From: John Holloway (johnholloway@PRODIGY.NET.MX)
Date: Thu May 29 2003 - 01:05:26 EDT
Rakesh, Very many thanks for this - I would never have come across it otherwise. By the way, do you have an e-mail address for Jacques Depelchin> it would be very interesting to get an African perspective. All the best, John ---------- >From: Rakesh Bhandari <rakeshb@STANFORD.EDU> >To: OPE-L@SUS.CSUCHICO.EDU >Subject: review of John Holloway >Date: Fri, May 16, 2003, 7:01 AM > >Spectrezine.org > >Book Review > >John Holloway Change the World Without Taking Power: The Meaning of >Revolution Today (London, Pluto Press 2002) > >"Political power grows from the barrel of a gun." (Mao Tse Tung) > >As we know from history Mao gained power in China after a long civil >war, including the Long March. At the beginning of 2001 the Mexican >Zapatistas marched from Chiapas to the capital Mexico City. They did not >come to power but spoke in the Mexican parliament and on the Zocalo, the >main square of the Mexican capital. > >John Holloway is one of the theoretical backers of the Zapatista >insurgency. In his new book Change the World Without Taking Power - The >Meaning of Revolution Today, he draws a picture of a new form of revolution. > >While in Mao's understanding power was located in the military forces of >the capitalist state which had to be defeated by revolutionary firepower >and guerrilla warfare, the Zapatistas, though armed, renounce provoking >a military confrontation with the Mexican army. Instead, they are >promoting the concept of ordinary-therefore-rebellious, a concept that >rejects a view of revolution led by an avant-garde of professional >revolutionaries and the view that revolution is made by taking power. >Their strategy is the strategy of low intensity revolution, a revolution >that changes society from the inside without taking the power but by >destroying the power. > >Holloway supports the Zapatista style of uprising by backing this new >understanding of struggle theoretically. His argument is different from >the classical anti-imperialist and revolutionary view of struggle, >preferring "a refusal to accept" (p. 6), a refusal of the daily >experience of exploitation and injustice, whether experienced as direct >injustice - being sacked by a boss - or cognitively perceived - by >knowing about millions of children that have to live in streets, or the >fact that the world's income is unjust distributed. This feeling of >being trapped in an unjust world like "flies caught in the spider's web" >(p. 5) is the energy that fuels resistance. Holloway's "scream" is a >primarily emotional rejection of the capitalist system, because it is in >capitalism that injustice has to be located. The scream proves that 'we >are' and above 'what we are not yet' (p. 7). So the identity of people >who are screaming is first of all a negative identity. It is the >identity of negating the present capitalist state of world society. Its >negativity forbids thinking in terms of classic forms of identity such >as working class, women or race. > >Holloway states that old forms of revolutionary theory have been >outdated as they have not brought the success expected and for this >reason places his theory beyond the state and beyond power. He asserts >that former leftist theory whether it was Rosa Luxemburg, Vladimir Ilich >Lenin or Eduard Bernstein always had as its focus for social upheaval >the taking of state power. Whether it was by elections (Bernstein) or by >revolution (Luxemburg/Lenin), the object of desire was the state. Since >the state is embedded in a network of power relations, the world cannot >be changed by taking state power. The state itself is only a node in the >net, but not equivalent with society. Holloway maintains that all >"major revolutionary leaders of the twentieth century: Rosa Luxemburg, >Trotzky, Gramsci, Mao, Che" (p. 18) shared this logic. Further on he >asserts that history has shown that this concept has not been successful > >full: http://www.spectrezine.org/reviews/holloway.htm
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