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Os 150 anos da Associação Internacional dos Trabalhadores

Em 28 de setembro de 1864, a sala do St. Martin’s Hall, um edifício situado no coração de Londres, estava lotado. Estavam reunidos cerca de dois mil trabalhadores e trabalhadores para participar de um comício de sindicalistas ingleses e colegas parisienses. Graças a esta iniciativa, nascia o ponto de referência do conjunto das principais organizações do movimento operário: a Associação Internacional de Trabalhadores.

Em poucos anos, a Internacional despertou paixões por toda a Europa. Graças a ela, o movimento operário pode compreender mais claramente os mecanismos de funcionamento do modo de produção capitalista, adquiriu maior consciência de sua própria força e inventou novas formas de luta. De forma contrária, nas classes dominantes, causou terror a notícia da formação da Internacional. A ideia de trabalhadores reclamarem maiores direitos e um papel ativo na história suscitou repulsa nas classes acomodadas e foram muitos os governos que a perseguiram com todos os meios a seu alcance.

As organizações que fundaram a Internacional eram muitos diferentes entre si. Seu centro motor inicial foram os sindicatos ingleses, que passaram a considerá-la o instrumento mais idôneo para lutar contra a importação de mão de obra de fora durante as greves. Outro importante ramo da associação foi a dos mutualistas, a componente moderada fiel à Teoria de Proudhon, predominante na França à época, enquanto o terceiro grupo, por ordem de importância, foram os comunistas, reunidos em torno da figura de Marx.

Inicialmente, fizeram parte também da Internacional grupos de trabalhadores que reivindicavam teorias utópicas, núcleos de exilados inspirados por concepções vagamente democráticas e defensoras de ideias interclassistas, como alguns seguidores de Mazzini. O empenho em fazer com que convivessem todas estas almas na mesma organização foi indiscutivelmente obra de Marx. Seus dotes políticos lhe permitiram conciliar o que não parecia conciliável, assegurando um futuro à Internacional. Foi Marx quem outorgou à Associação a clara finalidade de realizar um programa político não excludente, apesar de ser fortemente de classe, como garantia de um movimento que aspirava ser de massas e não sectário. Foi sempre Marx, alma política do Conselho Geral de Londres, que redigiu quase todas as resoluções principais da Internacional. Entretanto, diferentemente do que foi propagado pela liturgia soviética, a Internacional foi muito mais do que apenas Marx.

Desde o final de 1866, intensificaram-se as greves em muitos países europeus, o coração vibrante de uma época de luta significativa. A primeira grande batalha vencida graças ao apoio da Internacional foi a dos bronzistas de Paris no inverno de 1867. Neste período, tiveram também o vitorioso desenlace nas greves dos trabalhadores das fábricas de Marchienne, as dos operários das bacias mineiras de Provenza, dos mineiros de carvão de Charleroi e dos pedreiros de Genebra. Em cada um destes acontecimentos, repetiu-se de modo idêntico a pauta: arrecadação de dinheiro em apoio aos grevistas, graças aos chamamentos redigidos e traduzidos pelo Conselho Geral e depois enviados aos trabalhadores de outros países, e à compreensão de que estes últimos não fizessem ações fura greve.

Todo isso obrigou os patrões a buscar um compromisso e a aceitar muitas das demandas dos operários. Iniciou-se uma época de progresso social, durante a qual os movimentos dos trabalhadores conseguiu maiores direitos para aqueles que ainda não gozavam deles, como prescreviam as receitas liberais da direita. Depois do êxito de todas estas lutas, centenas aderiram à Internacional em todas as cidades em que foram registradas greves.

Apesar das complicações derivadas da heterogeneidade das línguas, culturas políticas e países implicados, a Internacional conseguiu reunir e coordenar mais organizações e numerosas lutas nascidas espontaneamente. Seu maior mérito foi o de ter sabido indicar a absoluta necessidade da solidariedade de classe e da cooperação transnacional. Objetivos e estratégias do movimento operário mudaram de maneira irreversível e são atuais ainda hoje, 150 anos depois.

A proliferação de greves mudou também os equilíbrios no interior da organização. O Congresso de Bruxelas de 1868 votou a resolução sobre a socialização dos meios de produção. Tal ação representou um passo decisivo no decorrer da definição das bases econômicas do socialismo e, pela primeira vez, um dos baluartes reivindicativos do movimento operário ficou integrado ao programa político de uma grande organização. Entretanto, depois de ter derrotado os partidários de Proudhon, Marx teve que enfrentar seu novo rival interno, o russo Bakunin, que se somou à Internacional em 1869.

O período compreendido entre o final dos anos 60 e o início dos anos 70 foi rico em conflitos sociais. Muitos dos trabalhadores que fizeram parte dos protestos neste intervalo de tempo receberam apoio da Internacional, cuja fama ia sendo difundida cada vez mais. Da Bélgica à Alemanha e da Suíça à Espanha, a Associação aumentou seu número de militante e desenvolveu uma eficiente estrutura organizativa em quase todo o continente. Foi também para além do oceano, graças à iniciativa dos imigrantes reunidos nos Estados Unidos.

O momento mais significativo da história da Internacional coincidiu com a Comuna de Paris. Em março de 1871, após o fim da guerra franco-prussiana, os operários expulsaram o governo Thiers e tomaram o poder. Este foi o acontecimento político mais importante da história do movimento operário do século XIX. Desde aquele momento, a Internacional esteve no olho do furacão e adquiriu grande notoriedade. Na boca da burguesia, o nome da organização se tornou sinônimo de ameaça à ordem constituída, enquanto na dos trabalhadores se tornou a esperança de um mundo sem exploração e injustiças. A Comuna de Paris deu vitalidade ao movimento operário e levou-o a tomar posições mais radicais. Uma vez mais, a França mostrou que a revolução era possível, que o objetivo podia e devia ser a construção de uma sociedade radicalmente diferente da capitalista, mas também que, para alcançá-lo, os trabalhadores teriam que criar formas de associação política estáveis e bem organizadas.

Por esta razão, durante a Conferência de Londres de 1871, Marx propôs uma resolução sobre a necessidade de a classe trabalhadora se dedicar à batalha política e construir onde fosse possível um novo instrumento de luta considerado indispensável para a revolução: o partido (utilizado até então apenas pelos operários da Confederação Germânica). Muitos, entretanto, opuseram-se a esta decisão. Para além do grupo de Bakunin, contrário a qualquer política que não fosse a da destruição imediata do Estado, várias federações se uniram em sua impaciência e rebeldia em relação {a proposta do Conselho Geral, ao considerar que a eleição de Londres era uma ingerência na autonomia das federações locais.

O adversário principal da campanha iniciada por Marx foi uma atmosfera ainda resistente em aceitar o salto qualitativo proposto. Desenvolveu-se assim um enfrentamento que fez da direção da organização algo ainda mais problemático, enquanto ela se estendia na Itália e se ramificava na Holanda, Dinamarca, Portugal e Irlanda.

Em 1872, a Internacional era muito diferente do que havia sido no momento de sua fundação. Os componentes democratico-radicais tinham abandonado a Associação, depois de terem sido encurralados. Os mutualistas haviam sido derrotados e suas forças drasticamente reduzidas. Os reformistas já não constituíam a parte predominante da organização (salvo na Inglaterra) e o anticapitalismo tinha se transformado na linha política de toda a Internacional, também das novas tendências – como a anarquista, dirigida por Mijail Bakunin, e a blanquista – que haviam se somado no decorrer dos anos. O cenário, por outro lado, havia mudado radicalmente também fora da Associação. A unificação da Alemanha em 1871 sancionou o inicio de uma nova era em que o Estado nacional se afirmou definitivamente como forma de identidade política, jurídica e territorial.

O novo contexto tornava pouco plausível a continuidade de um organismo supranacional em que as organizações de vários países, apesar de dotadas de independência, deviam ceder uma parte considerável da direção política.

A configuração inicial da Internacional estava superada e sua missão original era concluída. Não se tratava de preparar e coordenar iniciativas de solidariedade em escala europeia, em apoio a greves, nem de convocar congressos para discutir acerca da utilidade da luta sindical ou da necessidade de socializar a terra e os meios de produção. Estes temas haviam se transformado em patrimônio coletivo de todos os componentes da organização. Depois da Comuna de Paris, o verdadeiro desafio do movimento operário era a revolução, ou seja, como se organizar para colocar fim ao modo de produção capitalista e derrocar as instituições do mundo burgues.

Durante sucessivas décadas, o movimento operário adotou um programa socialista que se estendeu primeiro por toda a Europa e depois por todos os rincões do mundo, construindo novas formas de coordenação supranacional que reivindicavam o nome e o ensino da Internacional. Esta imprimiu na consciência dos trabalhadores a convicção de que a libertação do trabalho do jugo do capital não podia ser obtida dentro das fronteiras de um país apenas, mas era, pelo contrário, uma questão global. E igualmente, graças à Internacional, os operários compreenderam que sua emancipação poderia ser conquistada somente por eles mesmos mediante sua capacidade de organização, uma conquista que não poderia ser delegada a outros. Em suma, a Internacional difundiu entre os trabalhadores a consciência de que sua escravidão terminaria somente com a superação do modo de produção capitalista e do trabalho assalariado, posto que as melhoras no interior do sistema vigente não transformariam sua condição estrutural.

Em uma época em que o mundo do trabalho se encontra acuado, também na Europa, sofrendo com condições de exploração e legislações semelhantes às do século XIX e em que velhos e novos conservadores tratam, uma vez mais, de separar o que trabalha do desempregado, precário ou migrante, a herança política da organização fundada em Londres recobra uma extraordinária relevância. Em todos os casos em que se comete uma injustiça social relativa ao trabalho, cada vez que se pisa em um direito germina a semente da nova Internacional.

Tradução: Daniella Cambaúva

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Paolo Petroni, ANSA

I 150 anni della Prima Internazionale

Cadono il 28 settembre e un volume riunisce discorsi e documenti

Centocinquanta anni fa, il 28 settembre 1864, alla St. Martin’s Hall di Londra, gremita da oltre duemila lavoratori, si teneva la sessione inaugurale dell’Associazione internazionale dei lavoratori: l’atto fondativo della prima organizzazione internazionale del movimento operaio.

Ciò che oggi colpisce è il carattere profondamente radicale e libertario di quella esperienza, di cui ora, in occasione della ricorrenza, lo studioso di Marx e docente di Sociologia teorica alla York University di Toronto pubblica un volume che raccoglie indirizzi, risoluzioni, discorsi e documenti, con note esplicative e un finale indice dei nomi.

”Il mondo del lavoro oggi è ridotto a una profonda subalternità ideologica rispetto al sistema dominante”, per cui, scrive Musto, la ragione del libro è nella necessità ”di ricostruire pazientemente, dalle macerie, la conoscenza diretta delle elaborazioni originali del movimento operaio, che può costituire un contributo importante per invertire questa tendenza”. Le discussioni, anche accese, che animarono quella riunione oggi ci paiono ancora di una certa attualità, spaziando dal diritto al lavoro alla critica delle ingiustizie sociali, dalla contestazione del modo di produzione capitalistico alla denuncia delle sue contraddizioni, dalla difesa della salute, dell’istruzione, del welfare all’aspra contestazione delle diseguaglianze di genere, dalla polemica contro i nazionalismi e le discriminazioni razziali al progetto di una nuova dimensione internazionale per le classi lavoratrici, in vista della loro emancipazione. Senza negare l’imprescindibile contributo apportato da Karl Marx, autore o coautore di trenta degli ottanta documenti raccolti nel libro (26 dei quali tradotti per la prima volta in italiano) e che concluse il suo indirizzo inaugurale con l’esortazione ”Proletari di tutti i paesi unitevi”, l’elaborazione di tutti questi temi, ricorda il curatore, fu un processo collettivo. Il programma politico, la richiesta del lavoro ridotto a otto ore quotidiane, la protezione dei diritti dei fanciulli e il loro diritto alla scuola, intende, usando parole sempre di Marx, ”far recuperare l’energia e la salute alla classe lavoratrice, che costituisce la gran massa di ogni nazione” e, non meno necessario, ”fornire a essa la possibilità di sviluppo intellettuale, di reazioni sociali e di attività sociale e politica”. Si parla così di proprietà, di lavoro, di sindacato, di sciopero, di movimenti cooperativi, Quindi si aprono focus sulla Comune di Parigi, sulla Questione irlandese, sugli Stati Uniti.

L’ideologia iniziale era improntata comunque più a generici richiami etico-umanitari, come la fratellanza tra i popoli e la pace, che alla lotta di classe e a precisi obiettivi politici, e gli organizzatori non si immaginavano quel che da quella riunione sarebbe nato, suscitando reazioni e passioni tutta Europa: una vera e propria organizzazione internazionale capace di coordinare le iniziative sindacali e politiche della classe operaia, come ricostruisce Musto in un articolato saggio introduttivo sulle vicende dell’Internazionale, sino al suo ultimo congresso a Verviers nel settembre 1877, cui parteciparono però delegati tutti di provenienza anarchica, mentre tutti gli altri si riunirono a Gand in occasione del Congresso Socialista Universale, avvertendo ormai l’importanza di partecipare con organizzazioni partitiche alla lotta politica. ”Questo pugno che sale / questo canto che va / è l’Internazionale, un’altra umanità./ Questa lotta che eguale / l’uomo all’uomo farà / è l’Internazionale, fu vinta e vincerà”, come canta l’Internazionale di Eugene Potier, pubblicata in chiusura del volume, nella traduzione di Franco Fortini. (ANSA).

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Journalism

150 años de la Internacional de los Trabajadores

El 28 de septiembre de 1864, la sala del St. Martin’s Hall, un edificio situado en el corazón de Londres, se encontraba a rebosar.

Habían concurrido hasta abarrotarla cerca de dos mil trabajadoras y trabajadores para escuchar un mitin de algunos sindicalistas ingleses y colegas parisinos. Gracias a esta iniciativa nacía el punto de referencia del conjunto de las principales organizaciones del movimiento obrero: la Asociación Internacional de Trabajadores.

En pocos años, la Internacional levantó pasiones por toda Europa. Gracias a ella, el movimiento obrero pudo comprender más claramente los mecanismos de funcionamiento del modo de producción capitalista, adquirió mayor conciencia de su propia fuerza e inventó nuevas formas de lucha. A la inversa, en las clases dominantes causó horror la noticia de la formación de la Internacional. La idea de que los obreros reclamasen mayores derechos y un papel activo en la historia suscitó repulsión en las clases acomodadas y fueron numerosos los gobiernos que la persiguieron con todos los medios a su alcance.

Las organizaciones que fundaron la Internacional eran muy diferentes entre sí. Su centro motor inicial fueron las Trade Unions inglesas, que la consideraron como el instrumento más idóneo para luchar contra la importación de mano de obra de fuera durante las huelgas. Otra rama significativa de la asociación fue la de los mutualistas, la componente moderada fiel a la teoría de Proudhon, predominante en aquel entonces en Francia; mientras que el tercer grupo, por orden de importancia, fueron los comunistas, reunidos en torno a la figura de Marx. Formaron parte inicialmente también de la Internacional grupos de trabajadores que reivindicaban teorías utópicas, núcleos de exiliados inspirados por concepciones vagamente democráticas y defensores de ideas interclasistas, como algunos seguidores de Mazzini. El empeño de lograr que convivieran todas estas almas en la misma organización fue indiscutiblemente obra de Marx. Sus dotes políticas le permitieron conciliar lo que no parecía conciliable y le aseguraron un futuro a la Internacional. Fue Marx quien le otorgó a la Asociación la clara finalidad de realizar un programa político no excluyente, si bien firmemente de clase, como garantía de un movimiento que aspiraba a ser de masas y no sectario. Fue siempre Marx, alma política del Consejo General de Londres, quien redactó casi todas las resoluciones principales de la Internacional. Sin embargo, a diferencia de lo propagado por la liturgia soviética, la Internacional fue mucho más que solo Marx.

Desde finales de 1866, se intensificaron las huelgas en muchos países europeos y fueron el corazón vibrante de una significativa época de lucha. La primera gran batalla ganada gracias al apoyo de la Internacional fue la de los broncistas de París en el invierno de 1867. En este periodo tuvieron también un desenlace victorioso las huelgas de los trabajadores fabriles de Marchienne, las de los obreros de la cuenca minera de Provenza, de los mineros del carbón de Charleroi y de los albañiles de Ginebra. En cada uno de estos acontecimientos, se repite de modo idéntico la pauta: se recauda dinero en apoyo de los huelguistas, gracias a los llamamientos redactados y traducidos por el Consejo General y luego enviados a los trabajadores de otros países, y al entendimiento a fin de que estos últimos no lleven a cambio acciones de rompehuelgas. Todo lo cual obligó a los patronos a buscar un compromiso y aceptar muchas de las peticiones de los obreros. Se inició una época de progreso social, durante la cual el movimiento de trabajadores consiguió mayores derechos para aquellos que aun no gozaban de ellos, sin substraérselos, como prescribían en cambio las recetas liberales de la derecha, a todos aquellos para los que ya se habían conquistado con esfuerzo. Tras el éxito de estas luchas, fueron centenares de afiliados los que se adhirieron a la Internacional en todas las ciudades en las que se habían registrado huelgas.

No obstante las complicaciones derivadas de la heterogeneidad de lenguas, culturas políticas y países implicados, la Internacional logró reunir y coordinar más organizaciones y numerosas luchas nacidas espontáneamente. Su mayor mérito fue el de haber sabido indicar la absoluta necesidad de la solidaridad de clase y de la cooperación transnacional. Objetivos y estrategias del movimiento obrero han cambiado irreversiblemente y se han vuelto de enorme actualidad también hoy, 150 años después.

La proliferación de huelgas cambió también los equilibrios en el interior de la organización. Se contuvo a los componentes moderados y el Congreso de Bruselas de 1868 votó la resolución sobre la socialización de los medios de producción. Dicha acción representó un paso decisivo en el recorrido de definición de las bases económicas del socialismo y, por vez primera, uno de los baluartes reivindicativos del movimiento obrero quedó integrado en el programa político de una gran organización. Sin embargo, tras haber derrotado a los partidarios de Proudhon, Marx hubo de enfrentarse a un nuevo rival interno, el ruso Bakunin, que se sumó a la Internacional en 1869.

El periodo comprendido entre el final de los años 60 y el inicio de los años 70 fue rico en conflictos sociales. Muchos de los trabajadores que tomaron parte en las protestas surgidas en este arco temporal recabaron el apoyo de la Internacional, cuya fama se iba difundiendo cada vez más. De Bélgica a Alemania y de Suiza a España, la Asociación aumentó su número de militantes y desarrolló una eficiente estructura organizativa en casi todo el continente. Llegó además también más allá del océano, gracias a la iniciativa de los inmigrantes reunidos en los Estados Unidos de Norteamérica.

El momento más significativo de la historia de la Internacional coincidió con la Comuna de París. En marzo de 1871, tras la terminación de la guerra franco-prusiana, los obreros expulsaron al gobierno Thiers y tomaron el poder. Esto constituyó el acontecimiento político más importante de la historia del movimiento obrero del siglo XIX. Desde ese momento, la Internacional estuvo en el ojo de huracán y adquirió gran notoriedad. En boca de la clase burguesa, el nombre de la organización devino sinónimo de amenaza al orden constituido, mientras que en que la de los obreros asumió el de esperanza en un mundo sin explotación ni injusticias. La Comuna de París le dio vitalidad al movimiento obrero y le movió a asumir posiciones más radicales. Una vez más, Francia había mostrado que la revolución era posible, que el objetivo podía y debía ser la construcción de una sociedad radicalmente diferente de la capitalista, pero también que para alcanzarlo, los trabajadores tendrían que crear formas de asociación política estables y bien organizadas.

Por esta razón, durante la Conferencia de Londres de 1871 propuso Marx una resolución sobre la necesidad de que la clase obrera se dedicara a la batalla política y construyera, allí donde fuera posible, un nuevo instrumento de lucha considerado indispensable para la revolución: el partido (entonces utilizado sólo por los obreros de la Confederación Germánica). Muchos, sin embargo, se opusieron a esta decisión. Más allá del grupo de Bakunin, contrario a cualquier política que no fuera la de la destrucción inmediata del Estado, varias federaciones se unieron en su impaciencia y rebeldía respecto a la propuesta del Consejo General, al estimar que la elección de Londres era una injerencia en la autonomía de las federaciones locales. El adversario principal del giro iniciado por Marx fue una atmósfera todavía remisa a aceptar el salto cualitativo propuesto. Se desarrolló así un enfrentamiento que hizo de la dirección de la organización, mientras se extendía en Italia y se ramificaba también en Holanda, Dinamarca, Portugal e Irlanda, algo aún más problemático.

En 1872 la Internacional era muy diferente de lo que había sido en el momento de su fundación. Los componentes democrático-radicales habían abandonado la Asociación, tras haber sido arrinconados. Los mutualistas habían sido derrotados y sus fuerzas, drásticamente reducidas. Los reformistas ya no constituían la parte predominante de la organización (salvo en Inglaterra) y el anticapitalismo se había convertido en línea política de toda la Internacional, también de las nuevas tendencias – como la anarquista, dirigida por Mijail Bakunin, y la blanquista – que se habían sumado en el curso de los años. El escenario, por otro lado, había cambiado también radicalmente fuera de la Asociación. La unificación de Alemania, acontecida en 1871, sancionó el inicio de una nueva era en la que el Estado nacional se afirmó definitivamente como forma de identidad política, jurídica y territorial. El nuevo contexto hacía poco plausible la continuidad de un organismo supranacional en el cual las organizaciones de varios países, si bien dotadas de independencia, debían ceder una parte considerable de la dirección política.

