxists.”

       On the positive side, the book puts forward cogent arguments to counter the works of leftists who deny the progressive aspects and anti-imperialist character of actually existing socialisms and governments such as that of Maduro in Venezuela (which some Communist Parties have condemned as neoliberal and authoritarian [Ellner, 2023, 404-406]). In this respect, Western Marxism constitutes a contribution to the debate that has pitted two diametrically opposed positions on the left against each other. One persuasively underscores the need to prioritize the struggle against U.S. imperialism, and the other posits that globalization in recent decades has eroded the relevance of the territorial based concept of imperialism associated with Lenin (Foster, 2024; Science and Society, 2024; Ellner 2024a; 2024b; 2024c). Losurdo sides with the former. In addition, his thesis on the capitulation of Western Marxism contextualizes such adverse phenomena as the neoliberal turn, abandonment of Keynesianism and “class dealignment” of European socialist parties (Sunkara, 2024).

       On the downside, there is a basic contradiction embedded in the book’s central thesis on the need for leftists to be realistic and “practical” (Rockhill, 2004) and to reject the idealism and utopianism of Western Marxism. In effect, the criteria Losurdo and Rockhill set for being considered a true Marxist are too exclusive. Those leftists who fail to prioritize anti-imperialism and to wholeheartedly support actually existing socialism fall short of that standard. There is a lack of realism in this position in that it ends up fragmenting the Left, more than it already is. More than ever, the Left in the Global North consists of three main currents: those who prioritize working class struggles, those who prioritize anti-imperialism and those who prioritize social issues, sometimes referred to as “identity politics.” Needless to say, the three intersect, but there is also tension between them. A realistic political strategy would recognize the deep social roots of the three main currents and would promote diversity and tolerance in accordance with Mao’s dictum on the need to recognize “contradictions among the people.” Only within this framework, will the debate over priorities be fruitful (Ellner 2024c).

       In short, by inveighing against all leftists who do not prioritize anti-U.S. imperialism, Western Marxism contributes to the fragmentation of the Left and contradicts the "practical" and realistic strategizing that Losurdo and Rockhill call for. At the same time, however, both theorists do a thorough job in debunking the misguided arguments of those on the left who refuse to recognize the socialist features of actually existing socialism and who see the continued existence of capitalist forms in those countries as a betrayal of Marxism. In this respect Western Marxism represents a much welcome contribution to the analysis of a complex subject that is in constant transformation.

 

REFEFENCES

Becker, Brian. 2007. “What do Socialists Defend in China Today?” (May 31). https://www.liberationschool.org/what-do-socialists-defend-in-china-today/   

Chretien, Todd. 2009. “Tiananmen Square: Which Side are you on?” (June 17), in Socialist Worker [organ of the International Socialist Organization – ISO]. https://socialistworker.org/2009/06/17/tiananmen-which-side-are-you-on

Clegg, Jenny. 2022. “John Ross – China’s Great Road: Lessons for Marxist Theory and Socialist Practices.”   https://socialistchina.org/2022/04/04/book-review-chinas-great-road-lessons-for-marxist-theory-and-socialist-practices/

Desai, Radhika. 2023. Capitalism, Coronavirus and War: A Geopolitical Economy. London and       New York: Routledge.

Ellner, Steve. 2023. “Objective Conditions in Venezuela: Maduro’s Defensive Strategy and Contradictions among the People.” Science and Society, 87:3, 385-413.

_____. 2024a. “Applying/Misapplying Gramsci’s Passive Revolution to Latin America.” Monthly Review 76:5: 47-63.

_____. 2024b. “Downplaying U.S. Imperialism Despite its Ongoing Tenacity: The Latin American Dimension.” Latin American Perspectives, 51:2, 34-47.

_____. 2024c. “Prioritizing Anti-U.S. Imperialism, Maduro’s Venezuela and the Complexities of Critical Solidarity: An Interview with Steve Ellner” (November 1). 

       https://links.org.au/prioritising-anti-us-imperialism-maduros-venezuela-and-complexities-critical-solidarity-interview

Laibman, David. 2020. “China; In the Perspective of Historical Materialism.” Science and Society, 84:2, 171-203.

Losurdo, Domenico. 2011. Stalin: Historia y crítica de una leyenda negra. Spain: El Viejo Topo.

