{"id":1343,"date":"2020-11-27T12:44:32","date_gmt":"2020-11-27T17:44:32","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/abolition1313\/?p=1343"},"modified":"2021-04-27T15:33:05","modified_gmt":"2021-04-27T19:33:05","slug":"etienne-balibar-the-manifesto-beyond-its-time-afterword-to-a-new-edition","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/abolition1313\/etienne-balibar-the-manifesto-beyond-its-time-afterword-to-a-new-edition\/","title":{"rendered":"\u00c9tienne Balibar | The Manifesto Beyond Its Time (Afterword to a new edition) (ENGLISH)"},"content":{"rendered":"<h2><a href=\"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/abolition1313\/etienne-balibar\/\">By \u00c9tienne Balibar<\/a>, translated by Xavier Flory<\/h2>\n<h1 style=\"text-align: left;\">Afterword to a new edition<a href=\"#_ftn1\" name=\"_ftnref1\">[1]<\/a><\/h1>\n<p>Although not the most widely disseminated \u201ccommunist\u201d book of all time\u2014that honor belongs to <em>\u201c<\/em>The Little Red Book,\u201d or <em>Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse-tung<\/em>, which is almost in competition with the Bible and the Koran\u2014the <em>Manifesto<\/em> of 1848 remains the most emblematic text of the revolutionary Marxist tradition: it declares and explains the intentions, and lays down the theoretical foundations in the form of a historical narrative and social analysis that concludes with a political program. The mass movement that, more than any other, set the terms of politics between the mid-19<sup>th<\/sup> and the mid-20<sup>th<\/sup> centuries (although without \u201ctransforming the world\u201d in the way imagined), organized and developed itself\u2014and as with any great \u201cbelief\u201d in history, \u00a0split and reformed itself\u2014using the vocabulary and essential historical narrative of the <em>Manifesto<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>This made its authors Marx and Engels<a href=\"#_ftn2\" name=\"_ftnref2\">[2]<\/a> incarnations of the intellectual figure pursued by the entire philosophical tradition\u2014or at least the Western tradition, which was thereby universalized: the \u201cphilosopher king,\u201d whose learned discourse, guided and simultaneously enlightened by its political intention, has a decisive effect on the life of men. This made them figures of a certain absolute, which had nothing to do with transcendence, but rather with history and politics, where the social objectivity and the revolutionary subjectivity envelop and determine one another.\u00a0 It is therefore unsurprising that, more than any other \u201cliterary\u201d document, the title and content of the <em>Manifesto<\/em> incarnate the insistence and uncertainty of the idea of <em>revolution<\/em>, an idea that the men and women of the 21<sup>st<\/sup> century have not stopped dreaming and fretting about.<\/p>\n<p>However, this is where the difficulties start. Now that the soil of experience and assumptions upon which this incarnation rested has more or less completely been eroded\u2014not only by time, but by the often dramatic vicissitudes of history\u2014or to borrow Foucault\u2019s metaphor, now that the text and ideas of the <em>Manifesto<\/em> are no longer a fish in the water of history, outside of which they cannot breathe,<a href=\"#_ftn3\" name=\"_ftnref3\">[3]<\/a> what can the status of this text be, not only for those who will continue to read it, but for all those who will hear of it as the concentrated expression of \u201cMarxism\u201d? The risk is that its status will oscillate between the antithetical poles of a <em>historical<\/em> <em>document<\/em>, even a museum piece, which one must submit to careful philological, ideological, and sociological analyses, but which by definition only sketches out a \u201cpast future\u201d (Koselleck), and the opposite pole: a timeless <em>prophecy, <\/em>which can be invoked as a sign of hope in the face of any \u201cfact\u201d\u2014facts that one must, as Rousseau said, \u201cput to the side,\u201d in order to imagine the possibility of emancipation\u2014and that can be called an Idea, \u201cThe Communist Idea.\u201d Thus, on one hand, theory reduced to the dated conditions of its composition, and on the other hand, practice as a pure \u201cinterruption,\u201d albeit in the form of an invocation rather than a contemporary event.<\/p>\n<p>It is to escape that choice that, without trying to reconstitute the absolute, I would like once again to attempt a <em>critical reading<\/em> of the <em>Manifesto<\/em>. By this I mean a reading that examines the text\u2019s propositions and arguments by taking them literally, but that simultaneously exposes the <em>aporias<\/em>, not only in the form of internal difficulties that were originally elided, as the <em>development<\/em> of the \u201ctheory\u201d revealed them, but also the <em>blind spots, <\/em>whose reality and importance were revealed by \u201cpractical\u201d <em>application<\/em>. I hope thereby to at least create the possibility of a <em>new usage<\/em> of the formulations of the <em>Manifesto<\/em>, which continues to articulate the \u201cinterpretation of the world\u201d and its \u201ctransformation\u201d (following the antithesis enigmatically proposed in the \u201cEleventh Thesis on Feuerbach\u201d), where the tipping point from one to the other resides. But I have no advance certitude about the proportion in which (somewhere between \u201cnothing\u201d and \u201ceverything\u201d) these formulations can be \u201cvalidated.\u201d Nothing is established. Everything can potentially be rethought and recovered, in conditions to be determined.<\/p>\n<p>I will proceed by consecutively identifying a few of the large kernels of meaning and problems that approximately correspond to each of the three principal chapters of the <em>Manifesto<\/em>: <em>the analogous nature of revolutions<\/em> (bourgeois and proletarian) and the idea of class struggles as a \u201ccivil war\u201d (Chapter One); the <em>negative<\/em> conception of politics as the end of the State (Chapter Two); and the position of the \u201cpartisan theory \u201d (and of its discourse) <em>outside<\/em> of ideological conflicts and its articulation to the revolutionary subject (Chapter Three). But we have to begin at the end, by postponing a discussion of the \u201cpremises\u201d with which Marx and Engels arrange their conclusions in the form of rallying cries.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\">***<\/p>\n<p>The \u201cfourth chapter\u201d of the <em>Manifesto<\/em> lays out the communists\u2019 position (<em>Stellung<\/em>) towards the \u201cdifferent opposition parties\u201d (<em>oppositionellen Parteien<\/em>). In the course of the argument, this is enlarged to include \u201cevery revolutionary movement against the existing social and political order\u201d as they develop (differently and unequally) all over (<em>\u00dcberall<\/em>). As was already made clear in the second chapter, this formulation makes it clear that the \u201ccommunists\u201d themselves are not a <em>distinct <\/em>party in an organizational sense. They are rather the link, the \u201csubjective\u201d capacity\u00a0 that creates the synthesis between the revolutionary \u201cparties\u201d: in a sense, a \u201cparty of parties,\u201d or a \u201cmovement of movements,\u201d that must <em>totalize<\/em> them in order to propel them towards action at the level of the <em>totality <\/em>itself, which is to say, the world that capitalism is in the process of unifying. This means that the movements that aim to <em>overturn the existing order<\/em> can be considered from <em>a single point of view<\/em>, or as the effect of a single logic.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\">It becomes apparent, however, through an examination of the ideas that flow from and undergird the famous concluding cry, \u201cWorkers of the world, unite!\u201d, that it encompasses several aspects. The first and most obvious of these is the \u201cviolent\u201d antagonism (<em>feindlichen Gegensatz<\/em> in German, a <em>hostility <\/em>that recalls a relationship of civil war, as mentioned in the first chapter) between the proletariat and the bourgeoisie, which gave birth to and organizes the capitalist order. This antagonism is rooted in the very mechanism of the exploitation of labor\u2014the work of a <em>laboring<\/em> class to which the designation \u201cproletariat\u201d underscores its status as a <em>radically<\/em> exploited class, without any reserve of autonomy\u2014by means of the privately owned instruments of production and the wage structure.<a href=\"#_ftn4\" name=\"_ftnref4\">[4]<\/a> This antagonism can only lead to an overturning or an abolition of capitalist property itself. But since this form had itself absorbed and made absolute all prior historical forms of property, the reversal of capitalist property would of necessity signify the abolition of private property <em>in general<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>In doing so, it would end the history of class struggle (or as the preface to <em>A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy<\/em> of 1959 put it, an end to the history of \u201cantagonistic forms\u201d of social production). It is evidently to this final state of affairs that the epithet <em>communist<\/em> most perfectly applies.<a href=\"#_ftn5\" name=\"_ftnref5\">[5]<\/a> The communists are those who \u201cin all movements prioritize the question of property\u201d and thereby prepare the transformation of private property into \u201csocietal property\u201d (Chapter Two, <em>gesellschaftliches Eigentum<\/em>, sometimes mistranslated as \u201ccommon property\u201d).<\/p>\n<p>But there are also two other facets of the project, included in the rallying cry, which every articulation of the text, insofar as it describes a \u201cmovement\u201d and not just a \u201cregime,\u201d leads us to consider as corollaries of the first, and thus as integral parts of the communist conception of the <em>Manifesto<\/em>: <em>internationalism<\/em> and <em>political radicalism<\/em>, which \u201cundergirds\u201d all <em>democratic<\/em> parties and (by eventually proceeding to a critique of their \u201crevolutionary illusions\u201d), orients them towards the objective form of their \u201cfuture,\u201d namely the communist revolution.<\/p>\n<p>These two aspects are intimately related, because the forms of internationalism that are concretely evoked involve an identification with the \u201cdisposition\u201d of radical (egalitarian, revolutionary) democracy in order to take it beyond itself into a social revolution\u2014or in other words, to take radical democracy beyond its \u201cbourgeois limits.\u201d It\u2019s clear, however, that these two aspects are not on equal footing, and this is even more apparent if one traces their genealogy throughout the work. Internationalism is immediately linked to the very idea of the proletariat<a href=\"#_ftn6\" name=\"_ftnref6\">[6]<\/a>: the correlation is founded on an analysis of the transnational development of capital, and thus of labor. Capital as such is global, and \u201cthe proletarians have no homeland\u201d (Chapter Two). One can therefore say that in the <em>Manifesto<\/em> there is an \u201canalytical\u201d unity of communism and internationalism. The one is unthinkable without the other.<\/p>\n<p>In contrast, the unity between communism and democracy is \u201csynthetic\u201d; it joins two distinct terms, which is not to say that this unity is contingent: without the fight for democracy, communism doesn\u2019t exist (for democracy provides the political education of the workers), and without the \u201cconquest of democracy\u201d (Chapter Two), we can\u2019t arrive at the classless society, where the values of liberty and equality inherent in the democratic ideal are not only preserved, but intensified. Nonetheless, the term \u201cdemocracy\u201d can seem to designate nothing more than a political \u201cmeans,\u201d a dialectical <em>mediator<\/em> that the communist movement has to put into motion in order to achieve its ends. The mediator <em>vanishes<\/em> in the result.<\/p>\n<p>We will have the opportunity to discuss the significance and consequences of this triple dimension of communism laid out in the <em>Manifesto<\/em> in some detail, and of the inequality between the terms. And I will already announce the resulting question I wish to pose, without providing a preconceived response: if today, while the \u201cparty\u201d announced performatively in the <em>Manifesto<\/em> (or which the <em>Manifesto<\/em> <em>brought into being <\/em>by describing its necessity and defining its historical function), not only has <em>entered<\/em> reality (as the new preface of Marx and Engels already announced in 1872, with the advent of the Paris Commune), but has also <em>exited<\/em> it (at least in the organizational form that it had assumed in the 19<sup>th<\/sup> and 20<sup>th<\/sup> centuries), and we wish to persist in calling ourselves \u201ccommunist,\u201d and to give a practical content to the word in our political action, then what becomes of Marx and Engels\u2019 three components of\u00a0 communism (socialization of the means of production, class internationalism, and revolutionary democracy)? And what other elements, potentially contradictory with the initial ones, should we add?<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\">***<\/p>\n<p>We now arrive at the first of three conceptual analyses that will introduce us to the core of the <em>problems<\/em> latent in the theory of the <em>Manifesto<\/em>: the conception of the revolution as a \u201cnegativity\u201d of the historical process, as expressed in Chapter One. Naturally, it\u2019s out of the question to examine the entire chapter, which through an extraordinary <em>tour de force<\/em>, manages to <em>summarize <\/em>(or synthetically concentrate) the essentials of a \u201cscience of history\u201d that did not yet exist\u2014and thus, which invents the science in the form of its conclusions.