La configuración inicial de la Internacional quedaba superada y su misión originaria había concluido. No se trataba ya de preparar y coordinar iniciativas de solidaridad a escala europea, en apoyo de huelgas, ni de convocar congresos para discutir acerca de la utilidad de la lucha sindical o de la necesidad de socializar la tierra y los medios de producción. Estos temas se habían convertido en patrimonio colectivo de todos los componentes de la organización. Tras la Comuna de París, el verdadero desafío del movimiento obrero era la revolución, o sea, cómo organizarse para poner fin al modo de producción capitalista y derrocar las instituciones del mundo burgués.

En décadas sucesivas, el movimiento obrero adoptó un programa socialista, se extendió primero por toda Europa y luego por todos los rincones del mundo, y construyó nuevas formas de coordinación supranacionales que reivindicaban el nombre y la enseñanza de la Internacional. Ésta imprimió en la conciencia de los proletarios la convicción que la liberación del trabajo del yugo del capital no podía conseguirse dentro de las fronteras de un solo país sino que era, por el contrario, una cuestión global. E igualmente, gracias a la Internacional, los obreros comprendieron que su emancipación sólo podían conquistarla ellos mismos, mediante su capacidad de organizarse, y que no iba a delegarse en otros. En suma, la Internacional difundió entre los trabajadores la conciencia de que su esclavitud sólo terminaría con la superación del modo de producción capitalista y del trabajo asalariado, puesto que las mejoras en el interior del sistema vigente, las cuales, no obstante, se intentaban conseguir, no transformarían su condición estructural.

En una época en la que el mundo del trabajo se ve constreñido, también en Europa, a sufrir condiciones de explotación y formas de legislación semejantes a las del XIX y en la que viejos y nuevos conservadores tratan, una vez más, de separar al que trabaja del desempleado, precario o migrante, la herencia política de la organización fundada en Londres recobra una extraordinaria relevancia. En todos los casos en los que se comete una injusticia social relativa al trabajo, cada vez que se pisotea un derecho, germina la semilla de la nueva Internacional.

(Traducción para www.sinpermiso.es: Lucas Antón)

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Reviews

Rita Felerico, Positano News

Centocinquant’anni fa, il 28 settembre 1864, alla St. Martin’s Hall di Londra, si teneva la sessione inaugurale dell’Associazione internazionale dei lavoratori: l’atto fondativo della prima organizzazione internazionale del movimento operaio.

Visti a distanza di 150 anni, questi 80 testi (26 dei quali tradotti per la prima volta in italiano) – editi da Donzelli e curati con estremo rigore scientifico da Marcello Musto, vedono contemporaneamente la luce in inglese presso l’editore Bloomsbury.

Marcello Musto è assistant professor di Sociologia teorica presso la York University (Toronto). Tra le sue pubblicazioni, tradotte in più lingue, si segnalano i volumi collettanei e le antologie Sulle tracce di un fantasma. L’opera di Karl Marx tra filologia e filosofia (Manifestolibri, 2005), Karl Marx’s «Grundrisse»: Foundations of the Critique of Political Economy 150 Years Later (Routledge, 2008), Karl Marx. L’alienazione (Donzelli, 2010), Karl Marx. Introduzione alla critica dell’economia politica (Quodlibet, 2010) e Marx for Today (Routledge, 2012); nonché le monografie Ripensare Marx e i marxismi (Carocci, 2011).

Una breve intervista al curatore

D. Hai appena pubblicato una raccolta di documenti sull’Internazionale (26 dei quali mai tradotti prima in italiano). Quale di questi scritti sceglieresti per commentarlo con le giovani generazioni?

Nel libro ho raggruppato gli 80 documenti che ho selezionato in 13 parti. Tra queste ci sono “Lavoro”, “Sindacato e Sciopero”, “Istruzione”, “Proprietà’ collettiva e Stato”, “Organizzazione politica” e tante altre. I testi sono tutti attualissimi, anche se hanno già 150 anni. I brani che consiglierei ai più giovani sono quelli che descrivono la società post-capitalistica. Ci sono pagine sull’importanza della riduzione dell’orario di lavoro o sull’uso dei macchinari e della tecnologia a favore dei lavoratori – e non della massimizzazione del profitto – che sembrano scritte per l’oggi. Credo siano i più stimolanti, perché aiutano a interrompere il mantra degli ultimi anni, enunciato, con intonazioni differenti, sia destra che a sinistra, secondo il quale non c’e’ alternativa al capitalismo.

D. Quale domanda porresti alla Confindustria rispetto all’attuale situazione economica, alla luce di quanto ‘ereditato’ da questi scritti?

Alla Confindustria nessuna. Mi pare difendano molto bene i loro interessi. Mi piacerebbe che la sinistra facesse lo stesso. Le domande, piuttosto, io le porrei a questo governo, che mi sembra abbia una posizione molto ideologica sul lavoro, ovvero difende la dogmatica ideologia neoliberale che ha imperato negli ultimi 25 anni e che ci ha portato esattamente dove siamo. Chiedo: quali cambiamenti hanno prodotto – oltre a privare di un futuro la mia generazione e a renderne ancora più difficile il presente, già molto prima della crisi – le varie “riforme” del mercato del lavoro che si sono susseguite dal pacchetto Treu (Governo Prodi) a oggi? Quale miglioramento produce per chi non ha lavoro, rendere più facili i licenziamenti (ovvero abolire l’Articolo 18)? L’insegnamento dell’Internazionale ci aiuta a guardare in direzione opposta. Grazie alla sua azione, i lavoratori avviarono una stagione di progresso sociale, durante la quale il movimento operaio ottenne maggiori diritti per coloro che ancora non ne avevano, senza sottrarne, come invece prescrivevano le ricette liberali della destra, a quanti li avevano già faticosamente conquistati.

D. Qual è la pagina che ti ha più emozionato?

Credo che uno dei testi più belli del volume, precedentemente inedito, sia quello prodotto della Sezione Centrale delle Lavoratrici di Ginevra. Parla di femminismo e pluralismo, due temi ineludibili per una sinistra che voglia davvero ripensarsi dopo la sconfitta del Novecento, e recita così: “Gli accordi raggiunti dovranno riconoscere alle donne i medesimi diritti che hanno gli uomini. In secondo luogo, quanto più diversi gruppi d’opinione che hanno di mira il medesimo scopo (l’emancipazione del lavoro) esistono, tanto più semplice diviene generalizzare il movimento delle classi lavoratrici, senza disperdere nessuna delle forze (anche le più differenti) che concorrono al risultato finale”.

Categories
Journalism

Os 150 anos da Internacional

No dia 28 de setembro de 1864, em um edifício no coração de Londres, nasceu aquele que se tornaria o ponto de referência das principais organizações do movimento operário: a Associação Internacional dos Trabalhadores (AIT).

As entidades que fundaram a AIT diferiam muito. Entre elas havia os sindicatos ingleses, os mutualistas franceses, os comunistas, os exilados democráticos, inúmeros grupos de trabalhadores que se reconheciam em teorias utópicas, aos quais, mais tarde, juntaram-se outras tendências, como os anarquistas de Bakunin.Foi Marx quem conseguiu que todas essas almas convivessem numa mesma organização e que realizou um programa político não excludente, embora firmemente classista, como garantia de um movimento que ambicionava ser de massas, e não sectário. Apesar das dificuldades derivadas da heterogeneidade de línguas, culturas políticas e países envolvidos, a AIT foi capaz de afiliar um enorme contingente de trabalhadores em toda a Europa e coordenar inúmeras greves nascidas espontaneamente. Graças à AIT, os trabalhadores adquiriram maior consciência da própria força e inventaram novas formas de luta. Após sua fundação, objetivos e estratégias do movimento operário transformaram-se de modo irreversível. Foi o Conselho Geral da AIT que aprovou algumas das mais famosas resoluções sobre a importância do sindicato, a criação do partido político ou a socialização da terra e dos meios de produção. Os congressos da AIT foram o palco no qual se forjaram debates históricos sobre o comunismo e a anarquia ou sobre a guerra como produto inevitável do regime capitalista.

O momento mais signifivativo da história da AIT coincidiu com a Comuna de Paris, ou seja, quando, em março de 1871, os operários derrubaram o governo de Thiers e tomaram o poder. Esse foi o evento político mais importante da história do movimento operário do século XIX. A França tinha mostrado que a revolução era possível, que o objetivo podia e devia ser a construção de uma sociedade radicalmente diferente da capitalista, mas também que, para alcançá-lo, os trabalhadores deveriam criar formas de associação política estáveis e bem organizadas.

Nas décadas seguintes, o movimento operário adotou um programa socialista, expandiu-se, primeiro, por toda a Europa e, depois, pelos mais diversos cantos do mundo e construiu novas formas de coordenação supranacionais, que se referiam ao nome e aos ensinamentos da AIT. Essa organização imprimiu na consciência dos proletários a convicção de que a emancipação do trabalho do jugo do capital não podia ser obtida nos limites de um único país, mas que era, ao contrário, uma questão global. Do mesmo modo, graças à AIT os operários compreenderam que sua emancipação só podia ser conquistada por eles mesmos, por sua capacidade de organizar-se, não podendo ser transferida a outrem. Por fim, a AIT difundiu entre os trabalhadores a consciência de que sua escravidão só teria fim com a superação do modo de produção capitalista e do trabalho assalariado, uma vez que as melhorias no interior do sistema vigente, ainda que devessem ser almejadas, não modificariam sua condição estrutural.

Em uma época na qual, em muitas partes do planeta, o mundo do trabalho é obrigado a suportar condições de exploração semelhantes àquelas do século XIX, a herança política da organização fundada em Londres em 1864 volta a adquirir extraordinária relevância. Em todas as situações em que se comete uma injustiça no trabalho, cada vez que um direito é pisoteado, germina a semente da nova Internacional.

Tradução de: Isabella Marcatti

Categories
Reviews

Massimiliano Panarari, La Repubblica

Categories
Reviews

Silvia Baglini, Azioni Parallele

Ripensare Marx e i marxismi si presenta come titolo programmatico a partire dalla grande operazione editoriale e filologica costituita dalla Mega2, la nuova edizione critica delle opere complete di Marx e Engels avviata negli anni Settanta del secolo scorso.

Che non si disponesse ancora di un’edizione critica dei lavori di due pensatori di questo calibro può apparire sorprendente, ed è anche anzitutto in questo senso che questa raccolta di testi di Marcello Musto, finalmente riuniti in traduzione italiana, si presenta decisiva: perché mette ordine nelle vicende della pubblicazione degli scritti di Marx e Engels (del primo soprattutto) e della loro ricezione, fornendo un quadro complessivo certamente in parte già noto tra gli studiosi almeno, ma qui ricostruito con una chiarezza e un’esaustività che risultano proficue sia per chi voglia avvicinarsi a questi autori, sia per chi già sia avanzato nella loro conoscenza e non disdegni un’accessibile crono-cartografia di riferimento.

Questa ricostruzione bio e bibliografica accurata – oltre che decisamente accattivante alla lettura – chiarisce i motivi storici e culturali di una lacuna quasi sconcertante e insieme permette di seguire lo sviluppo dei “marxismi”, ovvero di quelle posizioni filosofiche che si collocano nel segno di Marx, pur andando spesso ben oltre la volontà di interpretazione o trasmissione. Nel rivolgersi al pensiero marxiano non è possibile ignorare la mole di parole e riflessioni che ad esso si sono richiamate, né d’altronde si può dimenticare l’importanza da esso assunta nella storia politica, economica, sociale del XX secolo. Benché si possano, anche agilmente, tracciare dei distinguo tra l’opera del Moro di Treviri e quelle interpretazioni, azioni, pratiche, rivoluzioni che hanno voluto vestirsi del suo nome, è non di meno velleitario rifiutare di riconoscere che i protagonisti, tutt’altro che per ignoranza o mero interesse, hanno scelto di rifarsi a Marx facendone in qualche modo il capostipite di una costellazione ereditaria, anche ribelle, anche “traditrice”, ramificata, unita da interrogativi comuni, problematiche filosofiche, esigenze etiche e politiche riconoscibili.

Il compito che Musto si pone è dunque duplice: guidarci a conoscere di nuovo Marx, alla luce di una ricostruzione accurata della storia della ricezione e delle nuove acquisizioni filologiche degli ultimi decenni; sollecitarci a ridiscutere il concetto di marxismo – non a caso fin dal titolo declinato al plurale – non sulla falsariga di idee come fedeltà o correttezza, bensì per riflettere ancora sulla vivacità dell’interrogare marxiano e sulla forza di concetti forgiati oltre un secolo fa, che devono la loro possibile validità contemporanea proprio alla perenne in-attualità di cui testimonia la storia di ritorni, sparizioni e fraintendimenti che fa parte, per noi oggi, del significato che ad essi attribuiamo.

Che il pensiero di Marx abbia molto da offrirci ancora oggi è la convinzione di partenza che sottende la costruzione del libro, scritto non per incontrare la moda del presunto ritorno di Marx (in un mondo in cui l’alternativa concettuale ai sistemi dominanti appare in realtà sempre più difficile da percepire e definire) ma con un’intenzione filosofico-politica precisa, quella di risvegliare uno stile di pensiero irriverente, lucido, inquieto, troppo spesso pacificato da una serie di letture che ne hanno voluto fare una ricetta sociale o una visione della storia univoche e schematizzabili.

Musto riparte dal modo di interrogare marxiano, dalle vicende della costruzione del pensiero, dal contesto, dalle strade aperte e lasciate incomplete da Marx stesso, per restituirci un pensatore instancabile, insaziabile curioso quanto critico e auto-critico, in perenne sviluppo intellettuale: non un genio calato nel XIX secolo a svelarcene la Verità, non un autore dalle fulminanti intuizioni e dalla produzione sicura e compiuta, ma un puntiglioso artigiano del lavoro filosofico e un uomo interessato al mondo che lo circonda, le cui domande nascono dalla volontà quasi compulsiva di comprenderlo.

In questa officina intellettuale fervente Musto ci trasporta risvegliando il Marx “incompiuto” e obbligandoci a tenere a mente, in qualunque sua lettura o interpretazione ci si voglia cimentare, lo stato redazionale delle opere con cui abbiamo a che fare, le vicende editoriali, la ricchezza degli inediti; sollecitandoci a considerare le diverse vie inaugurate, seguite, abbandonate, le false piste, le ricerche parallele e apparentemente disparate che hanno nutrito il pensiero del Nostro.

Non possiamo non ricordare che i cosiddetti Manoscritti del 1844 sono quaderni di appunti scritti sull’impatto della conoscenza con il mondo borghese, politicamente più vivace e economicamente più avanzato rispetto a quello prussiano, della Parigi dei primi anni Quaranta, e che pertanto piuttosto che una teoria – sia essa il culmine del pensiero marxiano, o un residuo di umanismo filosofico poi abbandonato – essi ci offrono una preziosa testimonianza di studio, di lavoro sul metodo, di precisazione di questioni centrali (ad esempio la scoperta della storicità delle categorie economiche borghesi).

Così, quando parliamo della cosiddetta Ideologia tedesca e da lì traiamo le nostre definizioni sul «materialismo storico», dobbiamo ricordare che essa fu abbandonata alla critica roditrice dei topi o premurarci di dedicare più attenzione alle parti, ben più corpose di quella intitolata alla critica di Feuerbach, che troppo spesso sono state trascurate. Così, soprattutto, se studiamo il capolavoro di Marx dobbiamo precisare che solo il Primo libro del Capitale fu pubblicato dall’autore; che il testo che conosciamo deve molto ai rimaneggiamenti, pur benintenzionati, di Engels, che gli studi per quest’opera monumentale e non finita iniziarono almeno nella seconda metà degli anni Cinquanta e proseguirono fino alla morte di Marx.

Il libro di Musto si divide in due parti: la prima dedicata alla “rilettura” di Marx e ad una interpretazione che colleghi il pensiero alle vicende materiali della sua produzione, collocando i testi – e dunque il loro significato – entro il contesto della loro scrittura e dello sviluppo intellettuale dell’autore; la seconda che segue più propriamente la storia della ricezione di Marx e della nascita e diffusione dei diversi marxismi, nel rapporto più o meno stretto che hanno intrecciato con l’opera originale del filosofo di Treviri.

Nonostante questa divisione vi è però un richiamo reciproco nei temi trattati e nei problemi analizzati, che consente di definire la prospettiva propriamente filosofica, e non solo storica o filologica, che caratterizza questo lavoro e permette di cogliere la linea originale del pensiero di Musto stesso. Vorremmo a questo proposito seguire lo sviluppo dell’analisi di due temi fondamentali, ai quali i testi qui raccolti dedicano ampio spazio e che meritano di essere ancora discussi oggi, nonostante la mole di lavori di critica che Marx ha già suscitato. Si tratta delle due questioni della storia e del metodo della storiografia materialistica, e del concetto di alienazione e del suo correlato, il feticismo delle merci.

Musto individua negli anni parigini – a cui risale la stesura dei testi apparsi quasi un secolo dopo come Manoscritti economico-filosofici – la scoperta marxiana della storicità delle categorie dell’economia politica (p. 49). Scoperta che non coincide semplicemente con quella della mutevolezza dei rapporti storico-sociali o del carattere processuale della realtà, ma si precisa come presupposto metodologico e critico: quei rapporti che consideriamo “naturali” – tra uomini e cose, tra uomini e uomini – sono interamente il prodotto di un processo storico, e dunque anche quando, in economia, pensiamo di avere a che fare con “oggetti” che ci si danno senza ulteriori determinazioni – le categorie degli economisti borghesi come denaro, scambio, proprietà, produzione – stiamo sempre parlando di concetti che definiscono i caratteri di una realtà sociale specifica.

Questa scoperta ha un duplice peso: da un lato, conduce alla necessità di sviluppare strumenti teorici che consentano di ricostruire nel pensiero la realtà sociale nella sua complessità e nei suoi nessi interni specifici; dall’altro, e in relazione a questo, porta al riconoscimento di una priorità dell’organizzazione dei rapporti materiali rispetto alle descrizioni ideali, in termini di diritto, di scienza, di filosofia, che di essi si possono dare.

Risulta evidente già da qui come questo materialismo non sia affatto riduzionismo economicista: al contrario in esso Marx denuncia la mistificazione che soggiace al tentativo di autonomizzare l’economia e i fenomeni ad essa propri rispetto ad ogni altro aspetto dell’organizzazione dei rapporti tra gli uomini, tra gli uomini e le donne, tra questi e la natura. Marx de-naturalizza i rapporti economici mostrandone la storicità, ovvero l’appartenenza a determinate forme di organizzazione dei rapporti sociali. D’altra parte è la società borghese a richiedere che ci si concentri sullo studio delle categorie economiche, se la si vuol comprendere: perché è proprio essa a trasformare, per la prima volta nella storia umana, i rapporti tra persone in «rapporti di cose tra uomini e rapporti sociali tra cose».

Marx ha necessità di elaborare uno strumento concettuale che superi le connessioni superficiali tra le categorie dell’economia borghese: Musto ricostruisce questo percorso intellettuale attraverso i Grundrisse e i testi che precedono la stesura del primo libro del Capitale, mostrando i riferimenti filosofici, gli interessi politici, lo studio dei processi sociali, le riflessioni di metodo e i risultati scientifici di volta in volta conseguiti, criticati, superati.

Marx giunge al «capitale» attraverso un lungo e talvolta concitato percorso di ricerca, nel quale si approfondisce la sua consapevolezza della necessità di un metodo della ricostruzione storica e dell’esposizione storiografica: l’Introduzione del ’57 rappresenta un momento cruciale di questo cammino, anche se, Musto sottolinea, non possiamo esagerare l’importanza di un testo scritto in una settimana, incompiuto, ma dobbiamo analizzare come poi Marx abbia proceduto nei Lineamenti prima, nella stesura del Capitale poi.

Musto affronta anche il tema del rapporto tra l’Introduzione e la Scienza della Logica: Marx, egli afferma, non andava in giro con il libro di Hegel sotto il braccio cercando ispirazione; era già troppo preso dall’analisi della grande crisi economica, la prima su scala realmente mondiale, dalla cronaca degli eventi e soprattutto dallo studio dei suoi processi al fine di chiarire la teoria della crisi e del superamento possibile del sistema capitalistico, per dedicarsi ad uno studio puramente filosofico. Ciò non significa che Hegel sia assente: il testo dei Grundrisse, sia sul piano terminologico sia su quello della riflessione epistemologica (e storica, nel senso che intendiamo qui chiarire), è ricco di testimonianze di quanto bene Marx avesse studiato, e compreso, il grande filosofo prussiano. Piuttosto si potrebbe forse affermare, senza discordare da Musto, che non sia stata una rilettura occasionale a determinare l’impostazione del lavoro di Marx, quanto una frequentazione assidua e il riconoscimento della potenza teoretica del concetto e dell’astrazione nella loro definizione hegeliana. Marx necessita di uno strumento teorico che gli consenta di definire il rapporto complesso e processuale dei diversi momenti in cui l’economia politica divide la propria analisi delle società come rete di relazioni intrinseche, non soltanto riflessive; ha bisogno di una forma di concettualizzazione dell’oggetto storico che insieme ne distingua le peculiarità e consenta di pensarne il legame con lo sviluppo del genere umano e le forme di esistenza precedenti e distinte; infine cerca un’esposizione che restituisca l’oggetto come organicamente connesso e al tempo stesso aperto alla trasformazione.