______. 2015. La izquierda ausente: Crisis, sociedad del espectáculo, guerra. Spain: El Viejo Topo.

______. 2022. “Has China Turned to Capitalism? Reflections on the Transition from Capitalism to Socialism (2017). RedSails.org (April 3). https://redsails.org/losurdo-on-china/

Ponce de León, Jennifer and Gabriel Rockhill. 2024. “Introduction – Socialism as Anticolonial Liberation: Contemporary Lessons from Losurdo,” in Western Marxism: How it was Born, How it Died, How it can be Reborn, by Domenico Losurdo. New York: Monthly Review Press. 

PSL (Party of Socialism and Liberation). 2007. “For the Defense of China against Counterrevolution, Imperialist Intervention and Dismemberment” (May 31). https://www2.liberationschool.org/for-the-defense-of-china-against-counterrevolution-imperialist-intervention-and-dismemberment/

Rockhill, Gabriel. 2023. “The Myth of 1968 Thought and the French Intelligentsia: Historical Commodity Fetishism and Ideological Rollback.” Monthly Review, 75: 2: 19-49.

_____.2024. “Gabriel Rockhill, ‘Western Marxism’” (September 8). https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kx1mlpJoIZ4

Ross, John. 2021. China’s Great Road: Lessons for Marxist Theory and Socialist Practices.        Glasgow: Praxis Press.

Science and Society. 2024. “A Symposium: Imperialism, Anti-Imperialism, and the Global Class Struggle.” Science and Society, 88: 3, 318-367.

Sunkara, Bhaskar. 2024. “The Age of Class Dealignment” Jacobin (November 21). https://jacobin.com/2024/11/dealignment-left-parties-working-class

 

 



[1] According to Losurdo (2014, 365-367), Marx and Engels were aware that even the Jacobin period of the French revolution, the June days of 1848 and the Paris Commune contained important elements that went beyond class struggle. The “indignation at the incapacity of the French government to contain the advance of the Prussian army” figured prominently in the events of 1871. Support for the defense of national sovereignty also crossed class lines during the French revolution.


 

 

 

Anti-Imperialism and Re-Periodization::

A Commentary of Domenico Losurdo’s Western Marxism

 

Barbara Foley

As is suggested by the subtitle of Western Marxism—"How it was born, how it died, how it can be reborn”—Losurdo’s book is polemically directed at a wide range of twentieth- and twenty-first century philosophers and theorists whose “fetish of purity” and “messianic” idealism have, in his view, led them to abandon the transformational commitments at the heart of Marxism. Although he claims that the term “Western Marxism” is defined not by geography but by political orientation, the vast majority of the exemplars whom he gathers under its rubric are from the USA and Europe. In antithetical contrast, Losurdo holds up what he calls “Eastern Marxism,” whose proponents have shunned their Western counterparts’ distaste for the real world and have instead undertaken the hard work of constructing, under less than ideal circumstances, societies that would repair the ravages of centuries of colonial domination. Although he died in 2018, Losurdo’s works are increasingly influential in current debates over North/South imperialism, BRICS, and the political economy of the People’s Republic of China. Hardly confined to the groves of academe, Losurdo’s assessment of the historical and political trajectories of global movements identified with Marxism warrants careful scrutiny.[i]

One of Losurdo’s most cutting criticisms of the figures he associates with Western Marxism is their insouciance toward—if not outright contempt for—national liberation struggles in what was once called the Third World. Displaying an idealist utopianism fixated on the urgency of abolishing the state; increasingly focused on the alienation of labor rather than the class struggle; and seemingly allergic to such mundane practical affairs as organizing political parties and aiming at the seizure of power: Western Marxists from Trotsky to Hardt and Negri and beyond have sneered at the revolutionary movements that by 1970 ended up liberating two-thirds of the world’s population—at least formally—from the grip of colonialism. Indeed, Losurdo argues, in their covert or overt acceptance of various racist or Orientalist assumptions about the reasons for uneven global development, many Western Marxists have confirmed the dominant ideologies they ostensibly oppose. Losurdo’s frequent references to the monstrosities enacted by US and European regimes, from the Jim Crow US South to Indochina to Algeria, reflect not just moral indignation but a keen understanding of the extent to which racism, as both economic super-exploitation and its ideological justification, has been at the core of Western empire-building from the time of Columbus to the present.

