Leviathan’s Body
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Leviathan’s Body: Recovering Fredy Perlman’s anarchist social theory
by Uri Gordon, Forthcoming in Anarchist Studies (2023)
read here:
https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/uri-gordon-leviathan-s-body
Abstract
Fredy Perlman’s anarchist maximalism had a formative influence on the movement’s post-1960s revival, quite apart from his later and better-known critiques of domestication. Perlman’s longneglected books, pamphlets and parodies from 1968–1972 show him championing an antivanguardist ethos of direct action and practical de-alienation, while working towards an original and distinctly anarchist social theory of domination. This article traces the influences of Isaak Rubin, C. Wright Mills, and possibly Henri Lefebvre and Peter Kropotkin, on Perlman’s thought. Perlman’s originality was to generalise a heterodox Marxian critique of social reproduction, including but exceeding productive relations. Thus, he explicitly sets the state in analytical parity with capital, theorising authority as a fetish distinct from exchange value. Implicitly, he points to other containers for alienated powers, including the family, religion and scholarship. Perlman’s account of self- and community powers remains incomplete, however, eliding constitutive violence and inviting engagement with current intersectional approaches.
Keywords: Perlman, Fredy (1934–1985); alienation; New Left; power; the state
A short comment from autonomies dot org about the text
A short comment from autonomies dot org about the text originally posted here:
https://autonomies.org/2023/07/fredy-perlman-commodity-fetishism-an-int…
Uri Gordon’s recently published essay on Fredy Perlman’s anarchist social theory “Leviathan’s Body” serves as an inspiration to return to Perlman’s writings.
Perlman’s starting point, which informs his entire body of work, is a critique of alienation as practice. Initially drawn from Marx via Isaak Illich Rubin, and later influenced by the Situationists and possibly Lefebvre, the key to this critique is the concept of fetishism, which stands for the inverted domination of social forms of alienated power over the individuals who reproduce them. Influenced by his activist experiences and by the anarchist histories he read and translated, and taking further selective cues from C. Wright Mills and possibly from Kropotkin, Perlman’s breakthrough is to generalise this account of fetishism to include but exceed productive relations. Thus, he explicitly sets the state in analytical parity with capital, theorising authority as a fetish distinct from exchange value. Implicitly, he points to various other containers for alienated human powers, including the family, religion and scholarship. In further identifying direct action with the reclamation of alienated powers, Perlman adds sociological coherence to the anarchist case against representation and for collective autonomy in social struggles.
Isaak Illich Rubin’s tragic life would be outlived by his essay of 1927, Abstract Labour and Value in Marx’s System; a fundamental work that would contribute to the emergence of value-form theory, and more recently value criticism theory, withing the Marxist theoretical tradition. For Perlman, the encounter with Rubin’s work would allow him to develop a global understanding of capitalism rooted in a reading of Marx that bound his early theory of alienation with his later concepts of reification, the fetishism of commodities, abstract labour and value. Without here plunging into the details of this reading – summarised in the text below that served as an introduction to the first English language translation of Rubin’s essay -, Perlman would come to share the conception of capitalism as a historical social system that moulded social relations and social “identities” according to the needs of commodity production (and these include goods, labour and money). The critique of capitalism cannot therefore limit itself to questions of economic distribution and political liberalism – however significant these may be -, but must extend to a criticism of labour, money, the commodity form and of the social relations that render these possible (which potentially extends beyond the factory floor and the sphere of labour as typically understood).
Rubin points out that the form which labor takes in capitalist society is the form of value: “The reification of labor in value is the most important conclusion of the theory of fetishism, which explains the inevitability of ‘reification’ of production relations among people in a commodity economy” (Rubin, p.72). Thus the theory of value is about the regulation of labor; it is this fact that most critics of the theory failed to grasp.
The question Marx raises is how the working activity of people is regulated in capitalist society. His theory of value is offered as an answer to this question. It will be shown that most critics do not offer a different answer to the question Marx raises, they object to the question. In other words, economists do not say that Marx gives erroneous answers to the question he raises, but that he gives erroneous answers to the questions they raise:
Marx asks: How is human working activity regulated in a capitalist economy?
Marx answers: Human working activity is alienated by one class, appropriated by another class, congealed in commodities, and sold on a market in the form of value.