Musto sottolinea come l’operazione storiografica di Marx sia originale all’interno del contesto storico che l’ha vista nascere e anche sia rimasta incompresa nella maggior parte dei dibattiti successivi: tanto l’alternativa storicista tra Geisteswissenschaften e Naturwissenschaften, quanto le interpretazioni del materialismo storico in chiave evoluzionista o persino deterministica hanno perduto di vista la singolarità della prospettiva marxiana, che può essere compresa anche proprio rianalizzando il rapporto profondo con la filosofia hegeliana. L’Introduzione testimonia dello stretto confronto con la Logica per quanto attiene la costruzione dell’oggetto dello storico: rifiutata l’ipotesi di assumere come punto di partenza la “società”, il “dato” come si presenta all’osservatore, Marx afferma l’importanza di muoversi sul piano del concetto e della interna determinazione di quest’ultimo che, pur essendo costruito a partire dalle specificità di cui solo la storia concreta può esser fonte, trova la propria intima sostanza nella connessione intrinseca dei momenti e non in una “copia” dei dati empirici a disposizione.

Così Marx lavora al «capitale» che, come Musto spiega, non è una descrizione del capitalismo avanzato dell’Inghilterra contemporanea ma è, appunto, il concetto di capitale. Allo stesso modo da Hegel Marx desume il concetto di astrazione sensata che gli serve per la comprensione del processo storico entro il quale le diverse e specifiche forme sociali si producono e si determinano: strumento teorico che gli consente di evitare le rigidità di una considerazione della storia secondo leggi di natura ma anche la trappola di una definizione della scienza storica come occupantesi solo ed esclusivamente di particolari.

Tuttavia Marx non si limita ad applicare il metodo hegeliano alla propria ricerca bensì si rivolge ad Hegel in relazione ai propri interessi e agli sviluppi che già il suo pensiero ha compiuto: egli ha bisogno di una forma di pensiero che gli permetta al tempo stesso di isolare le linee fondamentali del sistema borghese (il «modo di produzione capitalistico») e di definirlo come oggetto storico, del quale sia possibile indagare le tendenze di sviluppo delle componenti nella loro connessione e individuare le linee di frattura e le possibilità di sviluppo o di trasformazione. Il modo di produzione così definito da Marx non appartiene ad una ricostruzione del cammino della storia umana “quale essa è stata” bensì costituisce un’operazione di costruzione dell’oggetto da parte del filosofo e storico materialista: i sistemi storico-sociali che Marx descrive non sono rappresentazioni “fedeli ai fatti” di epoche della storia umana, ma armature teoriche appositamente edificate per evidenziare le linee di sviluppo che all’autore interessano – benché naturalmente, come Marx precisa, una simile costruzione sia legittima solo a posteriori e non possa in alcun modo pretendere di descrivere ipotetiche leggi intrinseche del processo storico.

Il «rovesciamento» della dialettica si presenta così come una sorta di rivoluzione copernicana nella scienza storica (come l’avrebbe definita, acutamente, Walter Benjamin) che mette in discussione la natura stessa del suo “oggetto” rivelandone la natura di prodotto concettuale. Con ciò Marx non ricade nei limiti che egli stesso ha criticato alla filosofia idealistica e questo si vede chiaramente nella sua teoria della contraddizione e della crisi, concepita come elemento intrinseco a quell’organicità del concetto di cui si è detto e che tuttavia, come Musto sottolinea, contiene l’indicazione di tendenze ma nessuna predizione di sviluppo. Il concetto marxiano di concreto contiene la consapevolezza della non coincidenza di reale e ideale, non però come semplice postulato di un’ulteriorità di principio di un supposto reale indipendente rispetto ad un pensiero altrettanto indipendente.

La non coincidenza implica la consapevolezza del “posto dell’osservatore”: Marx capisce che il riconoscimento dell’armonia tra i diversi momenti del sillogismo – produzione, distribuzione, scambio, consumo – rappresenta una considerazione sensata ma esterna, perché ciascuno di essi non è agìto dalla società come un tutto unico e coeso, ma è un processo determinato dagli altri eppure al tempo stesso da essi distinto e indipendente (nel senso di non predeterminato né garantito) dai restanti. A differenza che in Hegel, scrive Musto, «la definizione [di Marx] della produzione come totalità organica non corrispondeva […] a un complesso ordinato e auto-regolantesi, all’interno del quale l’uniformità tra le diverse branche veniva sempre garantita» (p. 129). È necessario, sul piano teorico, presentare la connessione tra i momenti come organica, perché solo così se ne può comprendere il nesso concettuale; ma non è possibile invertire il punto di vista in modo da far precedere la considerazione del tutto a quella dei processi che lo compongono. La totalità può essere pensata come premessa e risultato solo al prezzo di assorbire sul piano teorico la dimensione della storia e della trasformazione, come già conosciute; ciò che Marx non vuol fare.

Al contrario egli si pone dal punto di vista delle linee di frattura, della crisi, che si presenta come momento storico e non semplicemente come elemento concettuale: è il concreto movimento storico delle lotte dei lavoratori a sostenere l’analisi teorica delle contraddizioni interne al modo di produzione, non viceversa; è l’esito delle lotte reali a determinare lo sviluppo effettivo delle contraddizioni. La filosofia di Marx può fornire gli elementi necessari affinché la classe in lotta comprenda il proprio percorso e obiettivo, indicare le direzioni lungo le quali il movimento rivoluzionario deve muoversi per cogliere più di un risultato provvisorio, più di un sommovimento generale che si spenga nella reazione: il filosofo che abbia compreso la natura del sistema può fornire le armi per il suo rovesciamento. Il suo compito è strategico (e non solo tattico, come quello a cui molti partiti socialisti si sono confinati).

Così concepito, al materialismo storico è preclusa ogni possibilità di pensarsi come una filosofia della storia universale: quella dimensione, che molti interpreti hanno letto come teleologica, si rivela integralmente politica, ovvero bisognosa di essere, ogni volta, misurata e pensata sulle lotte e le possibilità del (nuovo) presente.

A questo tipo di analisi si lega il secondo tema intorno a cui vogliamo concentrare questa breve presentazione delle prospettive filosofiche aperte dal libro di Musto, ovvero il concetto di alienazione. Esso torna con insistenza negli scritti raccolti in questo volume, non solo quando l’autore tratta dei Manoscritti del 1844 in cui, come è noto, il concetto fa la sua comparsa (capitoli 2 e 8), ma anche in riferimento ai Grundrisse e soprattutto nel saggio che conclude il libro (capitolo 11), dedicato alla storia filosofica del termine e alla ri-valutazione del tema alla luce delle domande filosofiche, sociali e politiche dell’attualità (il testo di questo articolo è comparso la prima volta nel numero della rivista «Socialism and Democracy» dal titolo Marx for Today).

Musto affronta la permanente rilevanza del concetto di alienazione per l’oggi (oggetto anche di suoi articoli pubblicati su quotidiani come l’«Unità») attraverso un’analisi che va a recuperarne il senso originario nel testo marxiano, nella convinzione che quella prima formulazione fosse più radicale, e potenzialmente più attuale, rispetto alle elaborazioni del concetto che si sono prodotte e in certe fasi sono persino state di moda nel Novecento. Così egli anzitutto chiarisce la pregnanza del concetto di alienazione lungo tutta l’opera di Marx, rifiutando entrambe le alternative “discontinuiste” presenti nelle interpretazioni secondo cui nella riflessione sull’alienazione del 1844 si troverebbe il più genuino Marx umanista o, viceversa, un pensiero solo giovanile e immaturo, in seguito abbandonato senza rimpianti insieme a questa idea ancorata ad una filosofia pre-scientifica.

Musto ci invita invece a considerare l’opera di Marx secondo una prospettiva di continuità che non implica, ovviamente, l’idea di un pensiero preformato o sempre uguale a se stesso: non si possono ricercare nei Manoscritti tutti gli elementi del pensiero che Marx svilupperà in seguito, né ha senso leggerli come prodromi delle opere successive; d’altra parte non ha neppure senso affermare che dopo il 1845 vi sia una cesura netta, ed è proprio la “pista” offertaci dalla presenza del concetto di alienazione a fornirci elementi a sostegno di questa interpretazione.

Basti pensare ai Grundrisse, che potrebbero essere considerati un maestoso (incompiuto) trattato sull’alienazione indagata nei suoi aspetti di processo storico “produttore” del capitalismo e di condizione fondamentale dei caratteri specifici dei fenomeni economici all’interno del modo di produzione tipico delle società borghesi.

In essi la trattazione giovanile, che poteva ancora prestare adito ad una lettura in chiave antropologica – benché Musto dissenta in fondo anche da questa concessione (p. 50) –, si trasforma in una riflessione che legge l’alienazione come «un importante concetto teorico per descrivere criticamente le caratteristiche del lavoro e dei rapporti sociali in una determinata realtà economico-produttiva: quella capitalista» (p. 252). L’alienazione non è anzitutto un fenomeno che riguarda il rapporto tra l’uomo e l’oggetto, tra l’uomo e il lavoro: essa è un processo socialmente determinato che produce a sua volta la possibilità di ogni tipo di rapporto tra gli uomini, tra essi e la loro produzione materiale e i prodotti di quest’ultima.

Questo è evidente già nel famoso manoscritto datato 1844 dedicato all’analisi del lavoro estraniato, nel quale, quasi en passant, Marx fa notare come non sia la proprietà privata a generare l’estraniazione, ma sia al contrario questa all’origine della proprietà privata: egli non ci dice da dove derivi allora a sua volta l’estraniazione, ma possiamo sentirci autorizzati ad ipotizzare che la priorità così riconosciuta non sia – almeno non ancora, non qui – l’affermazione di una precedenza storica, quanto un richiamo teorico e metodologico. Se gli economisti partono dal «fatto» della proprietà privata, occorre invece riconoscere come essa, nel profilo specifico che assume nelle società borghesi, sia in realtà la forma che assume a livello economico un tipo di struttura dei rapporti sociali che, con un vocabolo preso dalla filosofia a lui cara e in modo ancora non del tutto chiaro, Marx definisce «alienazione».

Sarà quest’ultima, lungi dall’essere abbandonata, a diventare oggetto della ricerca teorica in quei testi successivi in cui il Moro indagherà più da vicino la società borghese tentando di definire gli strumenti teorici che gli consentano di comprenderla nella sua totalità e nella sua specificità storica.

L’alienazione definisce un carattere unico delle società borghesi ovvero l’apparenza per cui in esse i rapporti sociali non sono relazioni tra persone, tra uomini e donne, ma anzitutto relazioni con «cose» e tra «cose». Il tema come è noto sarà ripreso nel XX secolo per la descrizione di una situazione umana sottomessa ad un mondo oggettivo, reificato e reificante, al quale i rapporti sociali sono assoggettati, al cui interno gli esseri umani tentano con difficoltà di realizzare il proprio sviluppo personale con risultati non di rado prossimi alla patologia mentale.

Musto compie un passo indietro rispetto a queste analisi tornando a concentrare la sua attenzione sull’alienazione come processo sociale storicamente specifico che determina l’instaurarsi di determinate relazioni di potere tra gli uomini, di un’organizzazione dei rapporti con i mezzi di produzione che definisce le possibilità di vita degli esseri umani e dunque la strutturazione in classi della società, di una forma del ricambio organico per cui la natura si erge di fronte a uomini e donne come estraneità dominante e da dominare.

L’alienazione non riguarda un generico rapporto tra gli uomini e le cose, né tra gli uomini e la tecnologia e tantomeno concerne la dimensione individuale o addirittura psicologica della persona. Essa è un processo di organizzazione del potere all’interno della società e determina le forme economiche in cui tale potere si incarna: perciò non ha senso lottare contro queste ultime se non si rovescia la prima, nei termini delle lotte cui Marx assiste e partecipa non ha senso tentare di riformare parti del sistema se non ci si impegna a superare la struttura del lavoro salariato stesso (pp. 130-131). Musto recupera la valenza politica e autenticamente rivoluzionaria del concetto di alienazione in Marx risvegliandone la carica oltre quanto le analisi novecentesche ne hanno fatto: liberandolo dalla sua funzione di indicatore generico per «tutte le manifestazioni dell’infelicità umana» (p. 324), riporta l’attenzione sull’attuale organizzazione classista – benché probabilmente diversa da quella ottocentesca – della società e sulle forme di dominio in essa attive.

All’interno di questa impostazione possiamo collocare le pagine dedicate al feticismo delle merci come fenomeno correlato dell’alienazione. Nel Capitale l’alienazione sembra scomparire; forse perché nella forma di esposizione che Marx ha scelto (e che non coincide, ad esempio, con quella dei Grundrisse) questo processo non può presentarsi in sé, ma soltanto attraverso i suoi “effetti permanenti” che sono la forma di merce dei prodotti del lavoro, il lavoro astratto, il capitale come organizzazione dei rapporti di produzione.

Ma la definizione che Marx dà del feticismo delle merci (pp. 338-339) rimanda chiaramente al concetto di alienazione come processo sociale immanente: esso si realizza, nella forma di merce, come potere oggettivo (non fenomeno psicologico) dei rapporti oggettuali, razionalizzati e calcolati sugli individui i quali ormai “liberati” dalla originaria appartenenza a rapporti sociali primari entrano reciprocamente in relazione tramite le figure economiche che incarnano e il mezzo di comunicazione universale che è il denaro. Il problema, come Musto sottolinea, non è in un ipotetico rovesciamento del rapporto generale tra uomini e cose (che peraltro proprio da Marx è presentato come in continua trasformazione lungo la storia del genere umano) quanto nell’individuazione dei caratteri specifici della forma di merce e del modo in cui in essa, sotto l’apparenza di categoria puramente economica, si definiscono condizioni, possibilità, limiti della vita umana individuale e sociale all’interno delle società in cui domina il modo di produzione capitalistico.

Il feticismo, come Marx lo intende, non è un universale fenomeno psicologico che riguarda sempre il nostro rapportarci agli oggetti, ma è un prodotto specifico di quell’organizzazione della produzione che si realizza in merci; perciò esso deve essere analizzato, piuttosto che sul piano psicologico, su quello sociale ed affrontato ad un livello propriamente politico. Le pagine finali che Musto gli dedica invitano quindi a separare almeno momentaneamente il concetto di feticismo nella sua concezione marxiana dall’accezione freudiana e da quella che la psicoanalisi gli ha conferito nel corso del Novecento, negando d’altra parte la possibilità di una “uscita” o un’emancipazione dalla condizione feticista per via psichica o nell’esperienza estetica, come alcuni interpreti hanno suggerito.

Come scrive Marx, vi è una forma di feticismo che è inscindibile dal modo di produzione capitalistico e che non si riduce ad un modo soggettivo di vivere i rapporti, che è espressione del loro strutturarsi oggettivo e insieme distoglimento dalla loro conflittualità. La possibilità di liberarsene, passaggio fondamentale per l’affermazione della dignità dell’essere umano non di contro alle «cose», ma in un rapporto pieno con esse e con i propri simili, passa per il risveglio di questa conflittualità e la rivoluzione dei rapporti sociali nella loro interezza.

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Undergraduate Courses

Century of Revolution

This course will examine, drawing on an interdisciplinary approach, the major developments in European political thought of the Seventeenth century.

The course will begin with an overview of the historical, productive and social characteristics of the principal European countries of the time, analyzing, in particular, structural changes of economy, and demographic, cultural and religious trends.

In addition to authors as Althusius or Spinoza, special attention will be given to the voices of protest of some of the major humanists, social reformers and political philosophers of the period, in particular Campanella, Bacon, Grotius, Pufendorf and the “Levellers”.

In the second part of the course we will consider the contributions of Hobbes and Locke to modern political thought, and the emergence of the liberal state, in light of both the issues and fears raised by “the world turned upside down” and the broader context of fundamental social change. Finally, in the last class the major political theories of the century, learned during the course, will be reviewed and critically compared.

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Reviews

Angelo D’Orsi, La Stampa

Così si unirono i lavoratori di tutto il mondo

Il 28 settembre di 150 anni fa nasceva a Londra la Prima Internazionale: la sua vicenda in un’antologia di testi dell’epoca, da Marx a Bakunin, agli scritti degli operai.

Londra, 28 settembre 1864: la sala del St. Martin’s Hall, nel cuore di Londra, era affollata da duemila uomini e donne di umili condizioni, inglesi, ma anche tedeschi, francesi, spagnoli, russi, polacchi, italiani… Nessuno, quel giorno, sospettava che stava nascendo la prima organizzazione mondiale proletaria. Forse neppure Karl Marx, la testa pensante più celebre, autore (pur in collaborazione con Engels) del Manifesto del Partito comunista che a Londra aveva visto la luce nel 1848.

Una preziosa antologia, che il dinamico editore Donzelli manda ora in libreria, ci consente di ripercorrere la vicenda della Prima Internazionale, vissuta fino al 1876, quando le difficoltà organizzative, il contrasto con gli anarchici (e la nascita di una loro «Internazionale antiautoritaria»), oltre alle persecuzioni poliziesche, ne segnarono la fine. L’Associazione fu poi sostituita, nel 1889, dalla Seconda, naufragata nel 1914, nel fragoroso scoppio della Grande guerra, che vide i diversi partiti operai schierarsi con le rispettive classi dirigenti, facendo così crollare clamorosamente il mito dell’internazionalismo proletario. A firmare il lavoro è un esponente della giovane generazione di studiosi, Marcello Musto, uno dei tanti che il nostro bloccato sistema universitario costringe a rifugiarsi all’estero, esuli culturali che prendono il luogo degli esuli politici. Il libro si intitola con la frase stentorea che chiude il Manifesto: Lavoratori di tutto il mondo unitevi! (pp. 256, € 25).

Mentre la pionieristica opera di Gian Mario Bravo nel 1978 raccoglieva, accanto ai documenti ufficiali, tutta una serie di scritti collaterali, fornendo un panorama amplissimo (due volumi per un totale di 1300 pagine), il libro in questione si limita ai testi dell’Organizzazione, ed è diretto a un pubblico più ampio. Il curatore ne evidenzia il significato politico-culturale, in un momento storico in cui i diritti dei lavoratori vengono messi in discussione.

Accanto ai comunisti, nell’Internazionale, v’erano socialisti, sindacalisti, anarchici, mazziniani, repubblicani, eterogenea platea di militanti, ai quali da allora fu affibbiata l’etichetta, che voleva essere infamante, di «internazionalisti», sinonimo di sovversivi dell’ordine costituito. In realtà, le proteste nascevano dalle insostenibili condizioni in cui vivevano e lavoravano i proletari. Il ruolo dell’Associazione fu raccogliere fondi e convincere i lavoratori a rinunciare al crumiraggio ai danni degli scioperanti di un altro Paese. Era la traduzione concreta dell’internazionalismo proletario, sotto forma di solidarietà e di cooperazione. Ma anche nelle battaglie apparentemente sindacali il lievito impresso dall’organizzazione fu politico. È evidente il contributo di Marx, al quale si devono più di un terzo dei documenti raccolti, anche se la costruzione teorico-politica fu collettiva, e lo testimoniano i testi qui raccolti, in gran parte di operai. Era la prova del passaggio della classe operaia «in sé», ossia non ancora cosciente della propria forza, a classe «per sé», cioè matura, e pronta alla lotta per il potere, come intanto stava teorizzando Marx.

Era per esempio il francese Eugène Tartaret a perorare la riduzione dell’orario, ma rivendicando la nobiltà del lavoro, che «non dev’essere più un castigo, una schiavitù, un marchio di indegnità, deve essere un dovere imposto a tutti i cittadini». Lo scopo fondamentale della riduzione dell’orario è tuttavia quello di consentire al lavoratore di essere un cittadino istruito e cosciente, invece che «un paria, uno schiavo indifferente al progresso…».

L’Internazionale, pur tra gli scontri interni (che videro l’allontanamento di mazziniani, anarchici ecc.), svolse un ruolo fondamentale nel processo di maturazione dei proletari. Per esempio, rispetto al luddismo, la risposta distruttiva all’introduzione delle macchine in fabbrica, si scriveva: «L’uomo privato del suo pane […] aveva torto nel maledire il macchinario: il suo odio e la sua collera dovevano condurre a risultati più alti. La causa dei mali è l’anarchia sociale: la giustizia sociale sarà il loro rimedio». Era una ventata di utopia, ma nel contempo era un progetto sociale di alto respiro.

Le parole più lucide erano sempre quelle di Marx, il quale peraltro sapeva comportarsi da leader, indirizzando a Lincoln un messaggio di congratulazioni per la rielezione alla Casa Bianca, ma rimaneva un rivoluzionario conseguente, e invitava a diffidare di ogni accordo separato (un monito che pochi oggi sono disposti ad ascoltare) e ad affrontare questioni come salario e orario in termini generali, ossia politici, giacché tutto sempre «si riduce alla questione dei rapporti di forza delle parti in lotta». E, con sarcasmo, scriveva di un certo tipo di capitalista: «È così infatuato per la libertà dei suoi operai […] di lavorare in ogni ora della loro vita per lui, che, sempre e con sdegno, ha respinto ogni legge sulle fabbriche, in quanto recante pregiudizio alla suddetta libertà. Lo fa inorridire soltanto l’idea che un operaio comune sia tanto folle da aspirare a un destino più elevato di quello di arricchire il suo signore e padrone, il suo superiore naturale. Vuole […] che il suo operaio resti un misero schiavo». Di qua, la «folle furia» contro lo sciopero, considerato «una blasfemia, una rivolta di schiavi, l’indice di un cataclisma sociale».