<a href=\"#_ftn7\" name=\"_ftnref7\">[7]<\/a> We must therefore skim far too quickly over what today still (and perhaps more than ever) appear as a mark of \u201cgenious\u201d in the theses of Marx and Engels, in the sense that they <em>foresee<\/em>\u00a0 societal transformations of which in their time there were but the slightest symptoms. This \u201cverification\u201d of the Marxist predictions started even during the lifetimes of Marx and Engels (even as other projections were refuted, including that of an <em>imminent revolution<\/em> to be precipitated by a general crisis of capitalism).<\/p>\n<p>It is thus that in 1867, in the conclusion of Book I of <em>Capital, <\/em>after detailing the \u201chistorical tendency of capitalist accumulation,\u201d by underlining the socializing effects of production and the inevitable concentration of property, Marx comes to the \u201cnegation of the negation,\u201d the content of which is the \u201cexpropriation of the expropriators.\u201d He even cites the <em>Manifesto<\/em> to prove that\u00a0 the <em>revolutionary form of societal transformation<\/em>, operated through the class struggle, is more relevant than ever.<a href=\"#_ftn8\" name=\"_ftnref8\">[8]<\/a> This \u201ccollage\u201d method will be repeated several times, and it played a big role in crediting the idea that the theory of the <em>Manifesto<\/em> constituted a fundamental and invariable \u201cbloc,\u201d to be \u201crectified\u201d only at the margins.<\/p>\n<p>The <em>Manifesto<\/em> does not, of course, ignore the link between accumulation and concentration, and it seems almost to sense, if in more philosophical than economic terms, the problem of socialization. But of primary interest for its authors\u2014since these traits make capitalism not only an economic system or a \u201cmode of production,\u201d but the essential condition and activity of a <em>class<\/em> (the market and industrial \u201cbourgeoisie\u201d)\u2014are the processes of <em>globalization<\/em> and <em>permanent revolution<\/em>. Capitalism is by nature a \u201cglobal\u201d system, or better yet, it is the economic system that \u201cglobalizes the globe,\u201d by transgressing cultural and territorial limits and by subjecting every population to a single form of domination, of which the theater is the \u201cglobal market.\u201d Capitalism and its carrier, the bourgeoisie, are \u201crevolutionary\u201d in the sense that they never stop transforming the productive forces and dissolving social forms that stand in their way, including those that they themselves created (<em>with the exception<\/em> of the most important social form: bourgeois property). These two theses undergird what, as I will show, constitutes the guiding thread of the <em>Manifesto<\/em>\u2019s theory, namely the idea of a <em>historical analogy between the bourgeois and proletarian revolutions<\/em>, which organizes all the developments of Chapter One and its dialectical unfolding.<\/p>\n<p>But before explaining this decisive point, I would like to provide a corrective to the preceding remarks. It is true that Marx had an extraordinary perception of the link between capitalism and globalization, which he sees in capitalism\u2019s need to constantly expand the scale of production, to intensify the division of labor, and to generalize the competition between workers and between providers of raw materials. This conception leads to a class struggle between the bourgeoisie and the proletariat across the entire social formation, thereby revealing a single and unified \u201cuniversal history\u201d (<em>Weltgeschichte<\/em> in German).\u00a0 Marx is, of course, attentive to the \u201cinequalities of development\u201d between countries and regions of the world, as well as to the lags produced by the fact that capitalism took over systems of production that preceded it from heterogeneous social forms. But in the <em>Manifesto<\/em> at least, he tends to consider colonialism simply a \u201cviolent\u201d means by which capital and the bourgeoisie destruct the obstacles that \u201ctraditional\u201d societies put up against the penetration of exchange value. And he also thinks that ultimately, the form of labor that capital exploits is always wage labor, accomplished by a proletarian.<a href=\"#_ftn9\" name=\"_ftnref9\">[9]<\/a> The result is that all the complexity of the social relations and relations of exploitations in the world where capitalist domination extends has no other significance, in the final analysis, than that of a <em>delay<\/em> or a <em>detour<\/em> that does not affect the essential <em>uni-linearity<\/em>\u00a0 of the historical process that will eventually lead to worldwide revolution through the expansion of capitalism.<\/p>\n<p>This is one of the points on which subsequent rectifications are the most interesting, in particular the one we find in the preface of 1882 (right before Marx\u2019s death, but still signed by both Marx and Engels), which evokes the \u201cgeopolitical\u201d effects of the development of capitalism in America and Russia, a discussion that reflects, in particular, Marx\u2019s exchange with the Russian \u201cpopulists\u201d on the possible communist futures that might arise from the remaining pre-capitalist relations in certain countries. As when he reflected on the effects of the acceleration of history, which could produce a \u201ctime discordance\u201d between Germany and the rest of Europe, it seems that Marx was on the cusp of admitting that a \u201ccomplex\u201d totality does not develop in a homogeneous form or in a linear timeframe. We will come back to this question. But, as we see, as long as these analyses don\u2019t undermine the idea of the \u201csimplification\u201d or \u201cpolarization\u201d of the class struggle around a unique form of labor exploitation (wage labor), these details only reinforce the <em>determinism<\/em> of the overall development.<\/p>\n<p>We have arrived at the essential point, and the thesis of the <em>analogous nature of revolutions<\/em> is explicit in the text: \u201cAt a certain stage in the development of these means of production and of exchange \u2026 the feudal relations of property became no longer compatible with the already developed productive forces; they became so many fetters. They had to be burst asunder; they were burst asunder. \u2026 A similar movement is going on before our own eyes. Modern bourgeois society, with its relations of production, exchange and property\u2014a society that has conjured such gigantic means of production and of exchange\u2014is like the sorcerer who is no longer able to control the powers of the nether world whom he has called up by his spells\u2026\u201d<\/p>\n<p>And a bit further, on the political side: \u201cwhen the class struggle nears the decisive hour, the progress of dissolution going on within the ruling class \u2026 assumes such a violent, glaring character, that a small section of the ruling class cuts itself adrift, and joins the revolutionary class, the class that holds the future in its hands. Just as, therefore, at an earlier period, a section of the nobility went over to the bourgeoisie, so now a portion of the bourgeoisie goes over to the proletariat\u2026\u201d<\/p>\n<p>This thesis goes well beyond a sentence. Underlying it is an analytical framework that applies to all of history, and particularly to \u201cmodern\u201d history, which is its true object. We should note that this idea does not suggest a <em>static<\/em> schema, of the type: observe (or imagine, in the case of the proletarian revolution to come) revolutions, and we shall see that they can all be categorized under the same concept, which is an important task in order to justify our use of the word or to choose one of its meanings from those that have built up in the word throughout history.<a href=\"#_ftn10\" name=\"_ftnref10\">[10]<\/a> What\u2019s at stake, instead, is the ability to extrapolate determinations from the bourgeois revolution\u00a0 that can be applied to the proletarian revolution: a dialectical process of \u201csurpassing\u201d the limits of the bourgeois revolution through the proletarian revolution, <em>on the basis<\/em> of the contradictions inherent in the first one and the effects it provokes. However, this does presuppose that a <em>typical historical configuration <\/em>(the \u201crevolutionary\u201d configuration) reproduces and intensifies itself, and thus <em>repeats<\/em> at least twice. Which is to say, on the level of historical \u201cactors:\u201d the bourgeoisie and the proletariat are both <em>revolutionary classes<\/em>, not by accident, at a particular moment in their history, but <em>in essence<\/em>. It is simply that at a given moment, the proletariat that had become revolutionary <em>in the image<\/em> of the bourgeoisie, <em>becomes revolutionary in its stead<\/em>; it becomes <em>the<\/em> revolutionary class against the bourgeoisie, which <em>ceases to be revolutionary<\/em>. And since this revolutionary process cannot but be <em>the final one<\/em>, since the bourgeoisie\u2014with its ceaseless \u201crevolutions\u201d in social institutions and productive forces\u2014instituted a system of <em>radical<\/em> exploitation, one could also say that the proletarian revolution is to the bourgeois revolution as an <em>absolute<\/em> to a <em>relative<\/em> revolution.<a href=\"#_ftn11\" name=\"_ftnref11\">[11]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>One might think that this is but a simple <em>postulate<\/em> of the philosophy of history. However, what I think is remarkable is that in the <em>Manifesto<\/em>, Marx and Engels truly <em>constructed a concept<\/em> around this thesis. And the distinguishing feature of a concept is that one can analyze it in its components (and from there, try to vary them). To isolate two components that Marx and Engel\u2019s narrative continually interlaces: first, the <em>bourgeoisie<\/em> is constantly presented as an <em>intrinsically revolutionary class <\/em>(until it reaches its limits), and second, it can be collectively considered an <em>agent<\/em> (or, more philosophically, a \u201csubject\u201d). Taken together, these two traits give the bourgeoisie, as described and even personified in the <em>Manifesto<\/em>, an almost demiurgic character, which has always struck readers.<a href=\"#_ftn12\" name=\"_ftnref12\">[12]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>The bourgeoisie creates its world, which is to say, it recreates the world in its image. But what is this representation made of? Essentially the idea that the <em>bourgeoisie brought both an \u201cindustrial revolution\u201d and a \u201cpolitical revolution\u201d into history<\/em>. The \u201corganic\u201d combination of these two ideas or processes, which continue to be studied today by historians and philosophers in isolation (except, naturally, by those who take the lead from Marx and Engels, such as Hobsbawn or Wallerstein in their characterization of an \u201cage of revolutions\u201d), is a spectacular dramaturgical effect that takes place in the first chapter of the <em>Manifesto<\/em>, and in which technological change and the development of productive forces at a worldwide scale are described as correlated to the \u201cconquest of power\u201d (or the sovereignty of class that gives birth to \u201cmodern state power\u201d). One could even say, when reading the developments dedicated to the social mores and values determined by bourgeois domination, which \u201cprofane\u201d the institutions of the established social order and \u201cdrown\u201d religious, \u201cemotional,\u201d and aesthetic values and ideals in the \u201cfrigid waters of egotistical calculus,\u201d that it adds up to a sketch of a theory of (bourgeois) \u201ccultural revolution.\u201d But it can more accurately be described as a critique of the <em>nihilism <\/em>of bourgeois culture, which penetrates both the industrial and political revolutions. The fundamental consequence of all this, to come back to the framework of analogous revolutions, is that the proletarian revolution will also have to combine a (new) industrial revolution with a (different) political revolution, which will be directed precisely against the edifice of \u201cmodern state power.\u201d The first aspect engendered the <em>productivism<\/em> of the Marxist tradition and of the socialist revolutions it inspired (unless one conceived of an \u201calternative development\u201d of productive forces, a theoretical bifurcation that remains possible, but that has not been exploited until very recently). The second leads us straight to the problem of <em>defining politics <\/em>and the concept of politics in Marx and Engels, to which we will return.<a href=\"#_ftn13\" name=\"_ftnref13\">[13]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>The second component, intrinsically political, or rather <em>meta-political<\/em>, is the equivalence established in the famous opening lines of Chapter One and reiterated throughout the text, between <em>class struggle<\/em> and \u201c<em>civil war<\/em>.\u201d This brings us to the polarizing element in Marxist theory as it applies itself to politics (some of whose consequences have been authentically emancipatory and others that have led to catastrophe). How should it be understood? My own reading of the text is that, first of all, it should not be understood as a <em>decision<\/em>: nobody \u201cdecides\u201d to wage class struggle as a civil war; it is rather a structural characteristic, a consequence of the <em>antagonistic<\/em> relations of exploitation. But I also don\u2019t think one should consider the comparison simply \u201cmetaphorical,\u201d since it really serves as a key link between <em>history <\/em>and<em> politics <\/em>in the <em>Manifesto<\/em>. Not only is the class struggle <em>properly speaking<\/em> a civil war (although importantly, \u201csometimes open, sometimes covert\u201d), but in some ways it is <em>the fundamental civil war<\/em>, the civil war that is not accidental and undergirds all others. This is important to understand what will lead Marx to significant rectifications in terminology, particularly after the \u201ctraumatic\u201d experience of the insurrection that ends in the massacre of workers in 1848.