The economists answer: Marx is wrong. Market price is not determined by labor; it is determined by the price of production and by demand. “The great Alfred Marshall” insisted that “market price — that is, economic value — was determined by both supply and demand, which interact with one another in much the same way as Adam Smith described the operation of competitive markets.”[63]
Marx was perfectly aware of the role of supply and demand in determining market price, as will be shown below. The point is that Marx did not ask what determines market price; he asked how working activity is regulated.
This Marxist source would be of considerable importance for Perlman’s own thought, as would be quickly revealed in his reading of the May 68 events in France (Worker-Student Action Committees. France May ’68). But it would perhaps also show its limits, limits that can be summarised in the ideas of a historicism of labour (the framing of human experience-thought by capitalist commodity production) and of emancipation as reappropriation or disalienation of human creative power (the conscious and self-conscious autonomy of creation). This however will be for a future post.
some brief follow up notes:
In the text Leviathan's Body, Uri Gordon writes about how Perlman has been mentioned elsewhere, with some incredible sources to track down, like Mark Huba's text "The Other Shore: On politics and ‘spirit’ in Fredy Perlman’s Against His-tory, Against Leviathan." [For now you can read the thesis statement on academia.edu, but hope to have it up on the library soon.]
One important mention that was perhaps left-out was that of the reading group Insurgent Summer, which ended up producing a multiple page insert within The Anvil Review, anarchists review popular culture. I say perhaps above because Artnoose who was part of it was mentioned, but the insert published an entire offline-only collection of writings about the reading group and book. I have a copy or two somewhere that I can get online to share eventually. It has writings from Aragorn! and friends about the book (if memory is correct). I participated in the reading group, but I don’t think any of my writings made it into print.
Towards the end of the text Leviathan’s Body, Uri Gordon mentions that The Strait will have part 2 coming out soon from Lorraine, which is super exciting!
In the other recent Fredy Perlman thread on SHH! THIS IS A LIBRARY! I shared a podcast of Uri Gordon talking about Fredy Perlman that is highly worth the listen, before or after reading Leviathan’s Body. Link below:
1º Painel virtual: Recovering Fredy Perlman’s anarchist social theory, Uri Gordon
YouTube link: https://youtu.be/O2OQFB_6CWc (starts a little after 9 minutes in)
Insurgent Summer
oh wow, I never knew about IS with Aragorn! -- very interesting.
did they deal with any of the works I discussed or mostly with the later stuff?
thanks also for promoting the youtube link
I had a chat with Cyber Dandy a couple of months ago about Perlman and other topics:
https://cyberdandy.buzzsprout.com/1974438/11671665
Insurgent Summer
Thanks for your reply Uri!
Insurgent Summer was an online and offline reading group around 2010 that had a number of participants whose focus was the book, Letters of Insurgents. From the start I was quite impressed with the overall group effort because the text wasn't yet posted or formatted for The Anarchist Library, so someone scanned the entire book, another person OCR'd (optical character recognition) it, and then a handful of librarians helped format it for the library markup.
To answer your question, while it has been many years, for the most part the reading group and The Anvil Review insert discussed Letters of Insurgents although I'm sure some did some brief cross-over to his other works. I know one aspect that I found intriguing was tracing real world events to events that happened in the book and figuring out an exact setting from that. I'm working on finding my copy or getting a copy to share electronically. My notes from Insurgent Summer are posted to my blog here:
https://stalkingtheearth.net/content/letters-insurgents-brief-commentary
Another participants notes are posted here:
https://ijustreadaboutthat.com/category/insurgent-summer/
The website Insurgent Summer has long been down, but you can use archive dot org to check out the old posts:
http://insurgentsummer.org/
https://web.archive.org/web/20100701000000*/insurgentsummer.org
Here is a Fifth Estate article about the reading group:
https://www.fifthestate.org/archive/383-summer-2010/reading-letters-ins…
And if you search for "Insurgent Summer Fredy Perlman" or some combination of related terms you might find some interesting gems.
Insurgent Summer text…
Insurgent Summer text mentioned above is now published for reading on The Anarchist Library:
thanks for your interest!
thanks all for your interest! i hope my writing will lead people to read more of Perlman and get deeper into his work
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