I documenti degli internazionalisti affrontano ogni tematica di qualche rilevanza nella costruzione della società futura: l’idea che dovesse essere una società immediatamente senza Stato, secondo la tesi di Bakunin, venne lasciata cadere, grazie alla contrapposizione di Marx, che ironizzava con l’anarchico russo, e la sua battaglia contro «l’idea astratta di Stato». La tragica ed esaltante esperienza della Comune di Parigi fornì a Marx conferma che la rivoluzione aveva bisogno di uno Stato, diverso da quello borghese (abolizione dell’esercito e della polizia permanenti, eleggibilità e revocabilità dei pubblici funzionari ecc.), ma anch’esso deputato all’esercizio della forza, contro il nemico di classe, che infatti, spodestato, prese la sua sanguinosa rivincita. Ciò malgrado, con la Comune, l’Internazionale segnò la più prestigiosa vittoria ideale: «essa fu essenzialmente un governo della classe operaia, […] la forma politica finalmente scoperta, nella quale si poteva compiere l’emancipazione economica del lavoro». Era uno dei risultati storici dell’Internazionale dei lavoratori.

Categories
Journal Articles

Anmerkungen zur Geschichte der Internationale

Erste Schritte
Am 28. September 1864 war die St. Martin`s Hall im Londoner Stadtzentrum zum Bersten überfüllt Zweitausend Arbeitsleute waren gekommen [1]. Der Grund war eine Versammlung, zu der englische Gewerkschaftsführer und eine kleine Gruppe von Arbeitern vom europäischen Festland aufgerufen hatten.

Die Organisatoren konnten sich nicht vorstellen, geschweige denn vorhersehen, welche Folgen ihre Initiative schon kurz danach haben sollte. Ihre Idee war es eigentlich, ein internationales Forum aufzubauen, wo die wichtigsten die Arbeiterschaft betreffenden Probleme untersucht und diskutiert werden konnten. Die Gründung einer Organisation mit dem Ziel der Koordinierung der gewerkschaftlichen und politischen Aktivitäten der Arbeiterklasse beinhaltete diese ursprüngliche Idee nicht. Tatsächlich allerdings wurde die gewählte Form zum Prototypen für alle folgenden Organisationen der Arbeiterbewegung, die sowohl für die reformistischen wie auch die revolutionären Strömungen zum Referenzpunkt wurde: Die Internationale Arbeiterassoziation (IAA). [2]

Die Internationale sorgte dafür, dass bald nach ihrer Gründung in ganz Europa Leidenschaften geweckt wurden. Sie machte Klassensolidarität zu einem Ideal und inspirierte eine große Zahl von Männern und Frauen für das radikalste aller Ziele zu kämpfen: Die Veränderung der Welt. Dank der Internationale gelang es der Arbeiterbewegung nicht nur, ein klareres Verständnis der Funktionsweise der kapitalistischen Produktionsweise zu gewinnen; sie wurde sich auch ihrer eigenen Stärke viel bewusster und konnte neue und modernere Kampfformen entwickeln.

Der richtige Mann am richtigen Platz
Die Arbeiterorganisationen, die die Internationale gründeten, waren ein kunterbunt zusammengewürfelter Haufen. Die treibende Kraft waren die britischen Gewerkschaften, deren Führer hauptsächlich an ökonomischen Fragen interessiert waren. Sie kämpften für die Verbesserung der Lebens- und Arbeitsbedingungen der Arbeiter, aber ohne den Kapitalismus in Frage zu stellen. Daher stellten sie sich die Internationale als ein Instrument vor, dass die Zufuhr von Arbeitskräften vom Festland im Falle von Streiks verhindern sollte.

Dann waren da die Mutualisten, die lange Zeit in Frankreich dominant waren, aber auch in Belgien und der französisch sprechenden Schweiz über großen Rückhalt verfügten. In Einklang mit den Theorien von Pierre-Joseph Proudhon waren sie nicht nur gegen jedes Engagement der Arbeiterklasse in der Politik, sondern sie lehnten auch den Streik als Mittel im Kampf ab. Gleichzeitig vertraten sie in den Diskussionen über die Emanzipation der Frau konservative Positionen. Sie traten für ein Kooperativsystem nach föderalem Muster ein und gingen von der Möglichkeit aus, den Kapitalismus durch den gleichen Zugang zu Krediten für jedermann schrittweise zu verändern. Man kann daher sagen, dass sie de facto den rechten Flügel der Internationale bildeten.

Neben diesen beiden Gruppen, die die Mehrheit ausmachten, gab es allerdings auch noch andere Akteure. So waren die Kommunisten die drittwichtigste Strömung. Sie gruppierten sich um Karl Marx, waren Antikapitalisten und in kleinen Gruppen mit begrenztem Einfluss aktiv. Sie traten gegen das herrschende Produktionssystem auf und verfochten die Notwendigkeit politischen Handels als Weg zum Sturz des Kapitalismus.

Zur Zeit ihrer Gründung umfassten die Reihen der Internationale auch allgemein demokratische Elemente, die nichts zu tun hatten mit der sozialistischen Tradition. Weiter verkompliziert wird das Bild durch den Umstand, dass manche Arbeiter, die Mitglied der Internationale wurden, die unterschiedlichsten verworrenen Theorien mitbrachten, von denen manche utopisch inspiriert waren. Gleichzeitig lehnte die Partei der Lassalleaner, die sich niemals der Internationale anschloss, aber immer um sie kreiste, die Gewerkschaftsbewegung ab und verstand politisches Handeln als strikt nationale Angelegenheit.

Das Zusammenwirken all dieser Strömungen in derselben Organisation zu gewährleisten, deren Programm weit weg von den Denkansätzen war, aus denen die einzelnen Gruppierungen einst entstanden waren, ist Marxens große Leistung. Sein politisches Talent ermöglichte es ihm, scheinbar Unvereinbares in Einklang zu bringen und somit sicherzustellen, dass die Internationale nicht sofort zur Bedeutungslosigkeit verdammt war, wie viele vorangegangene Arbeiterassoziationen [3] Es war Marx, der der Internationale ein klares Ziel gab und der erreichte, dass das politische Programm zwar nicht ausschließend, aber dennoch entschieden klassenbasiert war und der Internationale einen Massencharakter jenseits allen Sektierertums gab. Die politische Seele des Generalsrats war immer Marx: Er entwarf all seine wichtigen Resolutionen und bereitete die meisten Kongressberichte vor. Er war „der richtige Mann am richtigen Ort“ wie es der der deutsche Arbeiterführer Johann Georg Eccarius auf den Punkt brachte. [4]

Vor allem dank Marxens Fähigkeiten konnte die Internationale eine politische Synthese entwickeln, die die vielen nationalen Kontexte in einem Projekt gemeinsamen Kampfs vereinte. Die Aufrechterhaltung der Einheit war mitunter zermürbend, besonders da Marxens Antikapitalismus niemals in der Organisation dominierte. Mit der Zeit allerdings wurde das marxsche Denken zur hegemonialen Konzeption – teils aufgrund von Marxens eigener Beharrlichkeit, teils infolge gelegentlich vorkommender Abspaltungen anderer Richtungen.

Mitgliedschaft und Struktur
Während der gesamten Zeit ihrer Existenz galt die Internationale als eine gewaltige und mächtige Organisation. Die Zahl ihrer Mitglieder wurde aber immer überschätzt. So gab der Staatsanwalt, der im Juni 1870 einige ihrer französischen Führer unter Anklage stellte, ihre Mitgliedschaft in Europa mit 800.000 an[5]. Ein Jahr später, nach der Niederlage der Pariser Kommune, sprach die Londoner Times von zweieinhalb Millionen [6]. In Wirklichkeit waren die Mitgliederzahlen viel niedriger. Selbst den eigenen Führern und denjenigen, die sich intensiv mit den Zahlen beschäftigten, fiel es seinerzeit schwer, auch nur ungefähre Schätzungen abzugeben. Aber nach heutigem Stand der Forschung lässt sich die Hypothese aufstellen, dass auf dem Höhepunkt der Organisation zwischen 1871-1872 die Mitgliederzahl 150.000 nicht überstieg.

Zu einer Zeit allerdings, wo es – mit Ausnahme der englischen Gewerkschaften und des Allgemeinen Deutschen Arbeitervereins – kaum wirksame Organisationen der Arbeiterklasse gab, war diese Zahl dennoch beachtlich. Außerdem muss man sich darüber klar sein, dass die Internationale während des gesamten Zeitraums ihrer Existenz nur in Großbritannien, der Schweiz, Belgien und den USA legal war. In anderen Ländern existierte sie bestenfalls am Rande der Legalität und ihre Mitglieder waren der Verfolgung ausgesetzt. Allerdings hatte die Assoziation die bemerkenswerte Fähigkeit, ihre einzelnen Gliederungen zu einem in sich geschlossenem Ganzen zu vereinen. Innerhalb weniger Jahre nach ihrer Gründung hatte sie es geschafft, hunderte von Arbeitervereinen zu einem Bund zusammenzuschließen. Nach 1868 kamen Vereine in Spanien hinzu und im Nachgang der Pariser Kommune entwickelten sich auch Sektionen in Italien, den Niederlanden, Dänemark und Portugal.

Dennoch machten die Mitglieder der Internationale nur einen kleinen Teil der gesamten Arbeiterschaft aus. In Großbritannien war die Internationale, mit Ausnahme der Stahlarbeiter, im Industrieproletariat immer nur schwach vertreten. [7] Die große Mehrzahl der Mitglieder arbeitete im Schneiderhandwerk, in der Bekleidungsindustrie, in der Schuhmacherei und Tischlerei, also den Bereichen der Arbeiterklasse, die am besten organisiert waren und das größte Klassenbewusstsein hatten. Nirgendwo bildeten die Fabrikarbeiter jemals eine Mehrheit, am wenigsten, nach dem die Organisation sich nach und in Südeuropa ausgedehnt hatte. Das andere große Hindernis waren die Misserfolge beim Versuch, Mitglieder unter den ungelernten Arbeitern zu gewinnen [8] – trotz gewisser Erfolge, die im Vorfeld des ersten Kongresses erzielt wurden.

Die Entstehung der Internationale
Großbritannien war das erste Land, wo Beitrittsgesuche zur Internationalen gestellt wurden. In der Folge trat im Februar 1865 die Gewerkschaft der Maurer mit rd. 4.000 Mitgliedern bei, kurz darauf folgten die Assoziationen der Bauarbeiter und der Schumacher. In Frankreich begann die Internationale im Januar 1865 Form anzunehmen, als ihre erste Sektion in Paris gegründet wurde. Allerdings blieb sie sehr schwach, hatte wenig ideologischen Einfluss und schaffte es auch nicht, eine nationale Organisationsstruktur aufzubauen. Trotzdem gelang es den französischen Unterstützern der Internationale – größtenteils Anhängern von Proudhons Mutualismus –, sich als zweitgrößte Gruppe auf der ersten Konferenz der Organisation zu etablieren.

Im folgenden Jahr setzte die Internationale ihre Ausdehnung in Europa fort und baute ihre ersten bedeutenden Organisationskerne in Belgien und in der französisch-sprechenden Schweiz auf. Das Koalitionsverbot in Preußen hatte aber zur Folge, dass die Internationale keine Sektionen im Deutschen Bund gründen konnte. Der 5.000 Mitglieder starke Allgemeine Deutsche Arbeiterverein, die erste Arbeiterpartei der Geschichte, verfolgte eine ambivalente Linie des Dialogs mit Otto von Bismarck und zeigte in den ersten Jahren ihrer Existenz wenig bis kein Interesse an der Internationale. Dieses Desinteresse teilte auch Wilhelm Liebknecht, trotz seiner politischen Nähe zu Marx.

Die Aktivität des Generalrats in London war entscheidend für die weitere Stärkung der Internationale. Im September 1866 beherbergte die Stadt Genf den ersten Kongress der Internationale mit 60 Delegierten aus Großbritannien, Frankreich, Deutschland und der Schweiz. Hier konnte die Assoziation eine ausgesprochen positive Bilanz der ersten beiden Jahre seit ihrer Gründung ziehen, hatten sich doch über hundert Gewerkschaften und politische Organisationen zur IAA bekannt. Die Teilnehmer des Kongresses teilten sich in zwei Blöcke. Der erste Block, der aus den Britischen Delegierten, den wenigen Deutschen und einer Mehrheit der Schweizer bestand, folgte den Direktiven des Generalrates, die von Marx (der in Genf nicht anwesend war) formuliert worden waren. Den zweiten Block – die französischen Delegierten und einige aus der französisch-sprachigen Schweiz – bildeten die Mutualisten.

Zu diesem Zeitpunkt waren in der Internationale de facto moderate Positionen vorherrschend.
Indem sie sich auf die von Marx vorbereiteten Resolutionen stützten, gelang es den Führern des Generalrats erfolgreich, die Mutualisten auf dem Kongress zu marginalisieren und Abstimmungen zugunsten von Staatsintervention für sich zu entscheiden. Zu letzterem Punkt hatte Marx sich klar geäußert: „Bei der Durchsetzung solcher Gesetze … stärkt die Arbeiterklasse keineswegs die Macht der Regierung. Im Gegenteil, sie verwandelt jene Macht, die jetzt gegen sie gebraucht wird, in ihre eigenen Diener.“ [9]

Hinzu kommt, dass die Marxschen „Instruktionen“ für den Genfer Kongress die grundlegenden Aufgaben der Gewerkschaften betonten.

Wachsende Stärke
Ab Ende 1866 verstärkte sich die Streiktätigkeit in vielen europäischen Ländern. Sie wurde von einer großen Masse von Arbeitern getragen und half ein Bewusstsein für die eigene Situation zu schaffen. Diese Streiks waren das Herzstück einer neuen und wichtigen Welle von Kämpfen.

Obwohl einige Regierungen dieser Zeit die Internationale für die Unruhen verantwortlich machten, wussten die meisten der in die Kämpfe einbezogenen Arbeiter nicht einmal von ihrer Existenz. Der Grund ihrer Proteste waren die furchtbaren Lebens und Arbeitsbedingungen, die sie gezwungenermaßen erdulden mussten. Die Mobilisierung führte jedoch dazu, dass eine Phase des Kontakts und der Koordinierung der Streikbewegungen mit der Internationale begann. So wurden sie von der IAA mit Deklarationen und Solidaritätsaufrufen unterstützt und es wurden Gelder für die Streikenden gesammelt. Des weitern unterstützte die Internationale die Kämpfe gegen Versuche der „Bosse“, den Widerstand der Arbeiter zu schwächen.

Es war diese praktische Rolle der Internationale, die die Arbeiter erkennen ließ, dass diese Organisation ihre Interessen vertrat und die dazu führte, dass sie sich ihr in manchen Fällen auch anschlossen. [10] Arbeiter in anderen Ländern sammelten Geld zu Unterstützung der Streikenden und waren sich darin einig, keine Arbeit anzunehmen, die sie in „industrielle Söldner“ verwandelt hätte. Dies zwang die „Bosse“, auf viele Forderungen der Streikenden einzugehen und Kompromisse zu finden. In den Gemeinden, die im Zentrum des Geschehens standen, wurden hunderte neue Mitglieder geworben. Später stellte ein Bericht des Generalrats fest: „Die Internationale Arbeiterassoziation drängt die Menschen nicht dazu zu streiken, aber es sind die Streiks, die die Menschen in die Arme der Internationalen Arbeiterassoziation treiben“. [11]

Gestärkt durch ihren Erfolg, ihre steigenden Mitgliederzahlen und einer verbesserte Organisation machte die Internationale ab 1867 überall in Kontinentaleuropa Fortschritte. Aber Großbritannien blieb das Land, wo die Internationale die größte Präsenz hatte. Im Laufe des Jahres 1867 stieg die Zahl der Mitglieder durch den Beitritt dutzender weiterer Organisationen auf ca. 50.000. [12] Nirgendwo anders erreichte die Mitgliedschaft der Internationale ein derartiges Niveau. Dennoch waren die folgenden Jahre in Großbritannien, im Gegensatz zum Zeitraum 1864-1867, durch eine gewisse Stagnation geprägt. Dafür gab es mehrere Gründe. Der wichtigste aber war, dass es der Internationale nicht gelang, Fabrikarbeiter und ungelernte Arbeiter zu organisieren.

Weiterhin trug die wachsende Institutionalisierung der Arbeiterbewegung zu einem Abflauen der Aktivität der Internationale bei. Die Legalisierung der Gewerkschaften, die die Gefahr der Verfolgung und der Repression für ihre Mitglieder beendete, ermöglichte es der „Vierten Gewalt“, eine wirkliche Präsenz in der Gesellschaft zu erlangen.

Die Situation auf dem Kontinent war allerdings eine andere. Im Deutschen Bund existierten Tarifverhandlungen faktisch nicht. In Belgien wurden Streiks mit einer Repressionswelle beantwortet, als seien sie Kriegsakte. In der Schweiz wurden sie als Normabweichung betrachtet, mit der sich das Establishment nur schwer anfreunden konnte. In Frankreich waren Streiks zwar seit 1864 legal, aber die Aktivitäten der ersten Gewerkschaften unterlagen nach wie vor harten Restriktionen.

Vor diesem Hintergrund versammelte sich die durch eine erweiterte Mitgliedschaft zu neuer Stärke gekommene Internationale zu ihrem Kongress 1867. Marx war mit der Arbeit an den Korrekturfahnen für das „Kapital“ vollständig ausgelastet und nahm weder an Sitzungen des Generalrates, in denen die vorbereitenden Dokumente erarbeitet wurden, noch am Kongress selber teil. [13] Die Auswirkungen waren natürlich spürbar, was sich darin zeigte, dass der Kongress seinen Fokus auf die bloße Berichterstattung über das Wachstum der Organisation in zahlreichen Ländern legte und ansonsten dank der stark vertretenen Mutualisten vor allem über proudhonianische Themen diskutierte.

Von den frühesten Tagen der Internationale an waren Proudhons’ Ideen im größten Teil des Französisch sprechenden Europas hegemonial. In der Internationale repräsentierten die Mutualisten vier Jahre lang den gemäßigtesten Flügel. Die britischen Gewerkschaften, die die Mehrheit bildeten, teilten zwar Marxens Antikapitalismus nicht, aber sie hatten auch nicht den Einfluss auf die Politik der Organisation, den die Anhänger Proudhons auszuüben vermochten.

Marx spielte zweifelsfrei eine Schlüsselrolle in dem langen Kampf zur Schwächung des Einflusses Proudhons in der Internationale. Seine Vorstellungen waren grundlegend für die theoretische Entwicklung ihrer Führer, und er besaß die bemerkenswerte Fähigkeit, diese Ideen auch bei jedem größeren inhaltlichen Konflikt innerhalb der Organisation durchzusetzen. Die Arbeiter hatten allerdings bereits selbst Abstand von den Theorien Proudhons genommen. Vor allem die Wirksamkeit der Streiks überzeugte die Mutualisten von der Fehlerhaftigkeit ihrer Auffassungen. So hatte die Arbeiterbewegung selber bewiesen, dass es, im Gegensatz zur Position Proudhons, unmöglich war, sozialökonomische von politischen Fragen zu trennen. [14]

Der Brüsseler Kongress von 1868 beschnitt dem Mutualismus die Flügel. Die Versammlung erreichte ihren Höhepunkt mit der Annahme des Antrags von De Paepe, der die Sozialisierung aller Produktionsmittel forderte – ein großer Schritt vorwärts bei dem Versuch, eine ökonomische Basis des Sozialismus zu definieren. So stand dieser Punkt jetzt nicht mehr nur in den Schriften einzelner Intellektueller, sondern war Teil des Programms einer transnationalen Organisation. Was die Bereiche Landwirtschaft, Minen und Transport betraf, so beschloss der Kongress, dass die Notwendigkeit bestehe, das Land in „allgemeines gesellschaftliches Eigentum“ zu überführen. [15] Sogar die verheerenden Folgen privaten Waldbesitzes für die Umwelt wurden erkannt. Dies kann als großer Sieg des Generalrats gesehen werden, bedeutete es doch, dass zum ersten Mal sozialistische Grundsätze in einem politischen Programm einer großen Arbeiterorganisation verankert wurden.

Der Kongress von Basel 1869 war ebenso von Interesse, weil Michail Bakunin als Delegierter an den Beratungen teilnahm. Kurz nach dem er der Internationale 1869 beigetreten war, war der Einfluss des berühmten russischen Revolutionärs in einigen schweizerischen, spanischen und französischen Sektionen rasch gestiegen (wie auch in Italien nach der Pariser Kommune), und bereits auf dem Baseler Kongress gelang es ihm, Einfluss auf den Ausgang der Beratungen zu nehmen. Nachdem er die Mutualisten endgültig besiegt hatte und das Gespenst Proudhon seine letzte Ruhe finden ließ, hatte Marx sich nun mit einem härteren Kontrahenten auseinanderzusetzen. Bakunin baute eine neue Strömung auf, den Anarchismus, und versuchte, die Kontrolle über die Organisation zu gewinnen.

Ausdehnung quer durch Europa und Opposition zum Deutsch-Französischen Krieg
Die späten sechziger und die frühen siebziger Jahre waren eine Zeit reich an sozialen Auseinandersetzungen. Viele Arbeiter, die an den Protestaktionen teilnahmen, entschieden sich dafür, mit der Internationale in Kontakt zu treten.