<a href=\"#_ftn14\" name=\"_ftnref14\">[14]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Thus, this thesis appears particularly risky, which is why it\u2019s important not to distort it. To do so, we must understand that the equivalence works <em>in both directions<\/em>:\u00a0 Marx and Engels interpret the class struggle as a \u201ccivil war,\u201d but they also reduce civil war to a \u201cclass struggle.\u201d The result is an <em>enlargement<\/em> of the concept, which had previously served to measure the <em>intensity<\/em> of the social antagonism in history. In the sense that leads <em>towards<\/em> the idea of \u201ccivil war,\u201d the content is provided by the common thesis of the Manifesto and (in a more directly economical direction) of <em>Wage Labor and Capital<\/em> (which makes use on this point of the arguments of Ricardo and, in particular, of Ricardo\u2019s English socialist adherents, on the inverse movement of wages and profits): there is no community between the classes; the relation of exploitation excludes talk of a common interest between the owners of the means of production and the workers. Capitalists must wage a \u201cwar\u201d against the subsistence of their own workers; the\u00a0 workers, whose \u201cstruggle begins with their very existence,\u201d discover that their existence will be saved only with the abolition of capitalist property, and thus, of the bourgeoisie. One can add the idea that in the course of history we move from a partial and dispersed struggle (between multiple socio-economic \u201cactors\u201d) to a <em>simplified<\/em> antagonism that polarizes the entirety of society. There is therefore no \u201cmediation,\u201d no \u201cthird party,\u201d or \u201cintermediary force,\u201d except as residues, which the development of the antagonism will end up absorbing.<\/p>\n<p>However, and reciprocally, the Manifesto tends to <em>reduce<\/em> civil war, once it has been extended to the totality of history, to the <em>social<\/em> struggle between the classes (in opposition to a struggle between purely political \u201cparties,\u201d or to religious wars). We know that Michel Foucault, in order to speak of the \u201cwar of races\u201d as it was described in Europe between the 18<sup>th<\/sup> and 19<sup>th<\/sup> centuries (including in texts cited by Marx), floated a reversed reading of Clausewitz\u2019s formula that war was a continuation of politics by other means: an interpretation of politics as a continuation or metamorphosis of war. This idea is not foreign \u00a0to Marx; it is in fact at the heart of his argument in the <em>Manifesto, <\/em>on the condition that one identify political conflict (struggle) with social conflict (struggle). This interpretation resides not only on a polarization, but on a <em>scission<\/em> of the \u201csocial body,\u201d which periodically leads to a <em>rising to extremes <\/em>in which the class confrontation becomes a question of life and death for both sides. This vocabulary is present in the <em>Manifesto<\/em>: \u201cBut not only has the bourgeoisie forged the weapons that bring death to itself; it has also called into existence the men who are to wield the weapons \u2013 the modern working class \u2013 the proletarians.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>To recap these remarks (and keeping in mind a possible comparison with other texts by Marx): in 1847 he thinks he has<em> the solution<\/em> to the dialectical problem, which will be the obsession of his analyses in <em>Capital<\/em>\u2014the reciprocal transformation of <em>contradiction<\/em> and <em>conflict<\/em>, the postulate of a struggle without the possibility of compromise that can only lead to an abolition of relations of domination, in the immanence of economic contradictions, themselves aggravated to crisis by the development of the conflict. Which is why he had previously written (in <em>The Poverty of Philosophy<\/em>, 1847), that \u201chistory always advances by the bad side,\u201d and concludes the same text quoting George Sand: \u201cCombat or\u00a0 Death:\u00a0 bloody\u00a0 struggle\u00a0 or\u00a0 extinction.\u00a0 It\u00a0 is\u00a0 thus\u00a0 that\u00a0 the\u00a0 question\u00a0 is\u00a0 inexorably\u00a0 put.\u201d<a href=\"#_ftn15\" name=\"_ftnref15\">[15]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Before coming to the concept of political struggle that is articulated in the metapolitics of \u201ccivil war,\u201d<a href=\"#_ftn16\" name=\"_ftnref16\">[16]<\/a> two observations on the implications of the <em>combination<\/em> of the theses of the class struggle as a civil war and of two revolutionary classes, which justifies the analogous nature of the (two) revolutions. The first, and most immediately problematic issue (not only from an \u201cethical, but from a historical point of view), is that this framework is destined to exclude the \u201cpolitical capacity\u201d (in the strong sense that includes the ability to \u201cmake history\u201d) of all the forces, classes, and movements that do not <em>overturn the existing social order<\/em> and the dominant classes. Two of them are explicitly mentioned in the text, and their importance has not stopped growing.<\/p>\n<p>First, women, of whom (in Chapter Two) Marx and Engels\u2014in response to the accusation that communists want to introduce the \u201ccommunity of women\u201d\u2014incisively take up the argument of the romantic feminists who identified bourgeois marriage as a form of legal prostitution and as a \u201cdistribution of women between men,\u201d who consider women collectively as instruments of pleasure and (re)production. Nonetheless, there does not seem to be a \u201cwoman struggle,\u201d let alone a coming <em>revolution<\/em> in relations between the sexes. I don\u2019t think this is (primarily) due to sexism: it is first due to the fact that, in the framework of the succession of forms of social domination laid out in Chapter One, the \u201cpatriarchy\u201d that survives through several historical epochs is not inscribable as the enabling condition of a \u201crevolution.\u201d It\u2019s true that one could simply object: if Marx and Engels had taken the necessity of such a revolution into consideration (a \u201crevolt of the reproductive forces\u201d and not only of the \u201cproductive forces\u201d), they would have been able to rectify the progressive linearity of universal history\u2026 But in that case, the foundation of the idea of a <em>necessary succession <\/em>of one revolutionary process by another (\u201cthe bourgeoisie produces above all its own gravediggers. Its fall and the victory of the proletariat are equally inevitable.\u201d) no longer holds, and there is no more <em>Manifesto<\/em>. Or at least not this one.<\/p>\n<p>There is also the problem of the peasantry.<a href=\"#_ftn17\" name=\"_ftnref17\">[17]<\/a> We know that the historical role of the peasantry is the crux of Marxist analyses and political practice, from Marx himself in his analysis of Louis-Napol\u00e9on Bonaparte\u2019s \u201c18<sup>th<\/sup> Brumaire,\u201d which brutally cuts short the revolutionary experience of 1848, up to the Russian Revolution of the 20<sup>th<\/sup> century that ends in the forced collectivization and decimation of peasants\u2014until other, dissident \u201cMarxists,\u201d in colonial or semi-colonial contexts dominated by imperialism, decide to <em>substitute the peasantry for the proletariat<\/em> in the role of the \u201crevolutionary class\u201d\u2026 However, in the theory of the <em>Manifesto<\/em>, the peasantry is not an active class, let alone a class of the future: it is destined to extinction via capitalist industrialization and the concentration of property that includes the land. Thus, the peasantry can either function as a <em>reactionary<\/em> force that attempts (or dreams) of returning to a society prior to the bourgeois social transformation, or else it can merge with the proletariat that \u201crecruits from all classes of society,\u201d in rhythm with their dispossession and pauperization. It is thus <em>divided<\/em> by the principal antagonism, of which it is but an object. Only at the end of his life, through his exchanges with the Russian \u201cpopulists,\u201d did Marx begin to imagine another framework, in which <em>pre-capitalist<\/em> forms (and therefore also their carriers) can make an original contribution to the communist revolution (albeit, under the conditions of a proletariat revolution underway elsewhere in the world). As with the alienation of women in the bourgeois order, if only in an inverse sense, one sees the possibility of a <em>limit<\/em>, or of a \u201cpoint of heresy\u201d of the theory, where there are possibilities of a <em>revision<\/em> of the revolutionary scenario. But the revision might end up becoming \u201ctotal.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>This hypothesis also leads to another, more disturbing hypothesis for the \u201cdogmatic\u201d reading of Marx and Engel\u2019s text, but which the contemporary transformations of capitalism force us to consider. What\u2019s striking is that we can make these hypotheses <em>starting from<\/em> the very framework of <em>the analogous nature of revolutions<\/em>. In the <em>Manifesto<\/em>, it is destined to demonstrate that of the two \u201crevolutionary classes,\u201d it is the bourgeoisie that must finally make way for the proletariat. But this is based on the idea that the \u201crevolution of productive forces\u201d constantly caused by capitalism will come up against internal contradictions and conflicts that the bourgeoisie is incapable of resolving, and from which the proletariat, on the contrary, will emerge reinforced with a project to transform societal relations. It\u2019s possible, unfortunately, that history has created the opposite scaffolding, in which <em>the revolutionary capacities of capitalism triumph over those of the proletariat<\/em> (in the sense of <em>working class<\/em>), and even \u201cuse\u201d the class struggle and socialist revolutions to \u201cinvent\u201d new methods of the organization of labor and to open new fields of exploitation.<\/p>\n<p>In this sense, a \u201cspecter\u201d begins to haunt not Europe or the bourgeois world, but the world of intellectual and militant communists: the specter of a revolution or of a proletariat class that doesn\u2019t represent the <em>future<\/em> of bourgeois revolutions, but that, like Marx\u2019s \u201cpeasantry,\u201d is destined to <em>become reactionary<\/em>, because the possibilities of emancipation and improvement of its condition of which it dreams point only towards the past. This hypothesis is disastrous, if not outright nihilist. But it\u2019s important to point out that it is also inescapable from the moment the renewal capacities of capitalism are recognized, <em>only <\/em>if<em> the analogous nature of revolutions <\/em>\u00a0must be inscribed in a \u201chistoricist\u201d framework of history (as Benjamin puts it), which in reality reveals itself as a bourgeois philosophy of history. If this framework is challenged, then there is no <em>given<\/em> \u201csolution\u201d\u00a0 to \u201csave the possibility of revolution,\u201d but there is also no <em>absolute<\/em> obstacle that would prevent us from imagining the solution.<a href=\"#_ftn18\" name=\"_ftnref18\">[18]<\/a><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\">***<\/p>\n<p>This brings us to the <em>concept of politics<\/em> implied by the analyses and propositions of the <em>Manifesto<\/em>, and in particular in Chapter Two\u2014a question loaded with difficulties, but also pregnant with all the breaking power of this text in the history of philosophy, and which for that reason has continued to inspire the most contradictory commentaries: from those who think that Marx and Engels have formulated a conception of politics without precedent in history, comparable only to a few radical innovations (Machiavelli, Hobbes, and perhaps Weber or Schmitt), and those who think that Marx has no theory of politics, since he dissolves its autonomy into a sociological and eschatological \u201cmetapolitics\u201d (the \u201cdeath of the state\u201d). In the text, we find two contradictory affirmations:\u00a0 on the one hand, the class struggle of the proletariat, in unifying itself (first at the national level) and in elevating immediate struggles and resistances to exploitation all the way to the level of an abolition of capitalism, becomes a \u201cpolitical struggle,\u201d which above all invents <em>a new form of politics <\/em>(with new methods, carriers, and stakes). On the other hand, by abolishing the division of society into classes and the accompanying antagonism, the proletarian revolution brings about \u201cthe end of the political state.\u201d But this \u201cend\u201d can only react to what lays the groundwork for it: the proletarian class struggle <em>opposes <\/em>the existing forms of politics, and therefore does not fall under the concept of the political.<\/p>\n<p>What leads to the juxtaposition of these two contradictory theses? In the <em>Manifesto<\/em> and in texts from the same period (in particular, <em>The Poverty of Philosophy<\/em>, of which the final pages contain in this regard the decisive formulations), we see the outline of a \u201cdialectic\u201d that follows the classic form of the negation of the negation: politics <em>affirms<\/em> itself first as the \u201crevolutionary\u201d politics of a class (and a revolution in politics), only to be subsequently <em>negated<\/em> by the \u201ctotal revolution\u201d that abolishes its institutions and agents (class, the state). However in the details of the argument (and precisely because Marx and Engels want to specify the moments of this negation of the negation), we observe instead a <em>suspension <\/em>of the effects of the dialectic, accompanied by an unresolved\u2014and perhaps unresolvable\u2014complexity of these moments. I will try to show that these complications are part of the <em>problematization <\/em>of politics and its concept that the <em>Manifesto<\/em> produces, and thus might be\u2014up into the present\u2014more instructive than if the text had formulated a <em>simple definition<\/em>, or infused politics with a new <em>essence<\/em>, whether <em>of<\/em> the state or <em>against<\/em> it.