This insistent focus on Western assumptions about racial hierarchy underlies Losurdo’s call for re-periodizing modern global history. Citing Ho Chi Minh’s ironic comment that 1914 meant nothing special to Indochinese peasants for decades oppressed by French colonialism—1917 was, for them, a far more important historical marker (47)—Losurdo proposes a reconfiguration of the notion of world war. Why should World War II be seen as beginning not with the Italian invasion of Ethiopia, or the Japanese invasion of Manchuria, but with the Nazi invasion of Poland? And why should Nazi Germany’s attempted overrunning of its European neighbors to the East, accompanied by the doctrine of ubermensch and untermensch, not be seen as marking “the greatest colonial war in history” (156)? Viewed from a Third Worldist standpoint, indeed, the Bolshevik Revolution can be described as the first anticolonial turning point of the century (156), and the Chinese revolution of 1949 as the second—a “turning point in the turning point” (82).  For Losurdo, re-periodization does not just move the historical goalposts; it calls for ideological reconfiguration of the terrain under review.  Indeed, it calls for reconsideration of the main contradiction shaping global modernity: Part II of Western Marxism is titled, “Socialism versus Capitalism, or Anticolonialism versus Colonialism?” (73). The question answers itself.

Despite its provocative implications for a non-Eurocentric rewriting of modernity, Losurdo’s argument contains some serious flaws. For one thing, he uses far too broad a brush in portraying the pantheon of “Western Marxism,” which is represented by an extraordinary hodgepodge of philosophers and theorists from the Bolshevik era to the present: Trotsky, Bloch, Benjamin, Sartre, Althusser, Deleuze, Zizek, Badiou, Harvey, Colletti, Della Volpe, Hardt and Negri, and more; whole schools of thought, such as postcolonial and decolonial theory, are summarily dismissed (Brennan). Using the time-honored polemical strategy of grouping together a range of presumably dissimilar figures to illustrate their identity on a more fundamental level, Losurdo’s use of scattershot and lop-sided quotations frequently misrepresents various figures: an entire thesis about Togliatti’s internationalist antiracism hinges on a single, oft-repeated phrase, while the young pre-Marxist Bloch is represented by an avalanche of quotations (Brody).  Meanwhile, other figures who do not fit into his schema, such as Lukács and Gramsci, are relegated to the margins. Moreover, Losurdo draws into his discussion a raft of anomalous thinkers, from Arendt to Agamben to Foucault, whose connections with Marxism are nonexistent. The figures who best fit into his critical schema are perhaps those associated with the Frankfurt School: Adorno, Marcuse, Horkheimer. (Horkheimer’s 1942 chastisement of Stalin for strengthening the Soviet state when the Nazis were “at the gates of Leningrad and Moscow” [111-12] exemplifies a particularly troubling instance of the “purity fetish.”)  But the Frankfurt School’s substitution of critique for action and long-standing antipathy to the project of proletarian revolution hardly reflect a disappointed yearning to reach the communist horizon. Readers familiar with various figures in Losurdo’s long list may thus find themselves wondering exactly what qualifies someone to be a Western Marxist.  Losurdo’s strategy of cherry-picking quotations and then lumping together wildly diverse philosophers and theorists makes for powerful rhetoric; but it undermines his argument’s credibility if readers find themselves thinking, “Yes, but what about ___?”

Although Losurdo’s critique of Western Marxism will raise various hackles, it can serve as a useful corrective to the abiding academic Marxist preoccupation with reification, abstract labor, and the increasingly opaque webs being woven around the notion of value theory. His full-throated defense of the key role of communists in struggles against fascism and imperialism, moreover, is a welcome antidote to the Cold War-inflected discourse that continues to underlie much historical scholarship on the past century. For all the sympathy one might have with a number of Losurdo’s premises, however, his highly selective approach to the tradition he most admires, namely, that of Eastern Marxism, remains bothersome.  Marx cannot be left out of the discussion, of course; Losurdo frequently cites Marx’s thundering denunciations of capitalist rapacity around the globe. Because of their near-complete focus on the exploitation of free labor through the wage relation, however, he finds Marx’s writings lacking in explanatory power in relation to colonialism. Moreover, he finds problematic Marx’s “messianic” tendency, preferring to focus upon Marx’s alternative definition of communism as the active process of engaging with the here and now (223). Losurdo draws more inspiration from the writings—and actions—of Lenin, Stalin, and Mao, as well as Ho, Cesaire, and other prominent figures in anti-colonial national liberation movements that were faced with the challenges of making revolution in largely pre-capitalist social formations historically underdeveloped by colonialism. [ii]