Das Jahr 1869 sah eine signifikante Ausweitung der IAA über ganz Europa. In jedem europäischen Land, wo die Internationale halbwegs stark war, gründeten ihre Mitglieder neue Organisationen, die völlig unabhängig von jenen waren, die bereits existierten. In Großbritannien jedoch, wo die Gewerkschaften die Hauptbasis der Internationale bildeten, lösten diese ihre eigenen Organisationsstrukturen natürlich nicht auf. Der in London ansässige Generalrat hatte demzufolge zwei Aufgaben zugleich zu erfüllen: Einerseits war er internationales „Hauptquartier“, anderseits agierte er als Leitungsorgan für Großbritannien, wo die angeschlossenen Gewerkschaften 50.000 Mitglieder in ihrem Einflussbereich hatten.

In Frankreich sorgte die repressive Politik des Zweiten Kaiserreich dafür, dass das Jahr 1868 zu einem ernsten Krisenjahr für die Internationale wurde. Das folgende Jahr hingegen ging einher mit einer Wiederbelebung der Organisation, und neue Führer, die die mutualistischen Positionen hinter sich gelassen hatten, rückten in die erste Reihe. Der Höhepunkt der Entwicklung für die französische Sektion der Internationale kam im Jahr 1870. Trotz ihres bemerkenswerten Wachstums konnte die Organisation in 38 der 90 Départements allerdings niemals Fuß fassen. Die Gesamtzahl der Mitglieder in Frankreich lag irgendwo zwischen 30.000 und 40.000. [16] Wenn die Internationale in Frankreich auch keine wirkliche Massenorganisation darstellte, so war sie dennoch zu einer Organisation von beachtlicher Größe herangewachsen, die weitverbreitetes Interesse weckte.

In Belgien erreichte die Mitgliederzahl im Frühjahr 1870 ihren Höchststand mit mehreren zehntausend Mitgliedern. Damit überschritt man in Belgien vermutlich die Zahl der Mitglieder in Frankreich. Belgien war damit das Land, indem die IAA nicht nur die zahlenmäßig höchste Dichte an Mitgliedern, sondern auch den größte gesellschaftlichen Einfluss erreichte. Eine positive Entwicklung war zu dieser Zeit ebenso offensichtlich in der Schweiz.

Im Norddeutschen Bund war der Enthusiasmus für die Internationale trotz der Existenz zweier Arbeiterorganisationen – des lassalleanischen Allgemeinen Deutschen Arbeiterverein und der marxistischen Sozialdemokratischen Arbeiterpartei – gering und die Neigung, ihr beizutreten, nur schwach. Während der ersten drei Jahre ihrer Existenz wurde sie von deutschen Aktivisten aus Angst vor Verfolgung durch die deutsche Obrigkeit faktisch ignoriert. Das Bild änderte sich nach 1868 mit wachsender Bekanntheit und zunehmenden Erfolgen der Internationale in Europa; beide rivalisierenden Parteien strebten nun danach, die IAA in Deutschland zu vertreten.

Unter diesen allgemeinen Umständen, die gekennzeichnet waren durch offene Widersprüche zwischen den Staaten und deren ungleiche Entwicklung, bereitete die Internationale ihren fünften Kongress vor. Der Ausbruch des Deutsch- Französischen Krieges 1870 ließ allerdings keine andere Wahl, als den Kongress abzusagen. Der Konflikt im Herzen von Europa verschob die Prioritäten: Jetzt kam alles darauf an, der Arbeiterbewegung dabei zu helfen, eine unabhängige Position zu formulieren, weit weg von der nationalistischen Rhetorik ihrer Zeit.

In seiner „Ersten Adresse des Generalrates über den Deutsch- Französischen Krieg“ forderte Marx die französischen Arbeiter auf, Louis Bonaparte zu stürzen und das Kaiserreich, dass dieser 18 Jahre zuvor installiert hatte, verschwinden zu lassen. Die deutschen Arbeiter ihrerseits sollten verhindern, dass die Niederlage Bonapartes zu einem Angriff auf das französische Volk ausarten könnte: „Diese einzige große Tatsache, ohnegleichen in der Geschichte der Vergangenheit, eröffnet die Aussicht auf eine hellere Zukunft. Sie beweist, daß, im Gegensatz zur alten Gesellschaft mit ihrem ökonomischen Elend und ihrem politischen Wahnwitz, eine neue Gesellschaft entsteht, deren internationales Prinzip der Friede sein wird, weil bei jeder Nation dasselbe Prinzip herrscht – die Arbeit! Die Bahnbrecherin dieser neuen Gesellschaft ist die Internationale Arbeiterassoziation.“ [17]

Die Internationale und die Pariser Kommune
Nach dem deutschen Sieg in Sedan und der Gefangennahme Bonapartes wurde am 4. September 1870 in Frankreich die Dritte Republik proklamiert. Mit einer neuen Regierung konfrontiert, die die Stadt entwaffnen wollte und jede Sozialreform verweigerte, wendeten sich die Pariser gegen Adolphe Thiers und initiierten am 18. März 1871 das erste große politische Ereignis im Leben der Arbeiterbewegung: Die Pariser Kommune.

Obwohl Bakunin die Arbeiter aufgefordert hatte, den patriotischen Krieg in einen revolutionären Krieg zu verwandeln, [18] entschied sich der Generalrat in London zunächst dafür, zu schweigen. Man übertrug Marx die Aufgabe, einen Text im Namen der Internationale zu schreiben, aber der verzögerte die Veröffentlichung – aus komplizierten, aus tiefster Überzeugung vertretenen Beweggründen. So war er sich sowohl der wirklichen Kräfteverhältnisse vor Ort als auch der Schwäche der Kommune bewusst. Ihm war klar, dass sie zur Niederlage verdammt war. Eine leidenschaftliche Deklaration, die die Kommune begeistert aufgenommen hätte, trug die Gefahr in sich, falsche Erwartungen bei den Arbeitern in ganz Europa zu wecken, die in der Folge womöglich eine Quelle für Demoralisierung und Misstrauen geworden wäre. Seine düsteren Vorahnungen erwiesen sich bald als stichhaltig. Am 28. Mai 1871 wurde die Kommune im Blut ertränkt. Zwei Tage später erschien Marx wieder im Generalrat mit einem Manuskript unter dem Titel „Der Bürgerkrieg in Frankreich“. Es wurde nach Verlesung einstimmig beschlossen und anschließend unter den Namen aller Ratsmitglieder veröffentlicht. Dieses Dokument hatte in den nächsten Wochen einen gewaltigen Einfluss, größer als der aller anderen Dokumente der Arbeiterbewegung im 19. Jahrhundert.

Trotz des blutigen Ausgangs in Paris, der Welle von Verleumdungen und staatlicher Repression überall in Europa wurde die Internationale in der Folge der Kommune immer stärker und bekannter. Für die Kapitalisten und die Mittelklassen stellte sie eine Gefahr für die herrschende Ordnung dar, aber für die Arbeiter nährte sie die Hoffnung auf eine Welt ohne Ausbeutung und Unrecht. [19] Das aufständische Paris festigte die Arbeiterbewegung und trieb sie dazu, immer radikalere Positionen einzunehmen. Die Erfahrung zeigte, dass Revolution möglich war und dass es das Ziel sein musste, eine Gesellschaft zu errichten, die völlig verschieden von der kapitalistischen Gesellschaftsordnung ist. Die Erfahrung zeigte aber auch, dass die Arbeiter sich dafür dauerhafte und gut organisierte Formen der politischen Assoziation schaffen mussten. [20]

Diese gewaltige Vitalität war überall spürbar. Die Beteiligung an den Versammlungen des Generalrates verdoppelte sich. Zeitungen, die mit der Internationale verbunden waren, wuchsen nicht nur ihrer Zahl nach, sondern steigerten auch ihre Auflagen. Besonders bemerkenswert war das Wachstum in Belgien und Spanien, wo das Niveau der Beteiligung der Arbeiter schon vor der Pariser Kommune beträchtlich gewesen war. Außerdem schaffte die Organisation den Durchbruch in Italien. Obwohl Guiseppe Garibaldi nur eine vage Vorstellung von der Assoziation hatte [21], entschied der „Held der zwei Welten“ sich hinter sie zu stellen und unterschrieb einen Aufnahmeantrag, in dem die berühmten Worte standen: „Die Internationale ist die Sonne der Zukunft“. [22] Der Abdruck dieses Briefes in dutzenden Arbeiterzeitungen und auf Flugblättern trug dazu bei, dass viele Unentschlossene sich der Organisation anschlossen.

Die Internationale eröffnete im Oktober 1871 eine neue Sektion in Portugal. In Dänemark begann sie im selben Monat die meisten der neu gegründeten Gewerkschaften in Kopenhagen und Jütland miteinander zu verknüpfen. Eine andere bedeutende Entwicklung war die Gründung von irischen Arbeitersektionen in Großbritannien. Ihr Führer John MacDonnell wurde zum korrespondierenden Mitglied des Generalrates für Irland ernannt. Unerwartete Aufnahmegesuche kamen aus den verschiedensten Ecken der Welt: So wollten nicht nur einige englische Arbeiter aus Kalkutta der Internationale beitreten, sondern auch Arbeitergruppierungen aus Victoria in Australien und Christchurch, Neuseeland. Dasselbe galt für eine Reihe von Handwerkern aus Buenos Aires.

Die Londoner Konferenz von 1871
Zwei Jahre waren seit dem letzten Kongress der Internationale vergangen, aber unter den bestehenden Umständen konnte kein neuer Kongress stattfinden. Der Generalrat entschied deshalb, eine Konferenz in London einzuberufen. Trotz aller Versuche, dieses Ereignis so repräsentativ wie möglich zu machen, wurde es tatsächlich nicht mehr als eine erweiterte Generalratssitzung. Marx hatte im Vorhinein angekündigt, dass die Konferenz sich „ausschließlich mit Organisations- und Strategiefragen“ beschäftigen würde [23], während theoretische Debatten ausgespart werden sollten.

Marx setzte sich mit ganzer Kraft für folgende Prioritäten ein: Reorganisation der Internationale; ihre wirksame Verteidigung gegen feindliche Kräfte; Zurückdrängung des wachsenden Einflusses von Bakunin. Während der Konferenz war er der mit Abstand aktivste Delegierte; er ergriff 102 mal das Wort, blockierte Anträge, die nicht seinen Vorstellungen entsprachen, und konnte diejenigen auf seine Seite ziehen, die bis dahin noch nicht überzeugt gewesen waren.[24] Die Zusammenkunft in London bestätigte Marxens Gewicht in der Organisation nicht nur als theoretischer Kopf der Organisation, sondern auch als einer ihrer kämpferischsten und fähigsten Aktivisten.

Die wichtigste Entscheidung der Konferenz und der Grund, weshalb man sich später an sie erinnern sollte, war die Annahme von Edouard Vaillants Resolution IX. Der Führer der Blanquisten, deren übrig gebliebene Kräfte nach dem Ende der Kommune der Internationale beigetreten waren, schlug vor, die Organisation zu einer zentralisierten, disziplinierten Partei unter der Führung des Generalrates umzugestalten. Trotz einiger Differenzen, besonders über die Blanquistische Position, dass ein straff organisierter kleiner Kern von Aktivisten für eine Revolution ausreichend sei, zögerte Marx nicht, eine Allianz mit der Gruppe von Vaillant einzugehen. Das geschah nicht nur, um die Opposition gegen Bakunins Anarchismus innerhalb der Internationale zu stärken. Vielmehr ging es darum, einen breiteren Konsens über die in der neuen Phase des Klassenkampfs für notwendig erachteten Veränderungen herzustellen.

Die in London verabschiedete Resolution stellte schließlich folgendes fest: „In seinem Kampf gegen die kollektive Macht der besitzenden Klassen kann das Proletariat nur dann als Klasse handeln, wenn es sich selbst als besondere politische Partei im Gegensatz zu allen alten, von den besitzenden Klassen gebildeten Parteien konstituiert. Diese Konstituierung des Proletariats als politische Partei ist unerläßlich, um den Triumph der sozialen Revolution und ihres höchsten Zieles, der Aufhebung der Klassen, zu sichern. Die durch den ökonomischen Kampf bereits erreichte Vereinigung der Kräfte der Arbeiterklasse, muss in den Händen dieser Klasse auch als Hebel in ihrem Kampf gegen die politische Macht ihrer Ausbeuter dienen.“ Die Schlussfolgerung war klar: „Die soziale Emanzipation der Arbeiter ist untrennbar von ihrer politischen Emanzipation.“ [25]

Während der Genfer Kongress von 1866 die Bedeutung der Gewerkschaften betonte, verschob sich der Schwerpunkt auf der Londoner Konferenz in Richtung des anderen zentralen (Kampf)-Mittels der modernen Arbeiterbewegung: der politischen Partei. Es sollte allerdings betont werden, dass das Verständnis davon, was „Partei“ bedeutete, damals viel breiter war, als das, was im 20. Jahrhundert darunter verstanden wurde. [26]

Nur vier Delegierte sprachen sich auf der Londoner Konferenz gegen die Resolution IX aus. Dennoch sollte sich Marxens Sieg bald als bedeutungslos herausstellen. Denn der Aufruf, in jedem Land Strukturen aufzubauen, die einer politischen Partei gleichkamen und dabei mehr Machtbefugnisse an den Generalrat abzugeben, hatten massive Auswirkungen auf das innere Leben der Internationale. Sie war noch nicht bereit dafür, so schnell von einem flexiblen auf ein einheitliches Organisationsmodel umzuschwenken. [27]

Marx war davon überzeugt, dass so gut wie alle wichtigen Verbände und lokalen Sektionen die Resolutionen der Konferenz unterstützen würden, doch er hatte die Situation falsch eingeschätzt. So berief eine Föderation der Internationale, die aus dem schweizerischen Kanton Jura, für den 12. November einen eigenen Kongress in der kleinen Gemeinde Sonvilier ein und gründete dort offiziell, trotz Bakunins Abwesenheit, eine Oppositionsströmung innerhalb der Internationale.

Obwohl die Reaktion dieser Föderation nicht unerwartet kam, war Marx wahrscheinlich doch überrascht, als sich auch anderswo Zeichen der Unruhe und sogar offener Rebellion gegen die politische Linie des Generalrates zeigten. In einer größeren Zahl von Ländern wurden die Entscheidungen aus London als unakzeptable Einmischung in die lokale politische Autonomie gewertet. Sogar die Belgische Föderation, die versucht hatte, auf der Konferenz zwischen den verschieden Lagern zu vermitteln, begann nun eine deutlich kritischere Haltung zu den Londonern einzunehmen, und auch die Niederländer gingen später auf Distanz zum Generalrat. In Südeuropa, wo die Gegentendenzen sogar noch stärker wirkten, gewann die Opposition bald beachtliche Unterstützung. Tatsächlich bezog die große Mehrheit der iberischen Mitglieder der Internationale gegen den Generalrat Stellung und bekannte sich zu Bakunins Ideen. Auch in Italien betrachtete man die Ergebnisse der Londoner Konferenz in einem negativen Licht. So nahm der Gründungskongress der italienischen Föderation sogar die radikalste Gegenposition zur Linie des Generalrates ein: Er beschloss, am kommenden Kongress der Internationale nicht teilzunehmen, sondern schlug einen „antiautoritären Generalkongress“ vor [28], der in Neuchâtel in der Schweiz stattfinden sollte. Dies sollte sich als der erste Akt der drohenden Spaltung erweisen.

Diese Auseinandersetzungen schadeten auch den Beziehungen der Mitglieder in London untereinander. So entwickelte sich das Verhältnis zwischen Marx und zweien seiner Mitstreiter, John Hales und Johann Georg Eccarius, zum Schlechten, und auch in Großbritannien begannen die ersten internen Konflikte aufzubrechen. Unterstützung für den Generalrat kam von der Mehrheit der Schweizer, den Franzosen (jetzt meist blanquistisch), den schwachen Deutschen, den kürzlich gegründeten dänischen Sektionen, aus Irland, Portugal und den osteuropäischen Gruppen in Ungarn und Böhmen. Zusammengenommen war das aber viel weniger an Zustimmung, als Marx nach der Londoner Konferenz erhofft hatte.

Die Opposition zum Generalrat variierte in ihrem Charakter und hatte oft hauptsächlich persönlich Motive. Dennoch, trotz der Faszination in einigen Ländern für Bakunins Theorien und trotz der Fähigkeit eines Guillaumes, die verschiedenen Oppositionellen zu vereinen, lag die Haupttriebkraft gegen die beschlossene Resolution über „Arbeiterklassenpolitik“ darin begründet, dass das Umfeld der Internationale nicht dazu bereit war, diesen von Marx vorgeschlagenen qualitativen Schritt nach vorne mitzugehen. So sah nicht nur die bakuninsche Strömung, sondern der Großteil der Föderationen und lokalen Sektionen das Prinzip der Autonomie und den Respekt vor den verschiedenen Besonderheiten als einen Grundpfeiler der Internationale an. Marx Fehleinschätzung in dieser Frage führte dazu, dass die Krise der Organisation beschleunigt wurde. [29]

Das Ende der Internationale
Die letzte Schlacht zeichnete sich für den Ausgang des Sommers 1872 ab. Der fünfte Kongress der Internationale fand im September in Den Haag statt. Anwesend waren 65 Delegierte aus vierzehn Ländern. Die entscheidende Bedeutung des Kongresses veranlasste Marx dazu, in Begleitung von Engels persönlich anwesend zu sein. [30] Es war der einzige Kongress der Organisation, an dem er teilnahm.

Die Repräsentativität der Delegierten war allerdings auf den Kopf gestellt, denn sie gab die realen Kräfteverhältnisse innerhalb der Organisation nicht wieder. Die französischen Sektionen waren in den Untergrund getrieben worden und die Legitimität ihre Mandate war hoch umstritten. Dennoch stammte der größte Delegiertenblock aus Frankreich. Danach folgten schon die deutschen Vertreter, die gut ein Viertel der Delegierten stellten, die aber über keine Sektionen innerhalb der Internationale verfügten. Andere Vertreter waren gleich durch den Generalrat delegiert worden und vertraten somit nicht den Willen irgendeiner Sektion.

Die Annahme der Resolutionen des Kongresses von Den Haag war nur aufgrund dieser verzerrten Zusammensetzung möglich. Die wichtigste Entscheidung, die in Den Haag getroffen wurde, bestand darin, die Resolution IX der Londoner Konferenz von 1871 als Artikel 7a in die Statuten der Assoziation zu übernehmen. Der politische Kampf war nun das notwendige Mittel zur Umgestaltung der Gesellschaft, denn: „Die Herren des Grund und Bodens und die Herren es Kapitals werden ihre politischen Vorrechte stets ausbeuten zur Verteidigung und Verewigung ihrer politischen Monopole und für die Versklavung der Arbeit. Die Eroberung der politischen Macht ist daher zur großen Pflicht der Arbeiterklasse geworden.“ [31]

Die Internationale hatte sich nun im Vergleich zu ihrer Gründungsperiode deutlich verändert: So hatte die radikaldemokratische Fraktion die Organisation verlassen, nachdem sie in wachsendem Masse marginalisiert worden war. Dann waren die Mutualisten zurückgedrängt und viele ihre Aktivisten zu Marxisten geworden. Somit machten die Reformisten nicht länger den Großteil der Mitglieder der Assoziation aus (mit der Ausnahme Großbritanniens), und der Antikapitalismus war zur politischen Linie der ganzen Assoziation geworden. Dies galt auch für erst jüngst entstandene Richtungen wie die anarchistisch-kollektivistische Strömung. Obwohl es während der Jahre, in denen die Internationale existierte, ein gewisses Maß an ökonomischem Aufschwung gegeben hatte, der die Lebensbedingungen in manchen Fällen etwas erleichterte, verstanden die Arbeiter, dass wirkliche Veränderung nicht durch solche Verbesserungen sondern nur durch das Ende der Ausbeutung des Menschen erreicht werden konnte.

Sie begründeten ihre Kämpfe mehr und mehr durch Forderungen, die ihren eigenen materiellen Bedürfnissen entsprachen und weniger im Namen der politischen Gruppen, denen sie angehörten.
Auch die Gesamtlage hatte sich radikal verändert. So hatte die Deutsche Einigung 1871 den Beginn eines neuen Zeitalters eingeläutet, in dem der Nationalstaat zum allgemeinen Bezugspunkt in Fragen der politischen, rechtlichen und territorialen Identität wurde. Diese Entwicklung warf Fragen für jedes supranationale Gremium auf, das sich nicht nur durch Mitgliedsbeiträge, die in jedem Land separat erhoben wurden, finanzierte, sondern das von seinen Mitgliedern auch verlangte, auf einen beträchtlichen Teil ihrer politischen Führungsfunktionen zu seinen Gunsten zu verzichten. Zur gleichen Zeit machten die wachsenden Differenzen zwischen nationalen Bewegungen und Organisationen es dem Generalrat äußerst schwer, eine politische Generallinie zu formulieren, die die Forderungen aller Beteiligten befriedigen konnte.

Sicherlich ist der Hinweis richtig, dass die Internationale von Beginn an eine Ansammlung verschiedenster Gewerkschaften und politischer Assoziationen war, die nicht leicht miteinander in Einklang zu bringen waren, und dass dies ein ungewöhnliches Ausmaß an Befindlichkeiten und unterschiedlichen Tendenzen mit sich brachte. Im Jahr 1872 jedoch waren die verschiedenen Organisationen der Assoziation und, allgemeiner gesprochen, der Klassenbewegungen der Arbeiter, nicht nur mit einem klareren politischen Programm ausgestattet, sie waren auch besser organisiert. Die Legalisierung der britischen Gewerkschaften hatte sie zu einem offiziellen Teil des nationalen politischen Lebens werden lassen. Die Belgische Föderation innerhalb der Internationale war eine weit verzweigte Organisation mit einer politischen Führung, die in der Lage war, bedeutende eigenständige theoretische Beiträge zu formulieren. Deutschland hatte zwei Arbeiterparteien, die Sozialdemokratische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei und den Allgemeinen Deutschen Arbeiterverein, die beide auch über eine parlamentarische Vertretung verfügten. Die französischen Arbeiter von Lyon bis Paris hatten bereits versucht „den Himmel zu stürmen“, und die spanische Föderation stand kurz davor, den Durchbruch zu einer Massenorganisation zu schaffen. Ähnliche Veränderungen hatten sich auch in anderen Ländern ergeben.