<\/p>\n<p>Indeed, the essential does not concern so much the \u201corigin\u201d (the workers\u2019 struggle <em>becomes<\/em> political) and the \u201cend\u201d (the state, without a function to fulfil, disappears), but rather the <em>mediation<\/em>, or the <em>transition<\/em> itself, in which the second chapter situates itself\u2014and this brings us to the instability and ambivalence of <em>four principal theoretical \u201cobjects\u201d<\/em>: <em>the state, the nation, democracy, and class<\/em> (the proletariat), whose relations will be transformed as we go along. <em>\u201cDemocracy\u201d<\/em> and <em>\u201cnation\u201d<\/em> <em>are the two questions<\/em> that the proletariat has to solve in order to undermine the (bourgeois) state, which it uses for its revolutionary project (the abolition of wages and capital) in order to prepare its own disappearance. These two questions are intimately related, not only in the institutions and discourses that nascent liberalism inherited from the French revolution, but in the propositions of the <em>bourgeois revolutionaries<\/em> (such as Mazzini) who flowered in 1848 during the \u201cspring of peoples,\u201d and which provided a rival interpretation of events to the <em>social<\/em> interpretation of the <em>socialists<\/em>.<a href=\"#_ftn19\" name=\"_ftnref19\">[19]<\/a> It is above all on these two questions (and their articulation) that the <em>Manifesto<\/em> confronts the \u201cstatist point of view\u201d (which is the bourgeois point of view) with the (proletarian) \u201cclass point of view.\u201d But given that the state has been described as a \u201cclass state,\u201d the revolutionary state (the proletariat) must use the term in a <em>paradoxical sense<\/em> in order to exercise its \u201cpolitical power,\u201d which is the key of societal transformation. Hence the dual path that Marx and Engels take in response to the contradictions presented by a <em>communist solution<\/em>: internationalism must be <em>tactically<\/em> subordinated in the confines of national struggles, but the national struggle must be <em>strategically<\/em> subordinated to internationalism (thereby inventing a new form of \u201ccosmopolitanism,\u201d which for the first time is, in a certain sense, <em>real<\/em>). Democracy must be conquered; it is a way to institute and make the state function, but only on the condition that it eventually be <em>surpassed<\/em> in favor of another form, its political practice abandoned in favor of another practice: \u201cfree association,\u201d which is not a power of domination (unlike any state, including democratic ones). It is through this dual path that (in 1848) Marx and Engels present the <em>transformation of the class into a \u201cparty\u201d<\/em> (a party immanent in the struggle, and particularly immanent in the struggle\u2019s expansion), but also, reciprocally, the passage from a \u201cclass in itself\u201d to a \u201cclass for itself,\u201d which is the <em>active<\/em> class in history (against another class).<a href=\"#_ftn20\" name=\"_ftnref20\">[20]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>The difficulties are in no way resolved by these general remarks. It is these political \u201cmediations\u201d of the class struggle that\u2014both for Marx and Engels, and for us readers\u2014immediately pose a problem. Let\u2019s examine the problem for each of the two sides of the state institution.<\/p>\n<p>Where are the difficulties concerning the idea of an \u201cinternationalist struggle within a national framework\u201d? From a theoretical point of view (for, as we know, practice is another story), the problem might not reside so much in the <em>crossed lines <\/em>between tactics and strategy (for a tactic is always, in a certain sense, the reversal of the priorities of the strategy), but more in the postulate that \u201cthe workers have no homeland.\u201d This is what assures the primacy of strategy over tactics. It is evident in the text that this affirmation goes far beyond a simple \u201cresponse\u201d to an ideological objection: one can\u2019t take away from the workers what they don\u2019t have, or rather, one can\u2019t <em>expulse<\/em> them from a \u201ccommunity\u201d in which they do not participate and from which they are <em>already<\/em> excluded. If the workers, as wage labor, are already property-less (<em>Eigentumlos<\/em>), they are also \u201cstripped of all illusion\u201d (<em>Illusionlos<\/em>), as <em>The German Ideology<\/em> puts it. This applies particularly to the illusion of <em>belonging<\/em> to the \u201cimaginary\u201d community that is the nation. They can therefore live and think through their condition at <em>the very level<\/em> that capitalism\u2014and the concomitant internationalization of the division of labor and production\u2014has created. This is fundamentally what transforms them into <em>proletarians<\/em>, and this thesis is the corollary of an extremely strong point in Marx and Engels\u2019 doctrine: if the bourgeoisie remains nationalist (and, for example, protectionist), there is nonetheless internal <em>overflow<\/em> of its own power system by the objective internationalizing process of <em>capital<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>In this sense, one can say that the proletariat fights against the bourgeoisie, not only by directly confronting it, but by searching, \u201cbehind its back,\u201d the capitalist tendency that produces and reproduces the bourgeoisie\u2014and by turning this tendency against its leaders.<a href=\"#_ftn21\" name=\"_ftnref21\">[21]<\/a> But this strongpoint contains an internal weakness: it rests on the <em>a priori<\/em> certainty that class determination <em>automatically leads to<\/em> national determination, such that the history of nations can be deduced from the history of class: \u201cNational differences and antagonism between peoples are daily and increasingly vanishing, owing to the development of the bourgeoisie \u2026 The supremacy of the proletariat will cause them to vanish still faster. \u2026 In proportion as the exploitation of one individual by another is put to an end, so the exploitation of one nation by another will also be put to an end.\u201d Not only is this empirically wrong (and this \u201cillusion\u201d directed against the \u201cbourgeois illusions,\u201d has exacted a terrible price in the history of workers\u2019 movement), but it is also not theoretically justified. It is possible that the <em>nation, <\/em>as a structure of the global market, is a social \u201cform\u201d or \u201cformation\u201d as essential to historical capitalism as class itself\u2026<a href=\"#_ftn22\" name=\"_ftnref22\">[22]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Where, in all this, is the problem of the \u201cconquest of democracy\u201d?<a href=\"#_ftn23\" name=\"_ftnref23\">[23]<\/a> To my understanding, it resides in the uncertainty of whether \u201cconquest\u201d is part of a transitory <em>usage<\/em>, or a <em>transformation, <\/em>even<em> auto-transformation <\/em>(an internal surpassing) of this \u201cpolitical form.\u201d And it can be read at two levels: <em>either<\/em> the proletariat is simply using\u00a0 democratic legitimacy to modify the right of property and therefore to modify the \u201cbourgeois relations of production,\u201d or it is also aiming to introduce democracy where the bourgeoisie carefully excludes it (in production and labour relations). But one can also posit that the proletariat is doing both (as, in their own ways, both the doctrines of the \u201cdictatorship of the proletariat\u201d and \u201cworker\u2019s autonomy,\u201d assert). This ambiguity is no doubt one of the reasons why Marx and Engels did not continue here in the path traced in their \u201cCritique of Hegel\u2019s Philosophy of the State\u201d of 1843, which saluted the \u201cradical\u201d moment of the French Revolution as the historical irruption\u00a0 of the \u201clegislative power that makes the great revolutions.\u201d For here we are dealing more with executive power\u2026<a href=\"#_ftn24\" name=\"_ftnref24\">[24]<\/a> And moreover, if we clearly see in the \u201ctransition\u201d from democracy (as a statist form) to the \u201cfree association in which the free development of each is the condition for the free development of all,\u201d the withering away of an <em>institution<\/em>, we also clearly see the vitality and development of a <em>principle<\/em> that comes from democracy (that I call \u201cequa-liberty\u201d elsewhere), and thus not so much an abolition as an intensification, something like a \u201cdemocratization of democracy.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The notion of democracy is therefore inherently <em>ambiguous, <\/em>but that ambiguity reveals the meaning of the process, which contains in itself the secret of the<em> \u201crevolution\u201d <\/em>(and even more hidden, the passage <em>from one revolution to another<\/em>, \u201cbourgeois\u201d to \u201cproletarian\u201d, which allows us to understand and organize the second as we bring the first to completion). This difficulty is all the more crucial because the <em>Manifesto<\/em> continually demands a <em>politics<\/em> of support (both strategic and tactical) to all democratic movements, which thereby become one of the conditions of communism, and whose meaning, modality, and objectives, we must therefore elucidate.<a href=\"#_ftn25\" name=\"_ftnref25\">[25]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>In these conditions, haven\u2019t we relaunched the problem of what the \u201cend of the political state\u201d means? It is not at all clear that the end of the state also means the \u201cend of politics\u201d itself. But what is a politics that is not <em>of<\/em> and <em>inside<\/em> the state, and whose object is not to control its \u201cpower\u201d in order to transform society?<a href=\"#_ftn26\" name=\"_ftnref26\">[26]<\/a> In the case of Marx and Engels, we have every reason to pose the problem not in terms of regimes and institutions, but in terms of <em>becoming<\/em>: what matters is the transition itself, and what happens starting <em>below<\/em> (and against) the state, with class <em>resistance<\/em> movements (and resistance to one\u2019s own class\u2019s decomposition), all the way <em>above and beyond<\/em> use of the state, with its negation. Thus, even if the <em>Manifesto<\/em> doesn\u2019t yet use this terminology, we observe a withering of the state in its very usage, by <em>injecting<\/em> the seed (and practice) of \u201cfree association,\u201d which we can rephrase in a circular manner as <em>communism as a modality of politics that itself aims towards communism<\/em>. More than ever, therefore, even if we fail to ask ourselves which <em>practices<\/em> can illustrate this modality (Marx, as we know, thought he observed it in the Commune), what reigns is <em>the irresolvable unity of opposites<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>We have come full circle, for this elucidates the question of what, in the <em>Manifesto<\/em>, the idea of a \u201cparty\u201d (the \u201ccommunist party,\u201d or better, no doubt, \u201cthe party of communism\u201d) that is neither \u201cdistinct\u201d nor \u201copposed to other working parties\u201d might represent. Faced with what he called the <em>separated State <\/em>(from civil society) in his critique of the Hegelian philosophy of the state, I propose we call it the \u201cindistinct party,\u201d or to use an expression of Muriel Combes, \u201cthe unseparated party.\u201d<a href=\"#_ftn27\" name=\"_ftnref27\">[27]<\/a> This party represents more the collective <em>conscience<\/em> of a movement than its formal <em>organization<\/em>.<a href=\"#_ftn28\" name=\"_ftnref28\">[28]<\/a> However, let us beware of false \u201crecurrences\u201d that would lead us to judge the relationships between these two variants (party-as-conscience and party-as-organization) according to a teleology, which would be nothing more than the transformation of a historical <em>fact<\/em> (albeit one that has dominated the destiny of Marxism) into a historical necessity.<\/p>\n<p>One must not turn organization into the future or perfection of conscience, and thereby implicitly turn it into the \u201cmaterial basis\u201d of its efficacy, and yet this is what Marx and Engels seem to indicate in the preface to their 1872 edition of the Manifesto: the \u201cparty\u201d that was announced in a \u201cmanifesto\u201d that would bring it about, now <em>exists<\/em> (as a workers party). But in reality, the \u201cparty\u201d of 1847\u2014related to the suspension of the dialectic between classes and the state\u2014did not exploit its inherent possibilities, which were instead <em>closed off<\/em> by the very organizations that went on to speak in its name. For \u201cindistinct\u201d or \u201cunseparated\u201d means, first of all, that this party is not a <em>political<\/em> <em>institution<\/em> as opposed to an <em>economic<\/em> (or \u201ccorporate\u201d) institution, or a labor union. But above all it means that this is not a party <em>amongst parties <\/em>(whereas 1847 is the moment when the party \u201csystem\u201d crystallizes in Europe in the parliamentary context): no doubt it repudiates the <em>anarchist<\/em> position that <em>denies<\/em> the necessity of the \u201cparty form\u201d itself (and does oppose the idea of associations or unions), but it also simultaneously <em>affirms<\/em> what Althusser will later call a \u201cparty outside the state\u201d (without thereby resolving the practical question).