Even when describing the core principles of Eastern Marxism, however, Losurdo’s tendency toward simplification and homogenization persists. He correctly describes Lenin’s insistence on the importance of colonial rebellion to the project of world communist revolution, as well as his early 1920s chastisement of those Bolsheviks who spurned participation in the urgent but messy realities of post-insurrectionary state-building: Trotsky comes in for particularly harsh critique.  But Losurdo neglects the full implications of Lenin’s statement, as early as 1922, that the New Economic Policy had been a temporary measure, a “retreat” to which “on behalf of the Party we must call a halt . . . [because] the purpose pursued by the retreat has been achieved” (Lenin 1922). In Losurdo’s telling, NEP was not just a pragmatic policy, one that would be largely negated and transcended by Stalin’s left turn and ensuing socialist construction, but the first in a series of communist-led state-building initiatives focused on increasing production. The Lenin who in The State and Revolution theorized the state as “a product of the irreconcilability of class antagonisms” and the dictatorship of the proletariat as the necessary dialectical means to the state’s withering away:  this Lenin fades from view (Lenin 1917).  In addition, Losurdo’s definition of the Bolshevik Revolution as “anti-colonial”—in its essence, and not just its effects—means that Lenin’s crucial distinction between colonialism and imperialism, as well as their common origin in the imperatives of monopoly capitalist accumulation, ends up being blurred (Lenin 1916).  Socialism, for Losurdo, has first and foremost entailed—and continues to entail—the development of productive forces guided by a state capable of resisting the predations of Western capital.  The question of communism is of necessity to be deferred to a distant future. [iii]

Since It is China that serves as Exhibit A in Losurdo’s account of the achievements of Eastern Marxism, however, his highly selective treatment of PRC history is particularly disturbing.  Losurdo cites Mao’s 1940 essay “On New Democracy” as proof of Mao’s full support of capitalist development in building the economy of the new Chinese nation (Mao 1940). Classes previously locked in sharp opposition could now be seen as positioned in non-antagonistic contradiction. Overlooked in Losurdo’s account, however, are numerous statements by Mao from the late 1940s onward in which he declared New Democracy to have been merely transitional (Mao 1949). Even on the cusp of the seizure of state power, he wrote that the state was an instrument of oppression and in need of abolition. By mid-1952 he was writing that the contradiction between the working class and the bourgeoisie had emerged as the principal contradiction in the PRC (Mao 1952). By mid-1953 he proclaimed this contradiction to be "antagonistic" and characterized as "Right Deviationist” those party members who were "pushing their 'New Democracy' instead of socialist transformation” (Mao 1953).

From the era of the GPCR (Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution), moreover, all we hear from Losurdo’s Mao is an uncontextualized slogan, attributed to Mao, declaring, “Grasp revolution, promote production.”  The entire upsurge of mass class struggle during the GPCR— from Mao’s famous statement that “it is right to rebel” and his call to “bomb the headquarters” to the revolutionary workers councils of the Shanghai Commune—all this antagonistic conflict, both physical and ideological, is dismissed by Losurdo as “anarchy” (133).  For Losurdo, the truth of the GPCR is contained in Lin Biao’s statement that “The enthusiasm of the broad masses of the working people both in revolution and production has soared to unprecedented heights. Many factories, mines and other enterprises have time and again topped their production records, creating all-time highs in production. The technical revolution is making constant progress. . . . ‘Grasp revolution, promote production’—this principle is absolutely correct” (quoted p. 131). Forgotten are Mao’s passionate anti-revisionist diatribes against Liu Shaoqui and Deng Xiaopeng—and, for that matter, Lin Biao—where he accuses them of plotting capitalist restoration.

Indeed, in Losurdo’s view, Deng simply inherited the mantle of Mao; with some unfortunate but ultimately unimportant interruptions, the productivist lineage beginning with New Democracy achieved its further development through Deng’s “opening up” and, by extension, in the “harmonious” regime of Xi Jinping. For that matter, when Deng’s “reforms” are construed as reenactments of the USSR’s New Economic Policy—now viewed not as a temporary expedient, but as the first phase of a long-term strategy for state-led socialist construction—the narrative of continuous progress is more seamless still. An alternative narrative, invoking a different periodization, would stress the defeat of the left in the GPCR as a qualitative turning point in the history of class struggles; in this narrative, the restoration and expansion of capitalist social relations constitute a form of primitive accumulation based on the seizure of the Mao-era socialist forces of production. By contrast, Losurdo’s periodization of the history of twentieth- and twenty-first-century Eastern Marxism, especially in China, stresses continuity and effaces contradiction. Or, to be more precise, this periodization displaces contradiction from the class conflict internal to the PRC to the conflict between the PRC—now construed as the leader of global “anti-imperialism”—and the imperialist West.  