Die ursprüngliche Ausgestaltung der Internationale war somit überholt, genauso wie ihre ursprüngliche Mission zu einem Ende gekommen war. Die Aufgabe bestand nicht länger darin, europaweit Streiks vorzubereiten oder zu unterstützten. Genauso so wenig konnte es einfach weiter darum gehen, Kongresse einzuberufen, die über die Zweckmäßigkeit von Gewerkschaften oder die Notwendigkeit der Sozialisierung von Land und Produktionsmitteln debattieren sollten. Solche Themen gehörten nun zum kollektiven Erbe der ganzen Organisation. Nach der Pariser Kommune war die wirkliche Herausforderung für die Arbeiterbewegung eine revolutionäre: Was war organisatorisch zu tun, um die kapitalistische Produktionsweise zu einem Ende zu bringen und die Institutionen des bürgerlichen Staates zu stürzen? Die Frage war nicht länger, wie die bestehende Gesellschaft zu reformieren sei, sondern wie eine neue Gesellschaft geschaffen werden könnte. [32]

Obwohl die Arbeiterparteien unter den verschiedensten Formen in den unterschiedlichen Ländern entstanden waren, durften sie sich auf keinen Fall den nationalen Interessen unterwerfen. [33] Der Kampf für Sozialismus konnte nicht darauf beschränkt werden. Gerade unter den neuen historischen Rahmenbedingungen musste der Internationalismus weiter der Orientierungspunkt für das Proletariat bleiben wie auch das Mittel zu Immunisierung gegen die tödliche Umarmung des Staates und des kapitalistischen Systems.

Was sich in der morgendlichen Sitzung des 6. Septembers 1872, der dramatischsten Phase des Kongresses, ereignete, war der letzte Akt der Internationale, wie sie über die Jahre erdacht und aufgebaut worden war. So stand Engels zum Erstaunen der Anwesenden auf und ergriff das Wort. Er schlug vor, dass der Sitz des Generalrates für die Jahre 1872-1873 nach New York verlegt werden sollte und dass er aus Mitgliedern des dortigen Föderationsrates zusammengesetzt sein sollte. [34] Damit wären Marx und andere „Gründungsväter“ nicht mehr Teil des zentralen Gremiums der Assoziation. Stattdessen würde sich dieses jetzt aus Leuten zusammensetzten, deren Namen unbekannt waren.

Selbst viele Anhänger der „Mehrheit“ stimmten gegen den Umzug nach New York, der gleichbedeutend mit dem Ende der Internationale als arbeitsfähige Struktur gewesen wäre. Dass der Beschluss letztendlich mit einer knapper Mehrheit von drei Stimmen angenommen wurde (26 dafür und 23 dagegen), lag daran, dass sich neun Delegierte enthielten und war in der Tatsache begründet, dass einige Mitglieder der „Minderheit“ es gerne sahen, dass dieses Gremium an einen Ort weit weg von ihren Aktivitätszentren verlegt wurde. Ein Faktor für die Verlegung war sicherlich, dass Marx die Internationale lieber aufgeben wollte, als sie als sektiererische Organisation in den Händen seiner Gegner enden zu sehen. Der Niedergang der Internationale, der mit der Verlagerung des Generalrates nach New York sicherlich folgen würde, war auf jeden Fall einer langen und verheerenden Abfolge von „Bruderkriegen“ vorzuziehen.

Trotzdem ist das von vielen geteilte Argument [35] nicht überzeugend, dass der Konflikt zwischen den beiden Hauptströmungen oder womöglich zwischen deren Repräsentanten Marx und Bakunin der Hauptgrund für den Verfall der Internationale war – unbeschadet des großen Formats der beiden Männer. Vielmehr waren es die Veränderungen, die in der Welt rundherum stattfanden, die die Internationale als überlebt erscheinen ließen: Das Wachstum und die Transformation der Organisationen der Arbeiterbewegung, die Stärkung des Nationalstaats als Ergebnis der italienischen und der deutschen Einigung, die Expansion der Internationale in Ländern wie Spanien und Italien (wo die wirtschaftlichen und sozialen Verhältnisse völlig andere waren als in Großbritannien und Frankreich), die Tendenz der britischen Gewerkschaften in Richtung einer noch weiteren Mäßigung und nicht zuletzt die Repression, die der Pariser Kommune folgte. Alle diese Faktoren zusammen ließen den ursprünglichen Aufbau der Internationale in der neuen Zeit als nicht mehr angemessen erscheinen.

In diesem stark von zentrifugalen Trends geprägten Szenario spielten Entwicklungen im Leben der Internationale und ihrer wichtigsten Protagonisten natürlich auch eine Rolle. Zum Beispiel war die Londoner Konferenz bei weitem nicht das rettende Ereignis, das Marx sich erhofft hatte. Im Gegenteil, das unnachgiebige Durchziehen der Tagung verschlimmerte die interne Krise, denn die vorherrschenden Stimmungen wurden nicht in Rechnung gestellt und es fehlte der Weitblick, der nötig gewesen wäre, um die Stärkung der Position Bakunins und seiner Richtung verhindern zu können. [36] Die Londoner Konferenz erwies sich als Phyrrussieg für Marx. Der Versuch, die internen Konflikte zu lösen, führte nur dazu, dass sie noch weiter akzentuiert wurden. Tatsächlich jedoch hatten die Londoner Entscheidungen nur einen Prozess beschleunigt, der längst im Gange war und der unmöglich aufgehalten werden konnte.

Schlussfolgerung
Diese bedeutende, 1864 entstandene Organisation, die über acht Jahre hinweg nicht nur erfolgreich Streiks und Kämpfe unterstützt hatte, sondern die auch ein antikapitalistisches Programm entwickelt hatte, implodierte letztlich auf dem Haager Kongress. Aber unbeschadet dessen beschloss die Arbeiterbewegung in späteren Jahrzehnten ein sozialistisches Programm, weitete sich auf ganz Europa und den Rest der Welt aus und bildete neue Strukturen supranationaler Koordination. Jenseits der Kontinuität der Namen (die zweite Internationale bestand von 1889 bis 1916, die Dritte Internationale von 1919 bis 1943) bezog sich jede dieser Gliederungen auf die Werte und Lehren der Ersten Internationalen. Somit zeigte sich ihre revolutionäre Botschaft als äußerst fruchtbar und bewirkte mit der Zeit Erfolge, die bedeutender waren, als die, die während ihrer Existenz erreicht wurden.

Die Internationale half den Arbeitern zu verstehen, dass die Befreiung der Arbeit nicht in einem Lande erreicht werden konnte, sondern eine globale Aufgabe sein musste. Sie verbreitete unter ihnen auch ein Bewusstsein darüber, dass sie dieses Ziel selber erreichen mussten, durch ihre eigene Fähigkeit sich zu organisieren, statt die Durchsetzung der eigenen Interessen an irgendwelche anderen Mächte zu delegieren. Und dass – hier war der Marxsche Beitrag entscheidend – es essentiell ist, die kapitalistischen Produktionsweise und die Lohnarbeit zu überwinden, denn Verbesserungen im Rahmen des bestehenden Systems, so notwendig der Kampf um sie auch sein mag, würden nicht die Abhängigkeit von der Herrschaft der Unternehmer verschwinden lassen.

Ein Graben trennt die Hoffnungen dieser Zeit von dem Zweifel, der so charakteristisch für uns selber ist, er trennt den „antisystemischen Mut“ und die Solidarität des Zeitalters der Internationale von der ideologischen Unterordnung und dem Individualismus einer heutigen Welt, die von neoliberalem Konkurrenzdenken und Privatisierung geformt wurde. Die Begeisterung für Politik unter den Arbeitern, die sich 1864 in London versammelten, steht in scharfem Kontrast zu Apathie und Resignation, die heute vorherrschend sind.

Zu einem Zeitpunkt, wo die Welt der Arbeit zu Ausbeutungsbedingungen zurückkehrt, die denen des 19. Jahrhunderts gleichen, hat das Projekt der Internationale einmal mehr an Aktualität gewonnen. Die heutige Barbarei der „Welt Ordnung“, die ökologischen Katastrophen, die von der gegenwärtigen Produktionsweise verursacht werden, die wachsende Kluft zwischen den wenigen reichen Ausbeutern und der übergroßen verarmten Mehrheit, die Unterdrückung der Frauen, der stürmische Wind von Krieg, Rassismus und Chauvinismus, fordern gebieterisch von der zeitgenössischen Arbeiterbewegung, sich auf Basis zweier Grundprinzipien der Internationale neu zu organisieren: Vielfältigkeit der Strukturen, Radikalität der Ziele. Die Ziele der vor 150 Jahren in London gegründeten Organisation sind heute lebendiger denn je. Um den Herausforderungen der Gegenwart gerecht zu werden, kann die neue Internationale dieser doppelten Anforderung nicht entgehen: Sie muss pluralistisch und sie muss antikapitalistisch sein.

Translated by: Sebastian Chwala

References
1. Dieser Artikel basiert auf der Einleitung von: Marcello Musto (Hrg.), Workers Unite! The International 150 Years Later, New York/London: Bloomsbury, 2014, ein Sammelband mit zentralen Dokumenten der Internationale.
Alle mit GC oder PI gekennzeichneten Zitate beziehen sich auf die mehrbändige Veröffentlichung der offiziellen Protokolle, die unter den Titeln „General Council of the First International“, 5 Bde., Moskau 1963-1968 (= GC), und „Première Internationale“,4 Bde., Genf 1962 und 1971 (= PI)erschienen sind.
2. Gegen Ende der IAA wurde von einigen Mitgliedern des Generalrates während der Debatte über die Neufassung der Statuten die Frage aufgeworfen, ob „men” im englischen Namen der Organisation nicht durch „persons” ersetzt werden sollte. Engels antwortete darauf, „daß man allgemein angenommen habe, daß ‚men’ als geschlechtsneutraler Begriff gemeint sei”. Die Arbeiterassoziation stand also sowohl Frauen als auch Männern offen.
3. Vgl. Henry Collins/Chimen Abramsky, Karl Marx and the British Labour Movement, London 1965, S. 34.
4. Johann George Eccarius to Karl Marx, 12 October 1864, in: Marx-Engels-Gesamtausgabe, Bd. III/13, Berlin 2002, S. 10.
5. Siehe Oscar Testut, L’Association internationale des travailleurs, Lyon, 1870, S. 310.
6. The Times, 5 June 1871.
7. Collins/Abramsky, a.a.O., S. 70; Jacques D’Hondt, Rapport de synthèse, in: Colloque International sur la première Internationale, La Première Internationale: l’institution, l’implantation, le rayonnement, Paris 1968, S. 475.
8. Collins/Abramsky, a.a.O., S. 70; Jacques D’Hondt, a.a.O., S. 289.
9. Musto, a.a.O., Dokument 2 (= Karl Marx, Vorschläge für das Programm der Internationalen Arbeiterassoziation [IAA], in: MEW 16, S. 194).
10. Jacques Freymond, Introduction, in: PI, I, S. XI.
11.Report of the [French] General Council, 1 September 1869, in: PI, II, S. 24.
12. Henri Collins, The International and the British Labour Movement: Origin of the International in England, in: Colloque International, La Première Internationale, a.a.O., S. 34.
13. Marx setzte die Praxis, bei den Kongressen nicht persönlich anwesend zu sein, in der Folge fort. Eine Ausnahme bildete nur der wichtige Kongress von Den Haag (1872).
14. Freymond, Introduction, in: PI, I, S. XIV.
15. Musto, a.a.O., Dokument 3.
16. Jacques Rougerie, in: Les sections françaises de l’Association Internationale des Travailleurs, in: Colloque International sur la premieère Internationale, a.a.O., S.111, sprach von “einigen zehntausend”.
17. Musto, a.a.O., Dokument 54. (= Karl Marx, Erste Adresse des Generalrats über den Deutsch-Französischen Krieg, in: MEW 17, S. 7).
18. Arthur Lehning, Introduction, in: Ders. (Hrg.), Bakunin-Archiv, Bd. VI: Michel Bakounine sur la Guerre Franco-Allemande et la Révolution Sociale en France (1870-1871), Leiden 1977, S. XVI.
19. Dazu Georges Haupt, L’internazionale socialista dalla Comune a Lenin, Turin 1978, S. 28.
20. Ebd., S. 93-95.
21. Nello Rosselli, Mazzini e Bakunin, Turin 1927, S. 323-324.
22. Giuseppe Garibaldi an Giorgio Pallavicino, 14 November 1871, in: Enrico Emilio Ximenes, Epistolario di Giuseppe Garibaldi, Bd. I, Milano 1885, S. 350.
23. Karl Marx, 15. August 1871, in: GC, Bd. IV, S. 259.
24. Miklós Molnár, Le déclin de la première internationale, Genf 1963, S. 127.
25. Musto, a.a.O., Dokument 74 (= Karl Marx/Friedrich Engels, Beschlüsse der Delegiertenkonferenz der Internationalen Arbeiterassoziation, abgehalten zu London, vom 17. bis 23. September 1871, in: MEW 17, S. 421).
26. In den frühen 1870er Jahren war die Arbeiterklasse nur in Deutschland als Partei organisiert. Die Verwendung des Wortes „Partei“ war daher sowohl bei den Anhängern Bakunins als auch bei Marx sehr unklar. Selbst Marx benutzte es mehr als Synonym für Klasse. Die Debatten in der Internationale konzentrierten sich nicht auf die Frage nach der Gründung einer politischen Partei (ein Ausdruck, der auf der Londoner Konferenz nur zweimal und auf dem Den Haager Kongress nur fünfmal benutzt wurde), sondern drehten sich vielmehr um die Nutzung des Adjektivs „politisch“ (Haupt, a.a.O., S. 84).
27. Jacques Freymond/Miklós Molnár, The Rise and Fall oft he First International, in: Milorad M. Drachkovitch, The Revolutionary Internationals , 1864-1943, Stanford 1966, S. 27.
28. Verschiedene Autoren, Risoluzione, programma e regolamento della federazione italiana dell’ Associazione Internazionale dei Lavoratori, in: Gian Mario Bravo, La Prima Internazionale, Rom 1978, S. 787.
29. Siehe Freymond/Molnár, a.a.O., S. 27-28.
30. Siehe Karl Marx an Ludwig Kugelmann vom 29. Juli 1872, in: MEW Band 33, S. 505. Dort schrieb er: „Auf dem internationalen Kongreß … handelt es sich um Leben oder Tod der Internationalen; und bevor ich austrete, will ich sie wenigstens vor den auflösenden Elementen schützen.“
31. Musto, a.a.O., Dokument 65.
32. Freymond, Introduction, in: PI, I, S. X.
33. Vgl. Haupt, a.a.O., S. 100.
34. Friedrich Engels, 5. September 1872, in: PI, II, S. 355.
35. Miklós Molnár, Quelques remarques à propos de la crise de l’Internationale en 1872, in: Colloque International, La Première Internationale, a.a.O., S. 439.
36. Molnár, Le Déclin de la Première Internationale, a.a.O., S. 144.

Categories
Journal Articles

Notas sobre a história da I Internacional

I. A formação da Internacional
No dia 28 de setembro de 1864, o salão do St. Martin’s Hall, edifício situado no coração de Londres, estava lotado. Ali se encontravam cerca de 2 mil trabalhadoras e trabalhadores para assistir ao comício de alguns dirigentes sindicais ingleses e de um pequeno grupo de operários vindos do continente.

Os organizadores da assembleia não imaginavam – nem teriam podido prever – o que essa iniciativa geraria. Em pouco tempo, a Internacional suscitou paixões em toda a Europa, difundiu o ideal da solidariedade de classe e motivou a consciência de uma grande massa de mulheres e homens, que escolheram a luta com a mais radical das metas: a de mudar o mundo. Nas classes dominantes, ao contrário, a notícia da fundação da Internacional provocou horror. O pensamento de que também os operários viessem a exigir para si um papel ativo na história gerou indignação, e foram numerosos os governos que invocaram a eliminação da organização, perseguindo-a com todos os meios de que dispunham.

As organizações operárias que fundaram a Internacional eram muito distintas entre si. A tarefa política de fazer conviver todos esses ânimos na mesma organização foi indiscutivelmente obra de Marx. Seus dotes políticos lhe permitiram conciliar aquilo que parecia inconciliável e asseguraram um futuro à Internacional, que, sem o seu protagonismo, teria seguramente caído no mesmo rápido esquecimento de todas as outras numerosas associações operárias que a precederam. Foi Marx quem deu uma finalidade clara à Internacional. Foi ele quem realizou um programa político não excludente, embora firmemente classista, como garantia de uma organização que ambicionava ser de massas e não sectária. Foi Marx, alma política de seu Conselho Geral, quem redigiu suas principais resoluções e compilou todos os relatórios preparatórios para os congressos. Ele foi o homem certo no lugar certo.

II. Greves e expansão
A Inglaterra foi o primeiro país onde foram apresentados pedidos de adesão à Internacional. A atividade do Conselho Geral em Londres foi decisiva para seu reforço. Na primavera de 1866, com seu apoio aos grevistas dos Alfaiates Unificados de Londres, a organização contribuiu ativamente, pela primeira vez, para uma luta operária. Em seguida à vitória desses trabalhadores, cinco pequenas sociedades de alfaiates, de cerca de quinhentos trabalhadores cada uma, decidiram filiar-se à Internacional. O resultado positivo de outras disputas atraiu diversos sindicatos pequenos, tanto que, em setembro de 1865, as organizações sindicais filiadas eram já dezessete, para um total de mais de 25 mil membros.

Em setembro 1866, a cidade de Genebra sediou o primeiro con- gresso da Internacional. Fizeram-se presentes sessenta delegados, pro- venientes da Inglaterra, da França, da Alemanha e da Suíça. Naquele momento, a Associação pôde fazer um balanço muito favorável, tendo acolhido sob sua bandeira, apenas dois anos depois de sua fundação, mais de uma centena de sindicatos e organizações políticas.

A partir do fim daquele ano, as greves se intensificaram em muitos países europeus. Organizadas por grandes massas de trabalhadores, elas contribuíram para a tomada de consciência das condições em que essas pessoas eram forçadas a viver e foram o coração pulsante de um novo e importante período de lutas. Essas mobilizações representaram um primeiro momento de encontro e coordenação com a Internacional, que os apoiou com proclamações e apelos de solidariedade, organizando a coleta de dinheiro em favor dos grevistas e promovendo encontros para bloquear as tentativas dos patrões de enfraquecer a resistência dos trabalhadores.

Assim, apesar das dificuldades derivadas da heterogeneidade de países, línguas e culturas políticas, a Internacional conseguiu reunir e coordenar muitas organizações e lutas nascidas espontaneamente. Seu maior mérito foi o de ter sabido indicar a absoluta necessidade da solidariedade de classe e da cooperação internacional, superando irreversivelmente o caráter parcial dos objetivos e das estratégias do movimento operário. A partir de 1867, reforçada pelo sucesso desses resultados, pelo número aumentado de seus militantes e por uma eficiente estrutura organizativa, a Internacional avançou em todo o continente.

Se o Congresso de Bruxelas de 1868 marcou o momento a partir do qual teve início a viragem coletivista da Internacional, o congresso do ano seguinte, realizado em setembro 1869 na Basileia, consumou esse processo, erradicando as teorias de Pierre-Joseph Proudhon. O Congresso de Basileia também foi interessante por outro motivo: a participação do delegado Mikhail Bakunin. Não tendo conseguido conquistar a direção da Liga da Paz, em setembro de 1868 ele havia fundado, em Genebra, a Aliança da Democracia Socialista, uma organização que, em dezembro, apresentou um pedido de adesão à Internacional. Depois de ter finalmente derrotado os mutualistas e o espectro de Proudhon, Marx se viu, a partir daquele momento, na necessidade de enfrentar um rival ainda mais hostil, um desafiante que formaria uma nova tendência – o anarquismo coletivista – no interior da organização, e que visava conquistá-la.

III. Desenvolvimento em toda a Europa e a Comuna de Paris
O período entre o fim dos anos 1860 e o início dos anos 1870 foi rico em conflitos sociais. Nesse intervalo de tempo, muitos dos trabalhadores que tomaram parte nos protestos resolveram dirigir-se à Internacional, cuja fama difundia-se cada vez mais. Apesar de seus recursos limitados, o Conselho Geral jamais deixou de responder com apelos de solidariedade a suas seções europeias com a coleta de fundos.

Em 1869, a Internacional obteve uma significativa expansão em quase toda a Europa. Devido à dura repressão imperial, na França o ano de 1868 havia sido caracterizado por uma fortíssima crise da Internacional. O ano sucessivo tornou-se, ao contrário, o de seu renascimento. Na Bélgica, distinguiu-se pela ascensão do sindicalismo, o êxito vitorioso das greves e a adesão à Internacional de inúmeras sociedades operárias. Durante esse período, o progresso da Internacional manifestou-se também na Suíça. Na Confederação Alemã do Norte, contudo, as coisas tomaram um rumo totalmente diverso. Apesar de o movimento operário daquele país já contar com organizações políticas, seu entusiasmo pela Internacional foi mínimo, e os pedidos de adesão tornaram-se escassos. Em compensação aos fracos resultados alemães, houve duas novidades positivas. Em maio de 1869, algumas seções da Internacional foram fundadas num novo país, a Holanda. Um pouco mais tarde, ela renasceu também na Itália, nação na qual só estivera presente, até então, com alguns núcleos esparsos e sem relação entre si. Ainda mais significativa, ao menos pelo caráter simbólico e considerando as esperanças que despertou, foi a expansão da Internacional no outro lado do Atlântico. A partir de 1869, por iniciativa de alguns imigrantes recém-chegados, foram constituídas as primeiras seções nos Estados Unidos.