<a href=\"#_ftn29\" name=\"_ftnref29\">[29]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>There is thus a strong correlation between the idea that \u201cthe communists do not form a distinct party,\u201d and the thesis that holds communism as the end or exit from \u201cstate politics\u201d (elsewhere called \u201cthe modern representative state,\u201d a creation of the bourgeoisie as part of its ascension to power). By definition, a \u201cdistinct party\u201d would inscribe itself (and its members) <em>within<\/em> the confines of the bourgeois (liberal) state and its \u201cpolitical struggles,\u201d with and against other parties. In fact, the \u201cindistinct party\u201d might be the strongest indicator in the <em>Manifesto <\/em>that the \u201cconquest of democracy\u201d must <em>already<\/em> engage the future that leads to a politics<em> beyond the state<\/em> (what I call a democratization of democracy), even as the revolution makes \u201cconcentrated\u201d or even despotic use of the power of the state. Nonetheless, nothing in all this spells out <em>how one might go about<\/em> practicing this unity of opposites\u2014unless Marx and Engels thought that there was here a <em>subjective disposition<\/em> that proceeds from the very <em>condition<\/em> of the workers. Since they are not looking to institute a new regime of \u201cprivate\u201d property, they also cannot be trying to <em>construct a state<\/em>, whose raison d\u2019\u00eatre is always to defend or organize a regime of property.<a href=\"#_ftn30\" name=\"_ftnref30\">[30]<\/a><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\">***<\/p>\n<p>Although no less essential, I must now quickly deal with the third problem this essay started with: the critique of ideology and of revolutionary subjectivity, connected above all with the contents of Chapter Three. Today, it is the most neglected chapter, which in later prefaces, Marx and Engels already declared obsolete, since the individuals and groups it mentions were already no longer active in 1872. These restrictive indications coincide with the canonical opposition between \u201cutopian socialism\u201d and \u201cscientific socialism,\u201d which allows Marxism to appear as a <em>surpassing<\/em> of the limits of utopian socialism, which remains attached to an embryonic stage of the working class movement. However, in reality, for the authors of the <em>Manifesto<\/em> in 1847 and 48, as they were writing, the \u201cscience\u201d (defended most notable by Proudhon) is <em>on the same side<\/em> as \u201cutopia,\u201d both of which are contrary to the <em>politics of class<\/em>.<a href=\"#_ftn31\" name=\"_ftnref31\">[31]<\/a> And moreover, the goal is not so much to take over where utopia left off, even dialectically, but to <em>jump outside<\/em> the existing \u201csocialist and communist literature\u201d, which is to say, jump outside the field of <em>ideology<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>In fact, this chapter, which appears exclusively critical, holds the key to two (and even three) crucial problems in defining communism as a \u201cparty\u201d in which a movement can be \u201cmanifested,\u201d which is to say, put into words that allow it to \u201cspeak\u201d on the stage of history: first, the problem of <em>the place that theory occupies in the movement<\/em>, or in relationship to the movement (or in other words, the place of Marx and Engels\u2019 <em>Manifesto<\/em> in the historical and political process that their work describes and seeks to bring about); second, the problem of <em>subjectivation<\/em>, the constitution of a <em>collective of subjects<\/em> described as \u201cthe most resolute fraction\u201d of revolutionaries, which represents the \u201cinterested of the totality of the movement.\u201d And hence the third problem: where and how (in which places, by means of which dialogue or dialectic) do <em>the theory and the collective<\/em> (of which the theorists can of course be a part) articulate themselves? How does the \u201cdetour of theory\u201d provide the \u201cmost resolute faction\u201d with the means to \u201crepresent\u201d the totality?<\/p>\n<p>The problem is clearly stated at the beginning of Chapter Two, in close relation with the idea of an \u201cindistinct party,\u201d but it is not thereby resolved. This resolution is confronted in Chapter Three, but it is essentially a <em>negative<\/em> resolution, both <em>oppositional<\/em> and <em>destructive<\/em>. Chapter Three excludes (thus, one can say \u201cauto-excludes\u201d) the theory of the <em>Manifesto<\/em> outside of the ideological field it describes. Moreover, it considers theory (of which it is a product) as exceeding this ideological field, and thus existing outside of it before being integrated within. Note the revealing diction: Chapter Two uses \u201cus\u201d to designate communists, but it is to correspond to the accusatory \u201cyou\u201d that it attributes to the bourgeois and their ideologues. In Chapter Three (and Four), there is no more \u201cwe,\u201d and the \u201cyou\u201d now designates <em>the proletarians<\/em> who are \u201ccalled upon\u201d by the theoretical discourse, which thereby attains a universality, and even a fictive impersonal nature. This means that the proletarians only speak to themselves through the intermediary of theory, which announces their <em>political project <\/em>and simultaneously <em>critiques<\/em> both their adversaries and their false representatives and spokesmen. The <em>critique<\/em> is therefore the key to articulating two problems: the place of theory and the constitution of the collective it addresses. But the critique, isolated in its \u201cliterary\u201d chapter, seems to not be a part of the world that it is criticizing.<\/p>\n<p>I propose two schematic <em>interpretations<\/em> of this situation that are not mutually exclusive. \u00a0The first concerns the \u201csubject\u201d of the theoretical pronouncement, who is characterized historically and sociologically in Chapter One: \u201cthat portion of the bourgeois ideologists who have raised themselves to the level of comprehending theoretically the historical movement as a whole.\u201d At this stage (which we might callthe stage of <em>class betrayal<\/em>), the pronouncement is always <em>within the confines of ideology, <\/em>even if it subverts ideology\u2019s function. It is only in Chapter Three that we <em>exit<\/em> ideology, by means of a critique of all discourses, <em>including<\/em> (and perhaps particularly) those that \u201ctake the side\u201d of the proletariat: to effectively represent the <em>totality<\/em> of interests and the <em>future<\/em> of the movement of the exploited, one must cut ties with all inherited modes of thought.<a href=\"#_ftn32\" name=\"_ftnref32\">[32]<\/a> This is why Marx and Engels signal (anonymously and impersonally) that as authors of the <em>Manifesto<\/em> written for their comrades, they are <em>neither<\/em> \u201creactionary\u201d socialists of a different type (essentially romantic socialists, trying to resuscitate or save the past \u201cprofaned\u201d and ruined by capitalism), <em>nor<\/em> \u201cconservative\u201d socialists (which, given the text\u2019s association of the term with Proudhon, means reformists), and <em>finally, nor<\/em> are they \u201ccritico-utopian\u201d socialists, despite the importance of the search for a concrete alternative to private property (Saint-Simon, Fourier, Owen) for the birth of a workers movement.<\/p>\n<p>This means that once all the critiques have been made, the theorists can speak the language of \u201creality\u201d that was obscured or foreclosed by past traditions\u2014they can speak the language of class struggle, and even speak <em>from within that reality <\/em>itself, or from a hitherto invisible place within it.<a href=\"#_ftn33\" name=\"_ftnref33\">[33]<\/a> The critique of ideology therefore opens the access to reality.<a href=\"#_ftn34\" name=\"_ftnref34\">[34]<\/a> We see that the \u201cnegative\u201d attitude of critique is addressed as much to the dominant as to the dominated discourses, which \u201cevacuates\u201d the revolutionary discourse from the place of ideology where all other discourses reside, in order to put us <em>face to face<\/em> with reality, (and this is indissociable from the theme of the class struggle as a civil war that we previously evoked). This negative critique rests on an ontology, which assumes that reality is itself \u201cstructured as a discourse,\u201d and on an epistemology that is not only polemical but \u201c<em>symptomal<\/em>,\u201d showing that the <em>irreconcilable character<\/em> of the class struggle rooted in the regime of capitalist property is the non-mentioned, the <em>unsaid<\/em> in all other \u201cliteratures,\u201d which either obscure its economic causes, or its political development, or else its historical consequences. Conversely, it is the \u201cmanifestation\u201d of this unsaid in an <em>additional<\/em> theoretical discourse that produces the irruption of the real, and consequently an effect of truth in the heart of the proletarian movement. This effect does not so much occur <em>within<\/em> their conscience as it <em>creates<\/em> that conscience, by taking the disillusionment (or disenchantment) that is ubiquitous in capitalism to its summit, thereby \u201ctearing apart\u201d the bourgeois and petit-bourgeois illusions. This moment is also the movement from melancholy and hopelessness to a capacity for action and transformation, for the conscience is situated at the same level as the perpetual change\u2014permanent revolution\u2014of capitalism, of which it abolishes all limitations.<\/p>\n<p>However seductive this interpretation might be, one can\u2019t pretend it doesn\u2019t have problematic consequences, on both the historical and political levels. First, there is the fact that any discourse always remains a form of discourse, which has ceased to remain \u201clatent\u201d and has become \u201cmanifest.\u201d Its <em>reintegration<\/em> into the ideological field is thus inevitable, and we have seen this happen historically with Marxism itself, which then became one of the various ideologies of the working class and certain intellectuals (\u201corganic\u201d or not). However, from the point of view of the \u201ctopic\u201d of discourses sketched in Chapter Three of the <em>Manifesto<\/em>, this reintegration should be impossible, or else it would be self-destructive from the point of view of the truth value and political function. It must therefore be continuously denied.<a href=\"#_ftn35\" name=\"_ftnref35\">[35]<\/a> However, there is something even more worrisome: the anti-ideological <em>negativity <\/em>thereby attributed to the revolutionary theory (at the moment when it constitutes and announces itself for the first time) undeniably possesses a critical virtue without equal, a power of <em>demarcation<\/em>. But it is so radical that it generates <em>on its targets <\/em>(the proletarians on their way to becoming \u201ccommunists\u201d) a sort of ontological a-subjectivity. Or to put it more simply, it makes the constitution of the revolutionary \u201cwe\u201d inexplicable, by reducing it to the present pregnant with the future, and thereby cutting it off from the past. This can seem not only paradoxical, but politically contradictory, taking place as Marx and Engels are elaborating a conception of the party as the collective conscience of the revolutionary class, going from existence <em>in itself<\/em> to existence <em>for itself<\/em>: a consciousness that is admittedly immanent in action and struggle, and is purely \u201cpractical,\u201d but which, in order to give it the power to cross the line between resistance and revolution, the authors endow with a <em>narrative<\/em> of genesis and progressive universalization. One should, in a certain sense, evoke the future <em>without imagining it<\/em>: not <em>Citt\u00e0 futura<\/em>\u2026 Everything happens as if the proletarians (and the communists) found themselves <em>subjectively quartered <\/em>between the consciousness of their history (which is essentially the history of the world, the history of the great \u201ccivil war\u201d that will end with the liberation of humanity) and the imaginary of the future, as provided in particular by the \u201cutopian\u201d systems, an imaginary that feeds their <em>transformative passion<\/em>, and thus their \u201cdesire for communism.\u201d<a href=\"#_ftn36\" name=\"_ftnref36\">[36]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Having formulated this judgement, itself very critical compared to the critique of Marx and Engels (or simply shown that one cannot elide it as a question and obstacle), I notice that there is nonetheless <em>also<\/em> in the text a central element that can perhaps provide a response: it is once again <em>internationalism<\/em>, which is presented as the corollary of the antagonism between wage labour and capital, and that ends up fusing with it. \u201cWorkers of the world, unite!\u201d Internationalism is not just a moral imperative, or an effect of the <em>internationalization<\/em> of exchange and the division of labour, which virtually brings about the internationalization of the proletariat condition (obviously overestimated by Marx and Engels). It is also <em>antinationalism<\/em>, and thus a political \u201cpassion.\u201d We can go further: the internationalism of the <em>Manifesto<\/em> is the epistemological monster of a belief opposed to all beliefs, of <em>an ideology opposed to all ideologies<\/em>. We should note that the synthesis proposed in the Manifesto has, from this point of view, the value of a true mutation, for none of the \u201csocialisms\u201d or \u201ccommunisms\u201d that Marx marks as \u201cideological\u201d is particularly internationalist. This is in part because the \u201ccommons\u201d or \u201ccommunities\u201d that they are trying to create (and sometimes recreate) against <em>individualism<\/em> or \u201c<em>egotism<\/em>\u201d necessarily entail <em>proximity<\/em>, national or local (such as the model units of the city and factories of Fourier and Owen, or the communist \u201ccolonies\u201d). Internationalism or the new \u201ccosmopolitanism\u201d put forward in the <em>Manifesto<\/em> is thus not only a theoretical thesis (derived from the \u201ccosmopolitanism of capital\u201d), but also a \u201csubjective\u201d political passion.