Losurdo’s account of the opposition between Western and Eastern Marxisms accounts in large part for his rising star among present-day defenses of China’s claim to being a socialist nation—with “Chinese characteristics”—and of BRICS as the front line of global anti-imperialism. Losurdo’s influential role is suggestively reflected in the frequent usage of the pejorative terms “purity fetish” and “messianism” by commentators responding to criticisms of the PRC’s turn to capitalism (Boer; Garrido; Ponce De Leon and Rockhill). But the enthusiastic embrace of productivism as the force that will liberate the oppressed peoples of the world has trouble accounting for the vast polarization between the billionaire elite and the vast toiling masses of the PRC—and also, for that matter, between the ruling and laboring classes in the member nations of BRICS.  While it is clear that the BRICS alliance poses a real threat to Western-led imperialism, it would also seem that China’s emergence as a global power has if anything consolidated the hold of capital—and capitalism—on the workers of the world. 

Losurdo’s homogenization of Eastern Marxism, epitomized in his effacing of the class struggle embodied in the GPCR, is problematized, however, by the presence of voices in present-day China that call attention to the nation’s abandonment of socialist principles. Wu Xuangong, for instance, has proposed that “it is hundreds of millions of workers working with high labor intensity at low salaries who create the world’s great economic achievements and feed the regenerated capitalists growing up quickly with huge amounts of surplus value” (Wu 5). Li Peilin has contended that “the three major contradictions of Chinese society are the contradictions between rich and poor, labor and capital, and cadres and masses” (Li ). Xu Zhun has argued that Deng’s “reforms” have directed the nation’s economy “from commune to capitalism” (Xu). Surely such Chinese critics of the current regime cannot simply be dismissed as Western Marxists anomalously inhabiting the PRC. A key principle of dialectics—whether of the Hegelian or the Maoist kind—is that contradictions never go away. They may take their time in moving toward resolution; but sooner or later, unless they are simply destroyed by an external force, they move toward sublation, either through crisis or through the guidance of a process leading to a higher level. The struggle is ongoing.

 

 

Works Cited

 

XX Boer, Roland. 2021. Socialism with Chinese Characteristics: A Guide for Foreigners. Singapore: Springer.

XX Brennan, Timothy. 2024. “Western Marxism is not a Monolith.” Jacobin 4 November 2024.

XX Broder, David. 2017. “Eastern Light on Western Marxism.” New Left Review 107.

XX Garrido, Carlos. 2023. China and the Purity Fetish of Western Marxism. Midwestern Marx Publishing Press.

XX Lenin, Vladimir. 1917. The State and Revolution. https://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1917/staterev/ch01.htm

XX _____ . 1922. “Eleventh Congress of The R.C.P.(B.).” https://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1922/mar/27.htm

XX _____ . 1916. Imperialism: The Highest Stage of Capitalism https://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1916/imp-hsc/ch06.htm

XX Li Peilin. 2018. “China’s Class Structure: Changes, Problems, and Policy Suggestions—A Study of Class Development since 1978.” International Critical Thought, 8:4, 574-595,

XX Losurdo, Domenico. 2017. “Has China Turned to Capitalism?--Reflections on the Transition from Capitalism to Socialism.”  International Critical Thought, 7:1, 15-31.

XX _____ .2023. Stalin: History and Critique of a Black Legend. Iskra Press.

XX Mao Zedong. 1940. “On New Democracy” https://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/mao/selected-works/volume-2/mswv2_26.htm,

XX____ .1949. “On the People's Democratic Dictatorship. " https://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/mao/selected-works/volume-4/mswv4_65.htm

XX _____ . 1952. “The Contradiction between the Working Class and the Bourgeoisie Is the Principal Contradiction in China." https://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/mao/selected-works/volume-5/mswv5_21.htm

XX _____. 1953. "Refute Right Deviationist Views That Depart from the General Line.” https://www.marxists.org/reference/archive//mao/selected-works/volume-5/mswv5_28.htm

 

XX Ponce De Leon, Jennifer, and Gabriel Rockhill. 2024. “Introduction” to Domenico Losurdo, Western Marxism. 9-34.

XX Wu Xuangong. 2019. "Achievements, Problems, and Directions of China's Reform and Opening." International Critical Thought 9, 1: 3-12.

XX Xu Zhun. 2018. From Commune to Capitalism: How China’s Peasants Lost Collective Farming and Gained Urban Poverty. Monthly Review Press.

.