Nesse cenário de dimensão universal, ainda que marcado por evidentes contradições e pela marcha desigual de seu desenvolvimento nos diversos países, a Internacional se preparava para celebrar seu quinto congresso, em setembro de 1870. Todavia, a Guerra Franco-Prussiana, deflagrada a 19 de julho de 1870, forçou sua suspensão.

Depois da queda de Bonaparte, derrotado em Sedan pelos alemães, em 4 de setembro de 1870 foi proclamada na França a Terceira República. A clara perspectiva de um governo que não realizaria nenhuma reforma social animou a sublevação dos parisienses, concluída com a derrubada de Thiers e a fundação, no dia 18 de março, da Comuna de Paris, o mais importante evento político da história do movimento operário do século XIX.

A Comuna de Paris foi reprimida com brutal violência pelo exér- cito de Versalhes. Não obstante os dramáticos eventos de Paris e o furor da repressão posta em ação por todos os governos europeus, a força da Internacional aumentou em seguida aos acontecimentos da Comuna. Apesar de frequentemente cercada pelas mentiras es- critas por seus adversários, a palavra “A Internacional” tornou-se, nesse período, conhecida de todos. Para os capitalistas e para a classe burguesa, soava como sinônimo de ameaça da ordem constituída, mas para os operários significou a esperança num mundo sem exploração e injustiças. A confiança de que isso fosse realizável aumentou depois da Comuna. A insurreição parisiense deu força ao movimento operário, impulsionando-o a assumir posições mais radicais e a intensificar a militância. Paris mostrou que a revolução era possível, que o objetivo podia e devia ser a construção de uma sociedade radicalmente diferente da capitalista, mas também que, para alcançá-lo, os trabalhadores deviam criar formas de associações políticas estáveis e bem organizadas.

IV. A crise da Internacional
Nesse cenário, que não permitia a convocação de um novo con- gresso, e a quase dois anos de distância do último, o Conselho Geral decidiu promover uma Conferência em Londres (setembro 1871), para defender a Internacional da ofensiva das forças inimigas e obstaculizar a crescente influência de Bakunin.

Se o Congresso de Genebra de 1866 havia confirmado a importância do sindicato, a Conferência de Londres de 1871 definiu o outro instru- mento fundamental de luta do movimento operário: o partido político. Apenas quatro delegados se opuseram à Resolução IX (“ação política da classe operária”), defendendo a necessidade de se adotar uma posição “abstencionista” de não engajamento na ação política; mas a vitória de Marx logo se mostrou efêmera. Após a conferência, Marx estava convicto de que as resoluções aprovadas em Londres receberiam o apoio de quase todas as principais federações e seções locais. Mas pouco tempo depois ele precisou reavaliar a situação.

A oposição ao Conselho Geral foi de diversos tipos, e muitas vezes baseou-se em motivos pessoais. Formou-se, assim, uma estranha al- quimia que tornou a direção da organização ainda mais problemática. O adversário principal da virada ocorrida com a Resolução IX foi um ambiente ainda imaturo para receber o salto de qualidade proposto por Marx. O princípio de autonomia das várias realidades das quais se compunha a Internacional era considerado uma das pedras basilares da Associação, não só pelo grupo mais ligado a Bakunin, mas por grande parte das federações e seções locais. A batalha final ocorreu no fim do outono de 1872. Depois dos terríveis eventos dos últimos três anos, a Internacional pôde finalmente voltar a reunir-se num congresso (Haia, setembro 1872).

A decisão de maior relevo tomada em Haia foi a introdução da principal deliberação política da conferência de 1871 nos estatutos da Associação. A luta política não era mais considerada um tabu, mas, antes, o instrumento necessário para a transformação da sociedade: “Porque os senhores da terra e do capital se servem de seus privilégios políticos para proteger e perpetuar seus monopólios econômicos, assim como para escravizar o trabalho, a conquista do poder político converte-se numa grande obrigação do proletariado”.

A Internacional era então muito diferente do que havia sido no tempo de sua fundação. Os componentes democrático-radicais abandonaram a Associação, depois de terem sido marginalizados. Os mutualistas haviam sido derrotados e suas forças, drasticamente reduzidas. Os reformistas não constituíam mais a parte dominante da organização (exceto na Inglaterra) e o anticapitalismo tornara-se a linha política de toda a Internacional, inclusive das novas tendências – como a anárquico-coletivista – que haviam se formado no curso dos últimos anos. Ainda que durante a existência da Internacional a Europa atravessasse uma fase de grande prosperidade econômica – que, em alguns casos, tornou menos difíceis as condições do proletariado –, os operários haviam compreendido que sua situação só mudaria verdadeiramente com o fim da exploração do homem sobre o homem, e não por meio de reivindicações econômicas voltadas à obtenção de meros paliativos às condições existentes.

Ademais, o cenário havia mudado radicalmente também no ex- terior da organização. A unificação da Alemanha, ocorrida em 1871, marcou o início de uma nova era, em que o Estado-nação afirmou-se definitivamente como forma de identidade política, jurídica e territorial. O novo contexto tornava pouco plausível a continuidade de um organismo supranacional ao qual as organizações dos vários países, ainda que munidas de autonomia, deviam ceder uma parte consistente da direção política e uma cota das contribuições dos próprios filiados. Depois da Comuna de Paris, o verdadeiro desafio que se colocou ao movimento operário era a revolução, isto é, o de como organizar-se para pôr fim ao modo de produção capitalista e derrubar as instituições do mundo burguês. Não mais a questão da reforma da sociedade existente, da construção de uma sociedade nova. Para avançar por esse novo caminho da luta de classe, Marx pensava ser inadiável a construção, em cada país, de partidos políticos da classe operária.

O documento Ao conselho federal da região espa- nhola da Associação Internacional dos Trabalhadores, redigido por Engels em fevereiro de 1871, foi uma das declarações do Conselho Geral mais explícitas nesse sentido. A morte da Internacional, que certamente se seguiria à decisão tomada em Haia de transferência do Conselho Geral para Nova York, era infinitamente preferível do que uma longa e inútil sucessão de lutas fratricidas. Porém, não parece convincente argumentar – como muitos o fizeram – que a principal razão para o declínio da Internacional tenha sido o conflito entre seus dois concorrentes, ou mesmo entre dois indivíduos, Marx e Bakunin, por maior que sejam suas estaturas. Na verdade, foram as mudanças ocorridas no mundo ao redor da Internacional que a tor- naram obsoleta. O crescimento e a transformação das organizações do movimento operário, o fortalecimento dos Estados-nação causado pela unificação nacional da Itália e da Alemanha, a expansão da Internacional em países como a Espanha e a Itália – com condições econômicas e sociais profundamente diferentes daquelas da Inglaterra e da França, onde a Associação havia nascido –, a definitiva virada moderada do sindicalismo inglês e a repressão que se seguiu à queda da Comuna de Paris agiram, de modo concomitante, para tornar a configuração originária da Internacional inapropriada frente às condições históricas modificadas.

V. A Nova Internacional
A Internacional imprimiu na consciência dos proletários a convicção de que a emancipação do trabalho do jugo do capital não podia ser obtida no interior dos limites de um único país, mas que, ao contrário, era uma questão global. Do mesmo modo, graças à Internacional os operários compreenderam que sua emancipação só podia ser con- quistada por eles mesmos, por sua capacidade de organizar-se, não podendo ser transferida a outrem. Por fim, a Internacional – e nesse ponto a contribuição teórica de Marx foi fundamental – difundiu entre os trabalhadores a consciência de que sua escravidão só teria fim com a superação do modo de produção capitalista e do trabalho assalariado, uma vez que as melhorias internas do sistema vigente, ainda que importantes, não modificariam por si só sua dependência econômica das oligarquias patronais.

Existe um verdadeiro abismo a separar as esperanças daquele tempo e a desesperança do presente; a determinação antissistêmica daquelas lutas e a subalternidade ideológica contemporânea; a solidariedade construída por aquele movimento operário e o individualismo de nossos dias, produto da competição do mercado e das privatizações; a paixão pela política dos trabalhadores que se reuniram em Londres em 1864 e a resignação e apatia hoje imperantes.
No entanto, numa época em que o mundo do trabalho voltou a sofrer condições de exploração semelhantes àquelas do século XIX, o projeto da Internacional retorna com extraordinária atualidade. Sob cada injustiça social, em todo lugar em que trabalhadoras e trabalhadores se veem privados de seus direitos, germina a semente da nova Internacional.

A barbárie da “ordem mundial” vigente, os desastres ecológicos produzidos pelo presente modo de produção, o inaceitável abismo que separa as riquezas de uma minoria de exploradores e o estado de indigência de extratos cada vez mais vastos da população mundial, a opressão de gênero e os novos ventos da guerra, do racismo e do chauvinismo impõem ao movimento operário contemporâneo reorganizar-se, com urgência, a partir de duas características da Internacional: a radicalidade dos objetivos a perseguir e a forma poliédrica de sua estrutura. Os objetivos da organização nascida em Londres há 150 anos são hoje mais atuais e indispensáveis que nunca. Mas, para estar à altura do presente, a nova Internacional não poderá prescindir de dois requisitos fundamentais: deverá ser plural e anticapitalista.

Categories
Journal Articles

Notes on the History of the International

Opening steps
On 28 September 1864, St. Martin’s Hall in the very heart of London was packed to overflowing with some two thousand workmen. [1] They had come to attend a meeting called by English trade union leaders and a small group of workers from the Continent.The preparatory Address of English to French Workmen stated:

A fraternity of peoples is highly necessary for the cause of labour, for we find that whenever we attempt to better our social condition by reducing the hours of toil, or by raising the price of labour, our employers threaten us with bringing over Frenchmen, Germans, Belgians and others to do our work at a reduced rate of wages; and we are sorry to say that this has been done, though not from any desire on the part of our continental brethren to injure us, but through a want of regular and systematic communication between the industrial classes of all countries. Our aim is to bring up the wages of the ill-paid to as near a level as possible with that of those who are better remunerated, and not to allow our employers to play us off one against the other, and so drag us down to the lowest possible condition, suitable to their avaricious bargaining.[2]

The organizers of this initiative did not imagine – nor could they have foreseen – what it would lead to shortly afterwards. Their idea was to build an international forum where the main problems affecting workers could be examined and discussed, but this did not include the actual founding of an organization to coordinate the trade union and political action of the working class. In reality, it gave birth to the prototype of all organizations of the workers’ movement, which both reformists and revolutionaries would subsequently take as their point of reference: the International Working Men’s Association.[3]

It was soon arousing passions all over Europe. It made class solidarity a shared ideal and inspired large numbers of men and women to struggle for the most radical of goals: changing the world. Thus, on the occasion of the Third Congress of the International, held in Brussels in 1868, the leader writer of The Times accurately identified the scope of the project:

It is not … a mere improvement that is contemplated, but nothing less than a regeneration, and that not of one nation only, but of mankind. This is certainly the most extensive aim ever contemplated by any institution, with the exception, perhaps, of the Christian Church. To be brief, this is the programme of the International Workingmen’s Association.[4]

Thanks to the International, the workers’ movement was able to gain a clearer understanding of the mechanisms of the capitalist mode of production, to become more aware of its own strength, and to develop new and more advanced forms of struggle. The organization resonated far beyond the frontiers of Europe, among the artisans of Buenos Aires, the early workers’ associations in Calcutta, and even the labour groups in Australia and New Zealand that applied to join it.

The right man in the right place
The workers’ organizations that founded the International were a motley assemblage. The central driving force was British trade unionism, whose leaders were mainly interested in economic questions; they fought to improve the workers’ conditions, but without calling capitalism into question. Hence they conceived of the International as an instrument that might prevent the import of manpower from abroad in the event of strikes.

Then there were the mutualists, long dominant in France but strong also in Belgium and French-speaking Switzerland. In keeping with the theories of Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, they were opposed to any working-class involvement in politics and to the strike as a weapon of struggle, as well as holding conservative positions on women’s emancipation. Advocating a cooperative system along federalist lines, they maintained that it was possible to change capitalism by means of equal access to credit. In the end, therefore, they may be said to have constituted the right wing of the International.

Alongside these two components, which comprised the majority, there were still others. Third in importance were the communists. Grouped around Karl Marx and active in small groupings with limited influence, they were anticapitalist: opposing the existing system of production and espousing the necessity of political action to overthrow it.

At the time of its founding, the ranks of the International also included vaguely democratic elements that had nothing to do with the socialist tradition. The picture is further complicated by the fact that some workers who joined the International brought with them a variety of confused theories, some of a utopian inspiration; while the party led by followers of Ferdinand Lassalle, which never affiliated to the International but orbited around it – was hostile to trade unionism and conceived of political action in rigidly national terms.

To secure cohabitation of all these currents in the same organization, around a program so distant from the approaches with which each had started out, was Marx’s great accomplishment. His political talents enabled him to reconcile the seemingly irreconcilable, ensuring that the International did not swiftly follow the many previous workers’ associations down the path to oblivion.[5] It was Marx who gave a clear purpose to the International, and Marx too who achieved a non-exclusionary, yet firmly class-based, political program that won it a mass character beyond all sectarianism. The political soul of its General Council was always Marx: he drafted all its main resolutions and prepared most of its congress reports. He was “the right man in the right place,” as the German workers’ leader Johann Georg Eccarius once put it. [6]

Contrary to later fantasies that pictured Marx as the founder of the International, he was not even among the organizers of the meeting at St. Martin’s Hall, and was a non-speaking participant.[7] Yet he immediately grasped the potential in the event and worked hard to ensure that the new organization successfully carried out its mission. Thanks to the prestige attaching to his name, at least in restricted circles, he was appointed to the standing committee,[8] where he soon gained sufficient trust to be given the task of writing the Inaugural Address and the Provisional Statutes of the International. In these fundamental texts, as in many others that followed, Marx drew on the best ideas of the various components of the International. He firmly linked economic and political struggle to each other, and made international thinking and international action an irreversible choice.

It was mainly thanks to Marx’s capacities that the International developed its function of political synthesis, unifying the various national contexts in a project of common struggle. The maintenance of unity was gruelling at times, especially as Marx’s anticapitalism was never the dominant political position within the organization. Over time, however, partly through his own tenacity, partly through occasional splits, Marx’s thought became the hegemonic doctrine. The character of workers’ mobilizations, the antisystemic challenge of the Paris Commune, the unprecedented task of holding together such a large and complex organization, the successive polemics with other tendencies in the workers’ movement on various theoretical and political issues: all this impelled Marx beyond the limits of political economy alone, which had absorbed so much of his attention since the defeat of the 1848 revolution and the ebbing of the most progressive forces. He was also stimulated to develop and sometimes revise his ideas, to put old certainties up for discussion and ask himself new questions, and in particular to sharpen his critique of capitalism by drawing the broad outlines of a communist society. The orthodox Soviet view of Marx’s role in the International, according to which he mechanically applied to the stage of history a political theory already forged in the confines of his study, is thus totally divorced from reality.

Membership and structure
During its lifetime, the International was depicted as a vast, powerful organization. The size of its membership was always overestimated. The public prosecutor who arraigned some of its French leaders in June 1870 stated that the organization had more than 800,000 members in Europe; [9] a year later, after the defeat of the Paris Commune, The Times put the total at two and a half million.[10] In reality, the membership figures were much lower. It has always been difficult to arrive at even approximate estimates, and that was true for its own leaders and those who studied it most closely. But the present state of research allows the hypothesis that, at its peak in 1871-72, the membership may been over 150,000, but not much higher.

In those times, when there was a dearth of effective working-class organizations apart from the English trade unions and the General Association of German Workers, that figure was still sizeable. It should also be borne in mind that, throughout its existence, the International was recognized as a legal organization only in Britain, Switzerland, Belgium and the United States. In other countries it was at best on the margins of legality, and its members were subject to persecution. On the other hand, the Association had a remarkable capacity to weld its components into a cohesive whole. Within a couple of years from its birth, it had succeeded in federating hundreds of workers’ societies; after 1868 societies were added in Spain, and following the Paris Commune sections sprang up also in Italy, Holland, Denmark and Portugal. The development of the International was doubtless uneven, yet a strong sense of belonging prevailed among those who joined it. They retained the bonds of class solidarity and responded as best they could to the call for a rally, the words of a poster or the unfurling of the red flag of struggle, in the name of an organization that had sustained them in their hour of need. [11]

Members of the International, however, comprised only a small part of the total workforce. In Britain, with the sole exception of steelworkers, the International always had a sparse presence among the industrial proletariat.[12] The great majority of members there came from tailoring, clothing, shoemaking and cabinet-making – that is, from sectors of the working class that were then the best organized and the most class-conscious. Nowhere did factory workers ever form a majority, at least after the expansion of the organization in Southern Europe. The other great limitation was the failure to draw in unskilled labour,[13] despite efforts in that direction beginning with the run-up to the first congress. The Instructions for Delegates of the Provisional General Council are clear on this: “Considering themselves and acting as the champions and representatives of the whole working class, [the unions] cannot fail to enlist the non-society men into their ranks.”[14]

In one of the key political-organizational documents of the International, Marx summarized its functions as follows: “It is the business of the International Working Men’s Association to combine and generalize the spontaneous movements of the working classes, but not to dictate or impose any doctrinary system whatever.”[15] Still, despite the considerable autonomy granted to federations and local sections, the International always retained a locus of political leadership. Its General Council was the body that worked out a unifying synthesis of the various tendencies and issued guidelines for the organization as a whole.

From October 1864 until August 1872 it met with great regularity, as many as 385 times, and debated a wide range of issues: working conditions, the effects of new machinery, support for strikes, the role and importance of trade unions, the Irish question, various foreign policy matters, and, of course, how to build the society of the future, and drafted the documents of the International. [16]

The formation of the International
Britain was the first country where applications were made to join the International; the 4,000-member Operative Society of Bricklayers affiliated in February 1865, soon to be followed by associations of construction workers and shoemakers. In the first year of its existence, the General Council (GC) began serious activity to publicize the principles of the Association. This helped to broaden its horizon beyond purely economic questions, as we can see from the fact that it was among the organizations belonging to the (electoral) Reform League founded in February 1865.

In France, the International began to take shape in January 1865, when its first section was founded in Paris. But it remained very limited in strength, had little ideological influence, and was unable even to establish a national federation. Nevertheless, the French supporters of the International, who were mostly followers of Proudhon’s mutualist theories, established themselves as the second largest group at the first conference of the organization.

In the following year, the International continued to expand in Europe and established its first important nuclei in Belgium and French-speaking Switzerland. The Prussian Combination Laws, however, meant that the International was unable to open sections in what was then the German Confederation. The 5,000-member General Association of German Workers – the first workers’ party in history – followed a line of ambivalent dialogue with Otto von Bismarck and showed little or no interest in the International during the early years of its existence. It was an indifference shared by Wilhelm Liebknecht, despite his political proximity to Marx.

The activity of the GC in London was decisive for the further strengthening of the International. In Spring 1866, with its support for the strikers of the London Amalgamated Tailors, it played an active role for the first time in a workers’ struggle, and following the success of the strike five societies of tailors, each numbering some 500 workers, decided to affiliate to the International. The International was the first association to succeed in the far from simple task of enlisting trade union organizations into its ranks.[17]

In September 1866, the city of Geneva hosted the first congress of the International, with 60 delegates from Britain, France, Germany and Switzerland. By then the Association could point to a very favourable balance-sheet of the two years since its foundation, having rallied to its banner more than one hundred trade unions and political organizations. Those taking part in the congress essentially divided into two blocs. The first, consisting of the British delegates, the few Germans and a majority of the Swiss, followed the GC directives drawn up by Marx (who was not present in Geneva). The second, comprising the French delegates and some of the French-speaking Swiss, was made up of the mutualists. At that time, in fact, moderate positions were prevalent in the International.

Basing themselves on resolutions prepared by Marx, the GC leaders succeeded in marginalizing the mutualists at the congress, and obtained votes in favour of state intervention. On the latter issue, Marx had spelled things out clearly:

In enforcing such laws [of social reform], the working class do not fortify governmental power. On the contrary, they transform that power, now used against them, into their own agency.[18]

Thus, far from strengthening bourgeois society (as Proudhon believed), these reformist demands were an indispensable starting point for the emancipation of the working class. Furthermore, the “instructions” that Marx wrote for the Geneva congress underline the basic function of trade unions against which not only the mutualists but others had taken a stand:

This activity of the Trades’ Unions is not only legitimate, it is necessary. It cannot be dispensed with so long as the present system of production lasts…. On the other hand, unconsciously to themselves, the Trades’ Unions were forming centres of organization of the working class, as the mediaeval municipalities and communes did for the middle class. If the Trades’ Unions are required for the guerrilla fights between capital and labour, they are still more important as organized agencies for superseding the very system of wages labour and capital rule.

In the same document, Marx did not spare the existing unions his criticism. For they were too exclusively bent upon the local and immediate struggles with capital [and had] not yet fully understood their power of acting against the system of wages slavery itself. They therefore kept too much aloof from general social and political movements.[19]

Growing strength
From late 1866 on, strikes intensified in many European countries. Organized by broad masses of workers, they helped to generate an awareness of their condition and formed the core of a new and important wave of struggles.