<a href=\"#_ftn37\" name=\"_ftnref37\">[37]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>It is thus <em>another community link<\/em> that <em>transverses <\/em>existing communities and those yet to come, by undoing their <em>intrinsic<\/em> cloture. In this respect, the \u201cyou\u201d of the final rallying cry can be extended as proceeding from a \u201cwe\u201d: \u201cworkers of the world, <em>let us unite<\/em>!\u201d, by which we readers of the <em>Manifesto <\/em>become communists. Is this not the secret of Marx and Engels\u2019 <em>addition of internationalism<\/em> in their renewal of communism, even as they try to found it in the real basis of the objective movement of capitalism? For them, these two aspects were perhaps only one, but for us\u2014who have lost the conviction that the globalization of capitalism automatically leads to the unity of its \u201cgravediggers\u201d\u2014it is truly an addition and a synthesis.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\">***<\/p>\n<p><em>Synthesis<\/em> is the word I want to use to outline not a conclusion, but a <em>contemporary counterpoint<\/em> to the preceding commentary, in which I sought to combine an elucidation of the text with a search for its <em>aporias<\/em> and points of heresy. Such a counterpoint will not consist in answering yes or no to the <em>Manifesto<\/em>\u2019s relevance in the present, in the sense of the <em>current<\/em> validity of its theses and analyses, whether at the level of its most general abstractions or its most specific claims (such as, \u201cworkers have no homeland\u201d), which continue to be up for discussion regarding both application and the modality (between observation and prescription).<a href=\"#_ftn38\" name=\"_ftnref38\">[38]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Everything that precedes amply shows, it seems, the surprising unity of opposites that constitutes the <em>Manifesto<\/em> in its relation to the future, which has partly become our past. \u201cPast future\u201d (<em>vergangene Zukunft<\/em>, Koselleck). No doubt, <em>time has jumped beyond the Manifesto<\/em>, and yet simultaneously, paradoxically, the Manifesto has leaped (and continues to leap) <em>beyond its own time<\/em>. This is why it is destined to be periodically <em>rewritten<\/em>: the rewriting started immediately, with its own authors<a href=\"#_ftn39\" name=\"_ftnref39\">[39]<\/a>; and, what is more surprising, it continues today. The most recent of these rewritings, <em>Undici Tesi sul comunismo posibile<\/em>, from 2017, is a collaborative effort born out of the <em>Rome Conference on communism<\/em> (January, 2017)\u2014an attempt to affirm\u00a0 communism in the sense of a <em>current objectivity<\/em>, a <em>power of contestation of the established order<\/em> (once again employing the \u201cspecter\u201d), and a <em>subjective productivity<\/em>.<a href=\"#_ftn40\" name=\"_ftnref40\">[40]<\/a> The <em>Tesi<\/em> pluralize, update, and thereby complicate in every way the virtual movement that, closely following the text of 1847, makes communism appear (with partially new content, attached to new fights) as the expression of an <em>internal contradiction of capitalism <\/em>(also often in new configurations, summarized by the notion of neoliberalism). Hence the strong tension between a dispersion of the forms of concrete domination and exploitation (in contrast to the sole figure of the wage laborer), and a more obstinate insistence on the idea that all struggles and \u201cforms of life\u201d that they sketch have a unique guiding thread, for which, even in the absence of a clearly identifiable \u201cproletariat,\u201d the authors wish to keep the notion of \u201cclass struggle.\u201d This might seem to point to a recurrence of the determinist framework, but the <em>Tesi <\/em>insist on considering communism as a form of \u201cconstructivism\u201d\u2014the <em>construction<\/em>, I would say, <em>of its own possibility. <\/em>This is the suggestion I would like to grab onto to formulate, in my turn, and in continuity with my preceding observations, a few <em>hypotheses<\/em> on the manner in which one might <em>rewrite<\/em> the <em>Communist Manifesto<\/em> today, not in the form of a single text narrating the constitution of a subject and the interpellation of its carriers, but in the form of a series of <em>problems to be resolved <\/em>in order that the construction might make sense to the \u201cglobal citizens\u201d of our century.<\/p>\n<p>First, we must take from our reading of the <em>Manifesto<\/em> the primacy of the question of politics, inseparable from the questions of its displacement and extension. The class struggle as imagined by Marx is both a metapolitical principle (as Jacques Ranci\u00e8re puts it)<a href=\"#_ftn41\" name=\"_ftnref41\">[41]<\/a> (and in this sense there are other comparable principles, including theological principles) and an effective agent of political transformation. It is as such that during the 19<sup>th<\/sup> and particularly the 20<sup>th<\/sup> century it played the role of an alternative to the bourgeois conception of politics, which was centered on the state and the verticality of the relationship between the governed and the government, largely congruent with the verticality of the relationship between exploiters and exploited, if not identical. In principle at least, (and the principle, despite all the recycling and even betrayals, did not lose all its efficacy), class struggle has remained one of the most insistent forms of the idea of a \u201cpolitics from below,\u201d or a \u201cpolitics of the governed,\u201d<a href=\"#_ftn42\" name=\"_ftnref42\">[42]<\/a> all the more effective when attached to the attempt to democratize democracy\u2014which, we know, was far from always being the case in the history of \u201creal existing communism\u201d: there is thus a strong element of contingency, and a synthesis of heterogeneous elements.<\/p>\n<p>But we can go further. In part due to its initial identification with the civil war model (from which Marx himself slowly retreated, without ever fully abandoning, and that resurfaces with force during the Russian Revolution), the metapolitics and the politics of the class struggle taken together force us to never reflect on the processes and forms of social conflict without including an \u201cimpolitical\u201d element\u2014which is to say, a dimension of potential extreme violence. This forces us to push beyond Marx and Engels\u2019 thinking on the violent conjunction of <em>productivity<\/em> and <em>destructiveness<\/em> in the economy and in history\u2014in capitalism itself, and conversely, in the movements that oppose capitalism.\u00a0 In a passage too often forgotten in Chapter One of the <em>Manifesto, <\/em>Marx and Engels note that the social struggle can \u201cend\u201d either with the victory of one of the warring classes, or with their \u201cmutual destruction\u201d (<em>gemeinsamer Untergang<\/em>), which can take multiple forms. But on the other hand, while the state itself is one of the most uncontrollable actors of the oscillation between productivity and destruction, the updating of the <em>Manifesto<\/em> forces us to pose more clearly than in the original the questions of the <em>gap<\/em> between the \u201cconcept of politics\u201d and the analysis of the \u201csocial function of the state.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>What was in a sense an <em>anticipation<\/em> by the authors of the <em>Manifesto<\/em>, oscillating between a projection into the future and a strategy for the present, has become a glaringly obvious phenomenon, for everyone agrees on the distinction between political economy or \u201cgovernance,\u201d particularly when it operates at a global and transnational level, and the political action of states. But the question remains whether there is <em>an alternative<\/em> \u201cfrom below\u201d or \u201cfrom elsewhere,\u201d <em>to the dominant form<\/em> (neoliberal, linked to the <em>financialization<\/em> of social life) in this gap, which has itself in a sense become <em>the primary object<\/em> of institutional politics and the principal worry of the governing class.<a href=\"#_ftn43\" name=\"_ftnref43\">[43]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Second, we have to get to the bottom of the observation that the <em>complexity<\/em> or <em>internal multiplicity<\/em> of the communist idea (a \u201cproject\u201d rather than a \u201cprogram\u201d) is irreducible to its consequences or the particular applications of a single principle to which a single actor could correspond (on the subjective side). This is true even if we describe it as an actor <em>in the process of unification<\/em> rather than <em>already unified<\/em>. This does not mean that the components of the idea of communism are unrelated to each other, or that some are necessary while others are contingent, but rather that their connection is completely synthetic. In other words, we must <em>analyze the components,<\/em> and to do so, isolate them in the abstract to then examine how they intersect, interpenetrate, and can complete one another within a single historical \u201cbecoming,\u201d but without falling into a pre-established form that guarantees their convergence. Not even in the form of a <em>name<\/em> (such as \u201cmultitude\u201d) that repeats the idea of the proletariat or takes up the same metapolitical functions.<a href=\"#_ftn44\" name=\"_ftnref44\">[44]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>This of course makes communism, more than previously, an endeavor in the making, \u00a0an unfulfilled inclination more than an ineluctable movement. Moreover, if some of the components still correspond to those of Marx and Engels, or are clearly of that lineage, it is possible that other components that were obscured or ignored by them could enter the fray and create a new set of problems for communism, in some sense from the <em>exterior<\/em>, by refraction, and might be destined to substitute communism under different names: communism in some sense <em>needs<\/em> this exteriority and heterogeneity so that the <em>reality<\/em> it tries to express and transform does not remain artificially circumscribed in the limits of a single essence or \u201cdirection of history.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Such is the case of feminism, or rather of <em>feminisms <\/em>in the plural<em>,<\/em> that unmoor communism from <em>a single<\/em> relation of domination, but to which communism in return can provide the means to understand why the patriarchy that feminism fights in every society tends to diversify according to the mode of reproduction of the workforce and the extent to which everyday life has been commodified. The same is no doubt true of the \u201ccommunal\u201d practices of postcolonial or <em>de<\/em>colonial antiracism and antifascism, which\u2014taking into account the new \u201claws of population\u201d of the capitalist economy and the prolongations of capitalism (or slavery) in the world today\u2014have become (and <em>must<\/em> continue to increasingly become) major forms of <em>internationalism<\/em> without which there can be no construction of communism. And just as class relations and their relationship to the institution of the nation and national belonging are not \u201cwithout history,\u201d so antiracism and antifascism are also not detachable from their history and discourse, from which class is never absent, but where it occupies a less decisive place. They organize and refer to themselves, not without internal contradictions, sometimes in the name of the \u201crace,\u201d and sometimes in the name of \u201chumanity.\u201d Therefore we need a \u201cnon-separation,\u201d but also a \u201cnon-fusion\u201d between communism and feminism or antiracism.<\/p>\n<p>And this necessity of a \u201csynthesis\u201d also clearly extends to the need for a <em>cultural revolution<\/em><a href=\"#_ftn45\" name=\"_ftnref45\"><em><strong>[45]<\/strong><\/em><\/a> directed against the ultra-competitive ways of life and consumption imposed by neoliberal capitalism itself, searching for the intermediate \u201cutopia\u201d between individualism and communitarianism.<a href=\"#_ftn46\" name=\"_ftnref46\">[46]<\/a>\u00a0 It must establish a <em>distance <\/em>with the Marxian conceptions of socialization and socialism that, with the abolition of the private ownership of the means of production, formed the core of its definition as an alternative to capitalism. This distancing is necessary as long\u00a0 as the alternative refers exclusively to structures of production and reproduction, and not yet, as the <em>Tesi<\/em> rightly put it, to \u201clifeforms\u201d that one could also call, following Agamben, \u201cforms of <em>usage<\/em>.\u201d One would no doubt have to say the same of the conjunction between the idea of protecting workers\u2019 lives and of protecting the milieu of their lives, which is to say, the planet. This example is all the more interesting in that it obliges us to use our imagination towards what <em>is<\/em> in common <em>against<\/em> the idea of \u201cputting in common\u201d\u2014 the <em>appropriation of the \u201cmeans of production\u201d<\/em> that inhabits the entire collectivist tradition, including in Marx\u2019s own formulation in <em>Capital<\/em> regarding the \u201cexpropriation of the expropriators.\u201d There remains a <em>fetishism <\/em>of property in some of Marxism\u2019s most typical mottoes.