COMMENTS ON BARBARA FOLEY’S ESSAY ON WESTERN MARXISM

Steve Ellner

In her essay on Western Marxism, Barbara Foley correctly points out that Domenico Losurdo’s interpretation of Mao, and to a certain extent Marx, is skewed. In these passages, Losurdo highlights anti-imperialist and anti-colonialist struggles and actually existing socialism’s battle of production, which he sees as an imperative in the struggle against imperialism. At the same time, he plays down both proletariat-based class analysis and the advance toward a higher stage of socialism. As Foley points out with regard to anti-colonialism, “Losurdo frequently cites Marx’s thundering denunciations of capitalist rapacity around the globe.” But the Italian philosopher focuses less on Marx’s writings on the proletariat at the point of production which he finds (in the words of Foley) “lacking in explanatory power in relation to colonialism.” Foley also points out that for Losurdo, “the question of communism is of necessity to be deferred to a distant future.”

Of course, actually existing socialism’s drive to increase productivity (which Losurdo emphasizes) and the struggle to achieve socialist goals in order to reach a higher stage of socialism (which he deemphasizes) are not divorced, and indeed Losurdo makes an effort to bridge the two. Thus, for instance, he argues that the Chinese success in boosting productivity is a major step toward achieving the more advanced socialist goal of economic equality by lessoning “global inequality” (251; Losurdo, 2017).

There are two fundamental issues underlying Foley’s critique. One is whether the priority struggle in the world today is anti-imperialism or anti-capitalism. Losurdo argues that it is anti-imperialism, and has been since 1917. Foley, in her objection to Losurdo’s periodization, implies that she prioritizes class struggle around “capitalist social relations” and not anti-imperialism.

The differences between Foley and Losurdo, which go a long way in explaining current divisions on the left, can be traced back to Mao’s On Contradiction (1937). Maoists who reject the thesis that imperialism is the “principal contradiction” point out that “the proletariat also existed in the oppressed countries” and thus class struggle at both national and international levels is as fundamental in the Global South as it is in the North (CWA, 2017, 73). Anti-Maoists who defend the Marxist principle that the primary contradiction lies at the point of production criticize Mao’s writing on the multiplicity of contradictions for straying from the concept of totality inherent in the thinking of Marx and Hegel (Wolf, 2017).

A different reading of Mao may lend itself to the view that objective analysis of the Global South needs to place both anti-imperialism and class struggle at the center of discussion, even though a dual focus on contradictions is rejected by the above-mentioned Maoists (CWA, 2017, 74-81). Mao 's 1937 essay posits that throughout the modern history of China in situations of war, anti-imperialism became the principal contradiction while class differences were “relegated temporarily to a secondary or subordinate position” (Mao, 1953, 35). Although there is only one principal contradiction, Mao observes that “sometimes there seems to be a balance of forces,” although he adds that this “is only a temporary and relative state” (Mao, 1953, 36).  Furthermore, Mao points to the complexity that often characterizes the identification of the principal contradiction and the fact that contradictions are in constant flux. To identify the principal contradiction, it is necessary to follow Lenin’s call for “concrete analysis of concrete conditions” (Mao, 1956, 30).

These assertions suggest that the formulation of a political strategy for the twenty-first century Global South needs to go beyond a simplistic structure-superstructure dichotomy with regard to proletarian class struggles and anti-imperialism, which need to be prioritized on equal terms. Two major developments, as they relate to the Global South, shed light on why this is the case. One is the “Third Worldism” and the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) which emerged from anti-colonial and anti-imperialist struggles beginning with the Bandung conference and the Suez Canal conflict in 1955 and 1956. The phenomenon of Third-Worldism created great expectations for socialists but proved disappointing in much of the Global South, including three of the NAM’s five founders which subsequently moved far to the right: Egypt, Indonesia and India. Add to this the fact that Venezuela’s charismatic Carlos Andrés Pérez, a leading Third-World spokesman in the 1970s, became a discredited neoliberal in the 1990s. These cases and others demonstrate the flaw of prioritizing anti-imperialism at the expense of domestic class struggle.

A second major development having to do with geopolitics, however, rules out the validity of the inverse, namely prioritizing class struggle in the Global South over anti-imperialism in the twenty-first century. The formidable political and military hegemony achieved by the United States, in the absence of the countervailing power represented by the Soviet Union before 1991, makes the case for highlighting the importance of anti-imperialism especially compelling. The epicenter of progressive governments over the recent past has been Latin America, where the interventionism of the U.S. represents a major obstacle to the stability of those governments and their efforts to achieve socialist transformation.