<\/p>\n<p>But I will stop here. Such enumerations are dangerous, as they give the impression of an eclectic list of demands and aspirations, and risk losing sight of the perspective of a great emancipatory movement of humanity at the level of history and the world, which is the most precious accomplishment of Marxist communism. In reality, what these seemingly eclectic elements point to is 1) that the components of communism can be momentarily <em>contradictory amongst themselves<\/em> (which is why communism\u00a0 can never cease <em>becoming a form of politics<\/em>\u2014beyond state politics\u2014but also never cease <em>doing politics<\/em> (and thereby resolving, as Mao said, the \u201ccontradictions within a people\u201d); 2) to enter a synthesis or political construction with the others, each component of the communist idea (socialism, democracy, internationalism) must be <em>augmented<\/em> and <em>decentered <\/em>using supplemental historical determinations, which are also carried by heterogeneous collective subjects, irreducible to a single model and rarely concentrated in a single place. In order for their encounter to be creative<em>, <\/em>the need to \u201cdemocratize democracy\u201d is more than ever a necessary, if not sufficient condition. It is necessary for the defense of ancient forms that capitalism continually disaggregates, and for the invention of new post-bourgeois forms, with their own procedures of participation, representation, and conflict. Which means that radical democracy (whose underestimation or instrumentalization was one of the key factors in the catastrophe of the \u201creal communisms\u201d of the 20<sup>th<\/sup> century) is not a mediation, and even less a \u201cvanishing mediation\u201d<a href=\"#_ftn47\" name=\"_ftnref47\">[47]<\/a>: if it can be thought of as a <em>form of transition<\/em>, it is because communism itself is nothing more than an <em>infinite transition<\/em>, in which unification (party) and diversification (movement) never cease to alternate.<\/p>\n<h1 style=\"text-align: center;\">Notes<\/h1>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref1\" name=\"_ftn1\">[1]<\/a> This essay is included (in Italian translation) in the volume: Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, <em>Manifesto comunista<\/em>, con saggi di E. Balibar, P. Chatterjee, P. Dardot &amp; C. Laval, A. Del Re, S. Federici; V. Gago, M. Hardt &amp; S. Mezzadra, A. Negri, S. Zizek, Ponte alle Grazie editore, 2018.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref2\" name=\"_ftn2\">[2]<\/a> The first indubitably having the leading role, but with no need to occult the contributions of the second: a rereading of the <em>Principles of Communism<\/em>, written by Engels in 1847, at the moment when the\u00a0 \u201cLeague of the Just\u201d changed its name to become the \u201cCommunist League,\u201d shows\u2014despite the different rhetorical models, the former a catechism through questions and answers and not a theoretical and political essay\u2014the importance of his contributions to the formulations of the <em>Manifesto<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref3\" name=\"_ftn3\">[3]<\/a> It is striking that Foucault is in this instance in complete agreement with Hegel, for whom, as we know, \u201cnone can jump beyond his time.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref4\" name=\"_ftn4\">[4]<\/a> The <em>Manifesto<\/em> was written practically concurrently with the lectures of 1847 (given by Marx to the Association of German Workers of Brussels, and published <em>post facto<\/em> in 1849), as\u00a0 <em>Wage Labor and Capital<\/em>, which one has to read in the original version, before it was corrected by Engels in an attempt to synchronize it with the critique of the political economy developed in <em>Capital<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref5\" name=\"_ftn5\">[5]<\/a> It\u2019s important to note that the <em>Manifesto<\/em> never uses the word \u201ccommunism,\u201d let alone \u201cthe communist mode of production\u201d to designate a social structure or a <em>historical stage<\/em> of society, but instead always to designate a movement with its ideal or principle, a party with its program, and by extension, the system that would result from its application.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref6\" name=\"_ftn6\">[6]<\/a> Which explains\u2014without prefiguring the contradictions\u2014the terminology of <em>proletarian internationalism, <\/em>which would later be formulated by Marxist-Leninists.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref7\" name=\"_ftn7\">[7]<\/a> Analogous, perhaps, to the mathematician Bourbaki\u2019s publication of his \u201ctheory of sets\u201d in the form of a \u201cleaflet of results.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref8\" name=\"_ftn8\">[8]<\/a> Which is also a way of <em>limiting the uncertainty<\/em> related to the historical consequences that can be deduced from the establishment of an economic trend. (Marx, Capital, Book I, chapter 20. See my commentary, \u201cDie Drei Endspiele des Kapitalismus,\u201d in Mathias Greffrath (ed.), Re. Das Kapital. Politische \u00d6konomie im 21. Jahrhundert, Verlag Antje Kunstmann, M\u00fbnchen, 2017.) English translation in M. Musto (Ed.),<em>\u00a0Marx&#8217;s Capital after 150 Years: Critique and Alternative to Capitalism<\/em>,\u00a0London-New York: Routledge,\u00a02019.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref9\" name=\"_ftn9\">[9]<\/a> Competition between wage labor always drives down their living standard down to the level of subsistence, if not lower. This is one of the key differences between (ancient) <em>personal slavery<\/em> and the <em>class slavery<\/em> engendered by <em>wage labor<\/em> and <em>capital<\/em>: the wage slaves can subsist only by constantly seeking out new masters, a difference that also contains an analogy, which <em>Capital<\/em> will retain by inscribing it in a more complete system of comparison between the two modes of exploitation.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref10\" name=\"_ftn10\">[10]<\/a> In short, the old image of the \u201cworld turned upside down\u201d (which came from the radical currents of the English revolution of the 17th century) has become: \u201cthe revolt of the productive forces against obsolete forms of production.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref11\" name=\"_ftn11\">[11]<\/a> This thesis was already indirectly present in <em>The German Ideology <\/em>in the form of a comparison between the successive functions of <em>carriers of the universal <\/em>inhabited by the bourgeoisie and the proletariat in the face of the \u201cparticular\u201d interests of society. It leads to all sorts of political applications, more or less successful in the history of revolutionary movements in the 19<sup>th<\/sup> and 20<sup>th<\/sup> centuries: from the framework of the \u201cpermanent revolution,\u201d which leads us from a bourgeois phase to a proletarian (or socialist) phase in the course of a political revolution, all the way to the question of whether in \u201cunder-developed\u201d countries in the capitalist world, the proletariat can and must replace the bourgeoisie in order to accomplish its \u201chistorical tasks\u201d of which the latter shows itself locally incapable. The later oppositions between \u201ctop-down revolutions\u201d and \u201cbottom-up\u201d revolutions (Engels), \u201cactive revolution\u201d and \u201cpassive revolution\u201d (Gramsci) do not follow the same framework, because instead of a movement of <em>surpassing <\/em>they institute a <em>competition<\/em> between the revolutionary classes and their representatives, but they only make sense if we have already accepted the framework of analogous revolutions.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref12\" name=\"_ftn12\">[12]<\/a> The thesis of the <em>Manifesto<\/em> <em>is not<\/em> that, having been revolutionary, the bourgeoisie becomes \u201cconservative\u201d or \u201creactionary,\u201d but that in its <em>ceaseless<\/em> revolution of society, it creates insurmountable contradictions that impose absolute limits on the pursuit of its historical role, and create and \u201carm\u201d its own \u201cgravediggers.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref13\" name=\"_ftn13\">[13]<\/a> Engels is the inventor (or in any case, one of the first users) of the concept of \u201cindustrial revolution\u201d in <em>The Condition of the Working Class in England<\/em> (1844). The examples are taken from English history, a \u201cclassic country,\u201d where technological inventions were put at the service of the capitalist organization of labor, but the terminology is also partly inspired by Saint-Simon.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref14\" name=\"_ftn14\">[14]<\/a> I don\u2019t pursue that point here, as I have discussed it elsewhere: in the article, \u201cKrieg,\u201d in <em>Historisch-Kritisches W\u00f6rterbuch des Marxismus<\/em> (hsg. Von Wolfgang F. Haug), vol. VII-2, Berlin 2010 (English translation: \u00ab\u00a0Marxism and War\u00a0\u00bb, <em>Radical\u00a0 Philosophy<\/em>\u00a0 160, March \/ April\u00a0 2010); and in 2012: \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/cts.vresp.com\/c\/?diacritics\/a803708f52\/bf51614251\/3bbe532f0d\">On the Aporias of Marxian Politics<\/a>. From Civil War to Class Struggle \u00bb, <em>Diacritics<\/em>, Volume 39, no. 2 <strong>Negative Politics (edited by Laurent Dubreuil).<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref15\" name=\"_ftn15\">[15]<\/a> I refer the reader to Michel Foucault, \u201cWe must defend society,\u201d from the <em>Lectures at the Coll\u00e8ge de France<\/em> of 1976. The terminology of \u201csocial war\u201d is a paradigm of the period. It is particularly prevalent in Balzac\u2019s <em>The Peasants<\/em>, written in 1844 and published posthumously in 1852, and also in Blanqui and his followers, who associate it with the notion of a \u201crevolutionary dictatorship.\u201d It leads to several famous descriptions in Disraeli\u2019s novel, <em>Sybil or the Two Nations <\/em>(1845), which describes the England of the industrial revolution as a nation cut into two hostile nations, separated both by their material conditions and by their values. The overlap with Engels is striking (The Condition of the Working Class in England, 1844). A common source might be found in the Chartist movement and in Carlyle.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref16\" name=\"_ftn16\">[16]<\/a> Very different from the Machiavellian conception of \u201cconflicting humors,\u201d in which the struggle between the rich and poor, although setting radically different interests against one another, can nonetheless be mediated by a \u201ctribune power,\u201d which is to say, an institution that represents the dominated inside the dominant order. On the contrary, in <em>Capital, <\/em>and in particular in the analysis of the battle for a normal working day in England, this is presented as a \u201clong civil war.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref17\" name=\"_ftn17\">[17]<\/a>\u00a0 To which the question of colonialism is ambiguously linked, thanks to the analogy that is established between the \u201csubjection of the country to the domination of the towns\u201d and the subjection of \u201cbarbaric or semi-barbaric nations\u201d to civilized nations, the subjection of \u201cnations of peasants to nations of bourgeois, from the East to the West.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref18\" name=\"_ftn18\">[18]<\/a> I cite Benjamin deliberately, thinking of his \u201cTheses on the Concept of History,\u201d from 1940. It is rightfully one of the most frequent arguments of contemporary \u201ccritical Marxism,\u201d where the epistemological proposition of a non-progressive temporality (in which the revolution is not the \u201cresolution of the problem\u201d posed by history, as in the Preface to the <em>Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy<\/em>) is combined with the \u201cmessianic\u201d hope of the redemption (or revenge) of the defeated. Taken literally, the \u201cMarxism\u201d of the <em>Manifesto<\/em> is the opposite of such a conception, although it also contains Messianic dimensions: its \u201cproletariat\u201d is not vanquished; it \u201cbegins to resist with its very existence,\u201d and its victory is ineluctable. This is why if history contradicts the narrative, there is no other choice than to deny it in the imagination.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref19\" name=\"_ftn19\">[19]<\/a> I return to the now established need to respond to Mazzini on the question of internationalism, as a motivation for writing the <em>Manifesto<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref20\" name=\"_ftn20\">[20]<\/a> The philosophical distinction between the \u201cclass in itself\u201d and \u201cthe class for itself\u201d is implicit in the <em>Manifesto<\/em>. It is presented as such in the immediately preceding texts (<em>The Poverty of Philosophy<\/em>) and those that follow (<em>The 18<sup>th<\/sup> Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte<\/em>). I think it\u2019s indispensable to introduce it here, as it entails the problem of <em>conscience<\/em> (social or collective) that we will later confront, and brings us to yet another \u201cpoint of heresy,\u201d because\u2014due to its very <em>practical<\/em> function\u2014the dialectic can be reversed: there is no \u201cclass in itself\u201d (but rather only structures of exploitation and economic conditions) if there is no \u201cparty\u201d (in a general historical sense, which is the sense of the <em>Manifesto<\/em>) to constitute that class. In the history of Marxism, this point of view becomes explicit in Gramsci, and it leads to the thesis of the <em>primacy of the class struggle over the existence of class<\/em>, and even to the \u201cclass struggle without [preexisting] classes,\u201d paradoxically upheld by two Marxists who agree on nothing else: Althusser and E.P. Thompson.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref21\" name=\"_ftn21\">[21]<\/a> This idea is explicit in the two contemporaneous texts of 1847: <em>Wage labor and Capital<\/em>, already cited, and <em>On the Question of Free Trade<\/em> (see the beautiful critical edition with commentary: Karl Marx, <em>Discorso sul libero scambio<\/em>, a cura di Alberto Burgio e Luigi Cavallaro, DeriveApprodi, Roma 2002).