In short, anti-imperialism in the twenty-first century cannot be subordinated to class struggle, and vice versa. The practical application of this duality goes counter to the thrust of both Losurdo’s thesis and that of his staunchest detractors on the left. On the one hand, progressive Global South governments which confront imperialism have nothing in common with those on the right; the destabilization and regime change campaigns against them orchestrated by the imperialists have to be placed in the center of analysis. On the other hand, leftist analysts like Losurdo who overemphasize anti-imperialism assume that the world is in a situation similar to that of World War II, when the immediate interests of the working class were subordinated to the more urgent cause of fascism’s military defeat.

Foley’s second basic criticism of Losurdo is more explicit than her first. She argues that “it would…seem that China’s emergence as a global power has if anything consolidated the hold of capital—and capitalism—on the workers of the world.” The statement, in my opinion, is accurate to a large extent, but leaves out an essential element. The Chinese model is hybrid and in flux, and certainly cannot be placed in the same category as capitalist nations at any stage of development. Its foreign policy in no way resembles that of capitalist nations elsewhere and even less so emerging capitalist nations. Historically, emerging capitalist nations, in accordance with the law of uneven development, are characterized by extreme bellicosity abroad, as was the case with Germany and Japan. China’s foreign policy is based on respect for national sovereignty and the absence of military deployment, other than in border areas. Foley’s last sentence is especially relevant with regard to the transformations underway in China: “the struggle is ongoing.” It certainly is – including within the state – and the final outcome, be it socialism or capitalism, is at this point hard to predict.

 

REFERENCES

CWU (Communist Workers’ Union – Marxist-Leninist-Maoist). 2022. “The ‘Leftism’ and
Fight for Unity: The Communists.” Negation of Negation.
https://www.bannedthought.net/Colombia/UOC-MLM/Negacion/nn6-eng.pdf

Losurdo, Domenico. 2017. “Has China Turned to Capitalism? Reflections on the Transition from Capitalism to Socialism.” https://redsails.org/losurdo-on-china/

Mao Tse-tung. 1953. On Contradiction. New York: International Publishers.

Wolf, Antonio. 2017.  “Left of Wreckage: Critique with A Sledgehammer” (September 24). https://leftofwreckage.wordpress.com/2017/09/24/theory-review-maos-on-contradiction/

 

Re-Thinking Anti-Imperialism: A Response to Steve Ellner

By Barbara Foley

Steve Ellner’s thoughtful and lucid evaluation of Domenico Losurdo’s Western Marxism raises several important questions. I agree with some of Ellner’s points and disagree with others. Our conversation is an important one, touching upon key considerations in Marxist assessments of past strategies and current possibilities for social revolution.

Ellner and I both argue that Losurdo cuts far too broad a swath in his dismissal of the tradition that he calls “Western Marxism,” since he draws together figures as diverse as Benjamin and Badiou and features centrally such anti-Marxists as Foucault and Arendt. Ellner usefully points out that Losurdo’s argument is skewed by his near-exclusive focus on “two dissimilar categories: leftist theoreticians (Western Marxists) versus leftist political movements (Eastern Marxists).”  I would add that Losurdo not only commits a category mistake but also fails to explore the extent to which the shortcomings of various intellectuals—including even those apparently remote from the realm of political strategizing—have in fact reflected various shortcomings in contemporaneous left parties and political formations.  Losurdo’s lambasting of the operaismo embraced by such Italian Marxists as Tronti and Negri, for instance, does not adequately connect their theoretical idealism with the revisionist policies of Eurocommunism. What could have been a productive contrast between comparable entities ends up as a false opposition between “messianic” and “puristic” ivory tower Western academics on the one hand and pragmatic roll-up-the-shirtsleeves Eastern practical revolutionaries on the other.   

While Ellner and I agree that Losurdo unduly homogenizes the tradition of Western Marxism, we differ in our reactions to his treatment of Eastern Marxism.  In my view, Losurdo equally homogenizes a significant range of Global South movements and political figures, starting with the era of the Bolshevik Revolution. There is little room in his schema, for instance, for a consideration of the debates between Lenin and Roy about the national question (Haithcox), or of Mariátegui’s back-and-forth with the Comintern about the meaning of self-determination in the Andes (Becker). In Losurdo’s telling, the politics guiding Third World opposition to the imperialist West (now Global North) have been essentially contradiction-free, even if external necessity has to one degree or another—at least until the rise of China--impeded their full enactment.