<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref22\" name=\"_ftn22\">[22]<\/a> One can\u2019t fully understand the Manifesto\u2019s propositions on the nation, nationalism, and internationalism if one neglects the fact, now well established, that appears among the \u201cdemands\u201d addressed to Marx and Engels by their comrades of the Communist League for the writing of the Manifesto: the need to respond to the \u201cmanifesto\u201d that had just been published (also in London) by another figure of the European democratic exile, Giuseppe Mazzini. His pamphlet, <em>Thoughts upon Democracy in Europe<\/em>, which first appeared in English in the Chartist journal <em>The People\u2019s Journal<\/em> in 1846-1847, contained both a detailed refutation of socialist and communist doctrine (which Marx and Engels would call \u201cutopian\u201d in their manifesto), and a project for a United States of Europe (which would surface later), to which the class internationalism of Marx and Engels is a direct response. See, S. Mastellone: <em>Mazzini and Marx: thoughts upon democracy in Europe<\/em>, Praeger, Westport and London, 2005.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref23\" name=\"_ftn23\">[23]<\/a> In German, <em>die Erk\u00e4mpfung der Demokratie<\/em>, which encompasses both the idea of a power grab <em>within<\/em> the democratic structure, and the idea that through this struggle, the democratic form is <em>won to the side of the proletarian struggle<\/em>, and thus detached from the bourgeois cause. One has to reread \u00a718 of Engels\u2019 <em>Principles of Communism<\/em> very attentively, which names a \u201cdemocratic constitution\u201d (<em>eine demokratische Staatsverfassung<\/em>) as one of the communist objectives. The entire discussion of the \u201cconquest\u201d and use of democracy is part of a battle on numerous fronts: against Mazzini, Proudhon and the \u201csocialists,\u201d and also against several strands of Chartism, which we will examine further.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref24\" name=\"_ftn24\">[24]<\/a> See, M. Abensour, <em>La d\u00e9mocratie contre l\u2019Etat<\/em>, <em>Marx et le moment machiav\u00e9lien<\/em>, PUF, Paris 1997 (English translation <em>Democracy Against the State<\/em>, Polity Press 2010). Abensour traces a line of continuity between the radical democratic strain of the <em>Manuscript of 1843<\/em> and the anti-statism of <em>The Civil War in France, <\/em>jumping over the <em>Manifesto<\/em>. It is more or less the opposite of what I did in my essay from 1972: \u201c<em>The Rectification of the Communist Manifesto<\/em>,\u201d (taken up again in<em> Cinq Etudes du mat\u00e9rialisme historique<\/em>, Maspero, 1974), where I imported the Althusserian notion of a \u201cnew practice of politics,\u201d and which Foucault gently mocks in an interview of the same year<em> (Dits et Ecrits<\/em>, n\u00b0 119).<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref25\" name=\"_ftn25\">[25]<\/a> Lest we forget, all this was written in a historical context of conservative reaction and repression, and of the \u201cHoly Alliance\u201d between aristocrats and property owners. The problem would resurface on a grander scale at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries, with the internal debates within social democracy about the nation\u2019s right to self-determination.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref26\" name=\"_ftn26\">[26]<\/a> It\u2019s not even clear that this dilemma belongs primarily to Marx, or to socialism and communism: it also exists for liberalism. In a brilliant text, I. Wallerstein argued that all fundamental \u201cideologies\u201d of the modern era (after the French Revolution) live inside the same \u201cperformative contradiction\u201d: they <em>use the state<\/em> as a means to assure the development or autonomy of a <em>society<\/em>, which, theoretically at least, neutralizes or minimizes that state (cf. I. Wallerstein, <em>The modern World-System<\/em>, vol. IV, <em>centrist Liberalism Triumphant 1789-1914<\/em>, University of California Press, 2011, chap. 1\u00a0: \u00ab\u00a0Centrist Liberalism as ideology\u201d.)<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref27\" name=\"_ftn27\">[27]<\/a> Muriel Combes\u00a0: <em>La vie ins\u00e9par\u00e9e. Vie et sujet au temps de la biopolitique<\/em>, Editions Dittmar, Paris 2011.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref28\" name=\"_ftn28\">[28]<\/a> I developed this idea in 1979 in my contribution to the collective volume<em> Marx et sa critique de la politique<\/em>, written with Andr\u00e9 Tosel and Cesare Luporini (Maspero, collection \u201cTheory\u201d).<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref29\" name=\"_ftn29\">[29]<\/a> See, L. Althusser, \u00ab\u00a0Le marxisme comme th\u00e9orie \u00ab\u00a0finie\u00a0\u00bb\u00a0\u00bb (1978), r\u00e9\u00e9d. Dans <em>Solitude de Machiavel<\/em>, Edition pr\u00e9par\u00e9e et comment\u00e9e par Yves Sintomer, PuF, Paris 1998 (engl. translation\u00a0: \u00ab\u00a0Marxism as a Finite Theory\u00a0\u00bb, Introduction by Rossana Rossanda, <em>Viewpoint Magazine<\/em>, December 14, 2017).<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref30\" name=\"_ftn30\">[30]<\/a> I do, however, think that Marx and Engels have a particular practical reference in mind, namely the history of English Chartism, which illustrates the idea of an \u201cunseparated party,\u201d for which the social (or socialist, or even anti-capitalist) demands go hand in hand with democratic demands (universal suffrage). But by the time they write the <em>Manifesto<\/em>, Chartism has been defeated and is dissolving, even though it leaves a profound trace. The \u201cradicals\u201d have become liberals or \u201cutopian\u201d socialists (which is to say, apolitical). The constitution of the social-democratic parties at the end of the century will make the problem urgent. Let us note that in the case of Chartism, and <em>a fortiori<\/em> in the case of the social-democratic parties, the national framework is affirmed so vigorously as to render the internationalist dimensions (even strategically) evanescent.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref31\" name=\"_ftn31\">[31]<\/a> See in particular the entire conclusion of the <em>Poverty of Philosophy<\/em>. On the subsequent vicissitudes of the opposition between \u201cscience\u201d and \u201cutopia,\u201d as well as of the conversion of science into utopia to the second degree in the Russian Revolution, see the book of Nestor Capdevila, <em>Equivoques et tourments de l\u2019utopie. Un concept en jeu<\/em>, Publications de la Sorbonne, Paris 2015.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref32\" name=\"_ftn32\">[32]<\/a> But at the same time\u2014and here the performative paradox reaches it apotheosis\u2014one must also <em>recuperate<\/em> and <em>incorporate<\/em> these previous modes of thought: this is why, as the great commentators have remarked (Charles Andler, Jacques Grandjonc, Bert Andreas), the <em>Manifesto<\/em> is a palimpsest, in which innumerable words and phrases from \u201ccriticoputopian socialists and communists\u201d are silently incorporated into the text and amalgamated with Marx and Engels\u2019 own formulations.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref33\" name=\"_ftn33\">[33]<\/a> <em>Sprache des wirklichen Lebens, <\/em>\u201clanguage,\u201d or better yet, \u201cspeech of real life,\u201d as<em> The German Ideology <\/em>put it. I<em>n Spectres of Marx, Derrida <\/em>will call this a sort of \u201cventriloquism.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref34\" name=\"_ftn34\">[34]<\/a> Obviously, this is <em>rhetorical<\/em>, if not <em>poetic<\/em> (as Jacques Ranci\u00e8re in particular never stopped demonstrating). This doesn\u2019t mean that it\u2019s hollow. On the contrary, the Manifesto is perhaps more effective on this point than capital, where the constitution of the \u201cvoice of reality\u201d in theoretical discourse emerges through a different procedure: the \u201cCritique of the political economy\u201d is combined with the quotation of the \u201cworker\u2019s speech,\u201d at least as it is reported by the factory inspectors.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref35\" name=\"_ftn35\">[35]<\/a> What seemed to many Marxists a \u201cguarantee\u201d against this reintegration, is the <em>political organization<\/em> (of the party itself), which, as Lenin would later say, \u201cin purging itself, reinforces itself\u201d (<em>Materialism and Empiriocriticism<\/em>). But this guarantee only precipitates the conclusion\u2026<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref36\" name=\"_ftn36\">[36]<\/a> Gramsci, in 1917:\u00a0\u201cI live, and I am a partisan. It is why I hate those who don\u2019t take part, I hate the indifferent.\u201d (<em>La cit\u00e9 future<\/em>, Pr\u00e9sentation d\u2019Andr\u00e9 Tosel, Editions Critiques, Paris 2017).<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref37\" name=\"_ftn37\">[37]<\/a> Which one can try to link to the fact that Marx, Engels and their comrades of the \u201cLeague of the Just,\u201d which at that moment was becoming the Communist League, came, as the text notes, \u201cfrom several countries,\u201d and therefore shared a solidarity of <em>exiles<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref38\" name=\"_ftn38\">[38]<\/a> Today, we often see an inversed application of the formula: \u201cwhoever does not have a homeland (migrants) is the proletariat.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref39\" name=\"_ftn39\">[39]<\/a> Even though, as they indicate in the <em>preface<\/em> of 1872, they forbade themselves to change the text itself, due to its appropriation by history, and contrary to what they did to other works (and in particular, <em>Wage labor and Capital<\/em>).<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref40\" name=\"_ftn40\">[40]<\/a> See the English translation : \u201c11 Theses on Possible Communism\u201d, <em>Viewpoint, <\/em>01-31-2018.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref41\" name=\"_ftn41\">[41]<\/a> It is one of his principal themes in <em>La m\u00e9sentente\u00a0: politique et philosophie<\/em>, Paris : Galil\u00e9e, 1995.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref42\" name=\"_ftn42\">[42]<\/a> Partha Chatterjee: <em>The Politics of the Governed: Reflections on Popular Politics in Most of the World<\/em>, Columbia University Press, 2004.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref43\" name=\"_ftn43\">[43]<\/a> States are overwhelmed simultaneously by global economic governance and the indefinite war (of \u201clow intensity\u201d) that they organize, use, or let happen (as in Libya).<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref44\" name=\"_ftn44\">[44]<\/a> This is my point of divergence with Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri, which calls for further discussion.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref45\" name=\"_ftn45\">[45]<\/a> I dare not say \u201creligious\u201d: \u00a0I am really thinking of what Nietzsche called the \u201ctransmutation of values.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref46\" name=\"_ftn46\">[46]<\/a> We must simultaneously maximize both the autonomy and interdependence of subjects, which is, of course\u2014from <em>The German Ideology<\/em> to the formulations of <em>Capital<\/em> concerning the \u201creestablishment of individual property on the basis of the acquisitions of capitalist socialization\u201d\u2014one of the constants in Marx\u2019s conception of communism.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref47\" name=\"_ftn47\">[47]<\/a> Following the profound formulation that Fredric Jameson created from the comparison between Marx\u2019s analysis of the \u201cbourgeois revolution\u201d and Max Weber\u2019s on the articulation of the Calvinist Reformation and of capitalism:\u00a0 Fredric Jameson, \u201cThe Vanishing Mediator, or Max Weber as Storyteller\u201d [1973], in <em>idem<\/em>, <em>The Ideologies of Theory: Essays 1971-1986<\/em>, vol. 2: <em>Syntax of History<\/em> (Lon\u00addon: Routledge, 1988), pp. 3-34.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>By \u00c9tienne Balibar, translated by Xavier Flory Afterword to a new edition[1] Although not the most widely disseminated \u201ccommunist\u201d book of all time\u2014that honor belongs to \u201cThe Little Red Book,\u201d or Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse-tung, which is almost in&hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/abolition1313\/etienne-balibar-the-manifesto-beyond-its-time-afterword-to-a-new-edition\/\" class=\"more-link\">Continue Reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2322,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[52428],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1343","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-posts-5-13"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/abolition1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1343","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/abolition1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/abolition1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/abolition1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2322"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/abolition1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1343"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/abolition1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1343\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/abolition1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1343"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/abolition1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1343"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/abolition1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1343"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}