Compounding Losurdo’s tendency to minimize significant rifts among Eastern Marxists about the meaning of national liberation is an inadequate discussion of the meaning of “actually existing socialism.” Does the phrase signify a nation that threw off the colonial yoke under the leadership of a communist party? Does it describe a nation that is on the road to socialism, and eventually to communism? Does it signal the primacy of productivism to contest colonial underdevelopment, and thus necessity for “accepting private production and markets,” as Ellner puts it? Or does it simply refer to a country or a region that, by virtue of its membership in a bloc contesting the power of Western imperialism, can be adjudged socialist? Untangling these conflicting meanings is important, insofar as the unproblematic acceptance of a presumably transparent meaning of “actually existing socialism” would seem to be, at least for Losurdo, a defining mark of Eastern Marxism. Ellner is more cautious in assigning teleology to the term, since he acknowledges that the collapse of the Soviet Union illustrates the ever-present threat of capitalist restoration.  Nonetheless, the phrase “actually existing socialism” occurs several times in Ellner’s discussion of Losurdo, leaving the reader wondering exactly what its referent might be.  

Fundamentally at issue in both Losurdo’s book and Ellner’s review is an understanding of what is meant by “anti-imperialism,” as well as of what it means to declare that the contradiction between imperialism and anti-imperialism has been the “principal contradiction” shaping global conflict and change since at least the end of World War II. [iv]While Ellner evinces nuanced criticisms of Losurdo’s heavy-handedness, the title of his commentary on Western Marxism indicates a basic alignment with Losurdo in this regard: “On A Much-Needed Polemic in Favor of Prioritizing Anti-Imperialism.”  

The elephant in this particular room, of course, is China and its formative role in BRICS, which are together increasingly challenging the hegemony, economic and political, of the global North. In Losurdo’s re-periodization, the Bolshevik Revolution 1949 was the turning point of the twentieth century, and the defeat of Japanese imperialism and subsequent construction of Chinese socialism constituted “the turning point within the turning point” (82): notably, the era beginning with Deng’s “reforms” is not an interruption, but a continuation, of the trajectory begun in the era of Mao. Ellner demurs with Losurdo’s “triumphal” narrative, noting that Losurdo does not take into account the debates between pro-China cheerleaders on the one hand, and, on the other, observers concerned about the opaque but potentially troubling connections between and among private capital (including hundreds of billionaires), state-owned enterprises, and the guiding role of the Communist Party. Routinely missing in celebrations of China’s skyrocketing rate of development, however, are references to those Chinese critics of recent and current trends indicating that China has abandoned the socialist road and is in fact riven by class struggles, both overt and covert (Chan et al.).   Presumably the act of bringing into the conversation figures such as Wu Xuangong, Li Peilin, and Xu Zhun (mentioned in my review)— who can hardly be characterized as “utopian,” “puristic,” or “messianic”—would unduly interfere with the portrait of Eastern Marxism as seamlessly unified. Finally, also routinely missing in discussions of sharpening contradictions within China are considerations of whether the super-exploited masses in the various nations participating in the BRICS project are benefiting from the presumably “anti-imperialist” economic developments that are advancing the fortunes of these nations’ capitalist ruling classes (Robinson).  The record on this matter is, to say the very least, mixed (Foley)

Clearly Losurdo, Ellner and I have some significant differences about strategies needed to abolish racialized global uneven development and liberate the world’s workers from the yoke of exploitation. Perhaps it should go without saying in the pages of Science & Society, however, that we are far more united than divided.  I wish that Losurdo were still with us and could be an active participant in the debates generated by his extraordinary body of work.  I am grateful to Steve Ellner for his provocative commentary and to Science & Society for hosting this important conversation.

 

Works Cited

Becker, Marc. 2006. “Mariátegui, the Comintern, and the Indigenous Questions in Latin America.” Science & Society 70, 4. 450-79.

Chan, Jenny, and Mark Selden and Pun Nagi. 2020. Dying for an iPhone: Apple, Foxconn, and The Lives of China's Workers. New York: Haymarket.

Foley, Barbara, Guest Editor. 2024. “Imperialism, Anti-Imperialism, and the Global Class Struggle: A Symposium.” Science & Society 88, 2. July. 318-367.

Haithcox, John. 2011. “The Roy-Lenin Debate on Colonial Policy: A New Interpretation” (1963). Rpt. Journal of Asian Studies. 23 March. 93-101.  

Robinson, William. 2023. “The Travesty of ‘Anti-Imperialism.’” Journal of World-Systems Research. 79, 2. 587-601.

 

 

 

 

 

 



[i] From here on I shall suspend the use of inverted commas around the terms “Western Marxism” and “Eastern Marxism.” This does not mean that I accept the terms as neutral or unproblematic descriptors. See also Losurdo 2017.

 

[iii] In Stalin (2023), Losurdo undertakes a full description of Stalin’s role in productivist social construction. See also Losurdo 2017.

 

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