Although some governments of the time blamed the International for the unrest, most of the workers in question did not even know of its existence; the root cause of their protests was the dire working and living conditions they were forced to endure. The mobilizations did, however, usher in a period of contact and coordination with the International, which supported them with declarations and calls for solidarity, raised funds for strikers, and helped fight attempts by the bosses to weaken the workers’ resistance.

It was because of its practical role in this period that workers began to recognize the International as an organization that defended their interests and, in some cases, asked to be affiliated to it.[20] Workers in other countries raised funds in support of the strikers and agreed not to accept work that would have turned them into industrial mercenaries, so that the bosses were forced to compromise on many of the strikers’ demands. In the towns at the centre of the action, hundreds of new members were recruited to the International. As was later observed in a GC report: “It is not the International Working Men’s Association that pushes people into strikes, but strikes that push workers into the arms of the International Working Men’s Association.”[21] Thus, for all the difficulties bound up with the diversity of nationalities, languages and political cultures, the International managed to demonstrate the absolute need for class solidarity and international cooperation, moving decisively beyond the partial character of the initial objectives and strategies.

From 1867 on, strengthened by success in achieving these goals, by increased membership and by a more efficient organization, the International made advances all over Continental Europe. It was its breakthrough year in France in particular, where the bronze workers’ strike had the same knock-on effect that the London tailors’ strike had produced in England. The International now had 25 sections in Geneva alone.

But Britain was still the country where the International had its greatest presence. In the course of 1867, the affiliation of another dozen organizations took the membership to a good 50,000.[22] Nowhere else did the membership of the International ever reach that level. In contrast to 1864-67 period, however, the subsequent years in Britain were marked by a kind of stagnation. There were several reasons for this, but the main one was that the International did not manage to break through into factory industry or unskilled labour.

The growing institutionalization of the labour movement further contributed to this slowdown in the life of the International. The Reform Act, resulting from the battle first joined by the Reform League, expanded the franchise to more than a million British workers. The subsequent legalization of trade unions, which ended the risk of persecution and repression, allowed the fourth estate to become a real presence in society, with the result that the pragmatic rulers of the country continued along the path of reform, and the labouring classes, so unlike their French counterparts, felt a growing sense of belonging as they pinned more of their hopes for the future on peaceful change.[23]

The situation on the Continent was very different indeed. In the German Confederation, collective wage-bargaining was still virtually non-existent. In Belgium, strikes were repressed by the government almost as if they were acts of war, while in Switzerland they were still an anomaly that the established order found it difficult to tolerate. In France, striking was legalized in 1864, but the first labour unions still operated under severe restrictions.

This was the backdrop to the congress of 1867, where the International assembled with a new strength based on expanded membership. Marx was busy working on the proofs of Capital and was absent from the General Council when preparatory documents were drafted as well as from the congress itself. [24] The effects were certainly felt, as is evident in the congress’s focus on bare reports of organizational growth in various countries and on Proudhonian themes dear to the strongly represented mutualists.

Also discussed there was the question of war and militarism, in which the delegate from Brussels, César De Paepe, formulated what later became the classical position of the workers’ movement: “so long as there exists what we call the principle of nationalities… so long as there are distinct classes, there will be war… the true cause of war is the interests of some capitalists.”[25] In addition there was a discussion of women’s emancipation,[26] and finally the congress voted in favour of a report stating that “the efforts of nations should tend toward state ownership of the means of transport and circulation.”[27] This was the first collectivist declaration approved at a congress of the International.

Defeat of the mutualists
From the earliest days of the International, Proudhon’s ideas were hegemonic in much of French-speaking Europe. For four years the mutualists were the most moderate wing of the International. The British trade unions, which constituted the majority, did not share Marx’s anticapitalism, but nor did they have the same pull on the policies of the organization that the followers of Proudhon were able to exercise.

Marx undoubtedly played a key role in the long struggle to reduce Proudhon’s influence in the International. His ideas were fundamental to the theoretical development of its leaders, and he showed a remarkable capacity to assert them by winning every major conflict inside the organization. The workers themselves, however, were already sidelining Proudhonian doctrines; it was above all the proliferation of strikes that convinced the mutualists of the error of their conceptions. And it was the workers’ movement itself that demonstrated, in opposition to Proudhon, that it was impossible to separate the social-economic question from the political question.[28]

The Brussels Congress of 1868 finally clipped the wings of the mutualists. The high point came when the assembly approved De Paepe’s proposal on the socialization of the means of production – a decisive step forward in defining the economic basis of socialism, no longer simply in the writings of particular intellectuals but in the program of a great transnational organization. As regards agriculture, mines and transport, the congress declared the necessity of converting land into “the common property of society,” even observing the destructive environmental effect of private ownership of forests. [29] This marked an important victory for the GC and the first appearance of socialist principles in the political program of a major workers’ organization.

If the collectivist turn of the International began at the Brussels Congress, it was the Basel Congress held the next year that consolidated it and eradicated Proudhonism even in its French homeland. Eleven of the French delegates even approved a new text which declared “that society has the right to abolish individual ownership of the land and to make it part of the community.”[30] The 78 delegates were drawn not only from France, Switzerland, Germany, Britain and Belgium, but also from Spain, Italy and Austria, plus the National Labor Union of the United States. The constituency of the association was visibly enlarged, and the record of the proceedings as well as general reports on the activity of the congress transmitted the enthusiasm of the workers gathered there.

The Basel Congress was also of interest because Mikhail Bakunin took part in the proceedings as a delegate. When his International Alliance for Socialist Democracy had applied to join the International, the GC initially turned down the request, on the grounds that it continued to be affiliated to another, parallel transnational structure, and that one of its objectives – “the equalization of classes”[31] – was radically different from a central pillar of the International, the abolition of classes. Shortly afterwards, however, the Alliance modified its program and agreed to wind up its network of sections; its 104-member Geneva section was accordingly admitted to the International.

Marx knew Bakunin well enough, but underestimated the consequences of this step. The influence of the famous Russian revolutionary rapidly increased in a number of Swiss, Spanish and French sections (as it did in Italian ones after the Paris Commune), and already at the Basel Congress he managed to affect the outcome of deliberations. The vote on the right of inheritance, for example, was the first occasion on which the delegates rejected a proposal of the General Council. Having finally defeated the mutualists and laid the spectre of Proudhon to rest, Marx now had to confront a much tougher rival, who formed a new tendency – collectivist anarchism – and sought to win control of the organization.

Before the Paris Commune
The late Sixties and early Seventies were a period rich in social conflicts. Many workers who took part in protest actions decided to make contact with the International. When 8,000 silk dyers and ribbon weavers in Basel asked for its support, the GC could not send them more than four pounds from its own funds, but it issued a circular that resulted in the collection of another £300 from workers’ groups in various countries. Even more significant was the struggle of Newcastle engineering workers to reduce the working day to nine hours, when two emissaries of the GC played a key role in stymying the bosses’ attempt to introduce strikebreakers from the Continent. The success of this strike, a nationwide cause célèbre, served as a warning for the English capitalists, who from that time on gave up recruiting workers from across the Channel.[32]

The year 1869 witnessed significant expansion of the International all over Europe. Britain was an exception in this respect, however. While the union leaders fully backed Marx against the mutualists, they had little time for theoretical issues[33] and did not exactly glow with revolutionary ardour. This was the reason why Marx for a long time opposed the founding of a British federation of the International independent of the GC.

In every European country where the International was reasonably strong, its members gave birth to new organizations completely autonomous from those already in existence. In Britain, however, the unions that made up the main force of the International naturally did not disband their own structures. The London-based GC therefore fulfilled two functions at once: as world headquarters and as the leadership for Britain, where trade union affiliations kept some 50,000 workers in its orbit of influence.

In France, the repressive policies of the Second Empire made 1868 a year of serious crisis for the International. The following year, however, saw a revival of the organization, and new leaders who had abandoned mutualist positions came to the fore. The peak of expansion for the International came in 1870, but despite its considerable growth, the organization never took root in 38 of the 90 départements. The national total has been put somewhere between 30,000 and 40,000.[34] Thus, although the International did not become a true mass organization in France, it certainly grew to a respectable size and aroused widespread interest.

In Belgium, membership peaked in the early 1870s at several tens of thousands, probably exceeding the number in the whole of France. It was here that the International achieved both its highest numerical density in the general population and its greatest influence in society. The positive evolution during this period was also apparent in Switzerland. In 1870, however, Bakunin’s activity divided the organization into two groups of equal size, which confronted each other at the congress of the Romande Federation precisely on the question of whether his International Alliance for Socialist Democracy should be admitted to the Federation.[35] When it proved impossible to reconcile their positions, the proceedings continued in two parallel congresses, and a truce was agreed only after an intervention by the GC. The group aligned with London was slightly smaller, yet retained the name Romande Federation, whereas the one linked to Bakunin had to adopt the name Jura Federation, even though its affiliation to the International was again recognized.

During this period, Bakunin’s ideas began to spread, but the country where they took hold most rapidly was Spain. In fact, the International first developed in the Iberian peninsula through the activity of the Neapolitan anarchist Giuseppe Fanelli, who, at Bakunin’s request, travelled to Barcelona and Madrid to help found both sections of the International and groups of the Alliance for Socialist Democracy. His trip achieved its purpose. But his distribution of documents of both international organizations, often to the same people, was a prime example of the Bakuninite confusion and theoretical eclecticism of the time; the Spanish workers founded the International with the principles of the Alliance for Socialist Democracy.

In the North German Confederation, despite the existence of two political organizations of the workers’ movement – the Lassallean General Association of German Workers and the Marxist Social Democratic Workers’ Party of Germany – there was little enthusiasm for the International and few requests to affiliate to it. During its first three years, German militants virtually ignored its existence, fearing persecution at the hands of the authorities. The picture changed somewhat after 1868, as the fame and successes of the International multiplied across Europe, and both rival parties aspired to represent its German wing. The weak internationalism of the Germans ultimately weighed more heavily than any legal aspects, however, and declined still further when the movement became more preoccupied with internal matters.[36]

Against this general background, marked by evident contradictions and uneven development between countries, the International made provisions for its fifth congress. The outbreak of the Franco-Prussian war, however, left no choice but to call off the congress. The conflict at the heart of Europe meant that the top priority now was to help the workers’ movement express an independent position, far from the nationalist rhetoric of the time. In his First Address on the Franco-Prussian War, Marx called upon the French workers to drive out Louis Bonaparte and to obliterate the empire he had established eighteen years earlier. The German workers, for their part, were supposed to prevent the defeat of Bonaparte from turning into an attack on the French people:

in contrast to old society, with its economical miseries and its political delirium, a new society is springing up, whose international rule will be Peace, because its national ruler will be everywhere the same – Labour. The pioneer of that new society is the International Working Men’s Association.[37]

The leaders of the Social Democratic Workers’ Party, Wilhelm Liebknecht and August Bebel, were the only two members of parliament in the North German Confederation who refused to vote for the special war budget, and sections of the International in France also sent messages of friendship and solidarity to the German workers. Yet the French defeat sealed the birth of a new and more potent age of nation-states in Europe, with all its accompanying chauvinism.

The International and the Paris Commune
After the German victory at Sedan and the capture of Bonaparte, the Third Republic was proclaimed in France on 4 September 1870. In January of the following year, a four-month siege of Paris ended in the French acceptance of Bismarck’s conditions; an ensuing armistice allowed the holding of elections and the appointment of Adolphe Thiers as President of the Republic. In the capital, however, Progressive-Republican forces swept the board and there was widespread popular discontent. Faced with the prospect of a government that wanted to disarm the city and withhold any social reform, the Parisians turned against Thiers and on 18 March initiated the first great political event in the life of the workers’ movement: the Paris Commune.

Although Bakunin had urged the workers to turn patriotic war into revolutionary war,[38] the General Council in London initially opted for silence. It assigned Marx the task of writing a text in the name of the International, but he delayed its publication for complicated, deeply held reasons. Well aware of the real relationship of forces on the ground as well as the weaknesses of the Commune, he knew that it was doomed to defeat. He had even tried to warn the French working class in his Second Address on the Franco-Prussian War: “Any attempt at upsetting the new government in the present crisis, when the enemy is almost knocking at the doors of Paris, would be a desperate folly. The French workmen … must not allow themselves to be swayed by national memories of 1792.”[39] A fervid declaration hailing the Commune would have risked creating false expectations among workers throughout Europe, eventually becoming a source of demoralization and distrust. His grim forebodings soon proved all too well founded, and on 28 May the Paris Commune was drowned in blood. Two days later, he reappeared at the GC with a manuscript entitled The Civil War in France; it was read and unanimously approved, then published over the names of all the Council members. The document had a huge impact over the next few weeks, greater than any other document of the workers’ movement in the nineteenth century.

Despite Marx’s passionate defence, and despite the claims both of reactionary opponents and of dogmatic Marxists eager to glorify the International, [40] the GC played no part in pushing for the Parisian insurrection. Prominent figures in the organization did play a role, but the leadership of the Commune was in the hands of its radical-republican Jacobin wing. Marx himself pointed out that “the majority of the Commune was in no sense socialist, nor could it have been.”[41]

Marx had to spend whole days answering press slanders about the International and himself: “at this moment,” he wrote, [he was] “the best calumniated and the most menaced man of London.”[42] Meanwhile, governments all over Europe sharpened their instruments of repression, fearing that other uprisings might follow the one in Paris. Criticism of the Commune even spread to sections of the workers’ movement. Following the publication of The Civil War in France, both the trade union leader George Odger and the old Chartist Benjamin Lucraft resigned from the International, bending under the pressure of the hostile press campaign. However, no trade union withdrew its support for the organization – which suggests once again that the failure of the International to grow in Britain was due mainly to political apathy in the working class. [43]

Despite the bloody denouement in Paris and the wave of calumny and government repression elsewhere in Europe, the International grew stronger and more widely known in the wake of the Commune. For the capitalists and the middle classes it represented a threat to the established order, but for the workers it fuelled hopes in a world without exploitation and injustice.[44] Insurrectionary Paris fortified the workers’ movement, impelling it to adopt more radical positions. The experience showed that revolution was possible, that the goal could and should be to build a society utterly different from the capitalist order, but also that, in order to achieve this, the workers would have to create durable and well-organized forms of political association.[45]

This enormous vitality was apparent everywhere. Attendance at GC meetings doubled, while newspapers linked to the International increased in both number and overall sales. Finally, and most significantly, the International continued to expand in Belgium and Spain – where the level of workers’ involvement had already been considerable before the Paris Commune – and experienced a real breakthrough in Italy. Although Giuseppe Garibaldi had only a vague idea of the Association,[46] the “hero of the two worlds” decided to throw his weight behind it and wrote a membership application that contained the famous sentence: “The International is the sun of the future.” [47] Printed in dozens of workers’ newssheets and papers, the letter was instrumental in persuading many waverers to join the organization.

The International opened a new section in Portugal in October 1871. In Denmark, in the same month, it began to link up most of the newly born trade unions in Copenhagen and Jutland. Another important development was the founding of Irish workers’ sections in Britain; their leader John MacDonnell was appointed the GC’s corresponding secretary for Ireland. Unexpected requests for affiliation came from various other parts of the world: some English workers in Calcutta, labour groups in Victoria, Australia and Christchurch, New Zealand, and a number of artisans in Buenos Aires.

The London Conference of 1871
Two years had passed since the last congress of the International, but a new one could not be held under the prevailing circumstances. The General Council therefore decided to organize a conference in London. Despite efforts to make the event as representative as possible, it was in fact more like an enlarged GC meeting. Marx had announced beforehand that the conference would be devoted “exclusively to questions of organization and policy,” [48] with theoretical discussions left to one side. He spelled this out at its first session:

The General Council has convened a conference to agree with delegates from various countries [on] measures that need to be taken against the dangers facing the Association in a large number of countries, and to move towards a new organization corresponding to the needs of the situation. In the second place, to work out a response to the governments that are ceaselessly working to destroy the Association with every means at their disposal. And lastly to settle the Swiss dispute once and for all.[49]

Marx summoned all his energies for these priorities: to reorganize the International, to defend it from hostile forces, and to check Bakunin’s growing influence. By far the most active delegate at the conference, Marx took the floor as many as 102 times, blocked proposals that did not fit in with his plans, and won over those not yet convinced.[50] The gathering in London confirmed his stature within the organization, not only as the brains shaping its political line, but also as one of its most combative and capable militants.

The most important decision taken at the conference, for which it would be remembered later, was the approval of Édouard Vaillant’s Resolution IX. The leader of the Blanquists – whose residual forces had joined the International after the end of the Commune – proposed that the organization should be transformed into a centralized, disciplined party, under the leadership of the General Council. Despite some differences, particularly over the Blanquist position that a tightly organized nucleus of militants was sufficient for the revolution, Marx did not hesitate to form an alliance with Vaillant’s group: not only to strengthen the opposition to Bakuninite anarchism within the International, but above all to create a broader consensus for the changes deemed necessary in the new phase of the class struggle. The resolution passed in London therefore stated:

that against this collective power of the propertied classes the working class cannot act, as a class, except by constituting itself into a political party, distinct from, and opposed to, all old parties formed by the propertied classes; that this constitution of the working class into a political party is indispensable in order to ensure the triumph of the social revolution and its ultimate end – the abolition of classes; and that the combination of forces which the working class has already effected by its economic struggles ought at the same time to serve as a lever for its struggles against the political power of landlords and capitalists. The conclusion was clear: “the economic movement [of the working class] and its political action are indissolubly united.” [51]

Whereas the Geneva Congress of 1866 established the importance of trade unions, the London Conference of 1871 shifted the focus to the other key instrument of the modern workers’ movement: the political party. It should be stressed, however, that the understanding of this was much broader than that which developed in the twentieth century.[52] Marx’s conception should therefore be differentiated both from the Blanquists’ – the two would openly clash later on – and from Lenin’s, as adopted by Communist organizations after the October Revolution.

Only four delegates opposed Resolution IX at the London Conference, but Marx’s victory soon proved to be ephemeral. For the call to establish what amounted to political parties in every country and to confer broader powers on the General Council had grave repercussions in the internal life of the International; it was not ready to move so rapidly from a flexible to a politically uniform model of organization. [53]

Marx was convinced that virtually all the main federations and local sections would back the resolutions of the Conference, but he soon had to think again. On 12 November, the Jura Federation called a congress of its own in the small commune of Sonvilier, and, although Bakunin was unable to attend, it officially launched the opposition within the International. Bakunin’s close ally James Guillaume and the other participants accused the General Council of having introduced the “authority principle” into the International and transformed its original structure into “a hierarchical organization directed and governed by a committee.” The Swiss declared themselves “against all directing authority, even should that authority be elected and endorsed by the workers,” and insisted on “retention of the principle of autonomy of the Sections,” so that the General Council would become “a simple correspondence and statistical bureau.”[54]

Although the position of the Jura Federation was not unexpected, Marx was probably surprised when signs of restlessness and even rebellion against the GC’s political line began to appear elsewhere. In a number of countries, the decisions taken in London were judged an unacceptable encroachment on local political autonomy. Even the Belgian Federation, which at the conference had aimed at mediation between the different sides, began to adopt a much more critical stance towards London, and the Dutch too later took their distance. In Southern Europe, where the reaction was even stronger, the opposition soon won considerable support. Indeed, the great majority of Iberian Internationalists came out against the GC and endorsed Bakunin’s ideas. In Italy too, the results of the London Conference were seen in a negative light. In fact, the founding congress of the Italian Federation of the International took the most radical position against the GC: they would not participate in the forthcoming congress of the International but proposed to hold an “anti-authoritarian general congress”[55] in Neuchâtel, Switzerland. This would prove to be the first act of the impending split.

Feuding across the Atlantic also harmed relations among members in London. The relations of two allies with Marx took a turn for the worse, and in Britain too the first internal conflicts began to emerge. Support for the General Council also came from the majority of the Swiss, from the French (now mostly Blanquists), the weak German forces, the recently constituted sections in Denmark, Ireland and Portugal, and the East European groups in Hungary and Bohemia. But they added up to much less than Marx had expected at the end of the London Conference.

The opposition to the GC was varied in character and sometimes had mainly personal motives. Still, beyond the fascination with Bakunin’s theories in certain countries and Guillaume’s capacity to unify the various oppositionists, the main factor militating against the resolution on “Working-Class Political Action” was an environment unwilling to accept the qualitative step forward proposed by Marx. Not only the group linked to Bakunin but most of the federations and local sections regarded the principle of autonomy and respect for the diverse realities as a cornerstone of the International. Marx’s miscalculation on this score accelerated the crisis of the organization.[56]

The end of the International
The final battle came towards the end of Summer 1872. After the terrible events of the previous three years – the Franco-Prussian war, the wave of repression following the Paris Commune, the numerous internal skirmishes – the International could at last meet again in congress. In the countries where it had recently taken root, it was expanding through the enthusiastic efforts of union leaders and worker-activists suddenly fired by its slogans. Yet most of the membership remained unaware of the gravity of the conflicts that raged on within its leading group. [57]

The Fifth Congress of the International took place in The Hague in September, attended by 65 delegates from a total of 14 countries. The crucial importance of the event impelled Marx to attend in person,[58] accompanied by Engels. In fact, it was the only congress of the organization in which he took part. Neither De Paepe nor Bakunin made it to the Dutch capital, but the “autonomist” contingent, a total of 25 in all, was present in strength.

By an irony of fate, the congress unfolded in Concordia Hall, though all the sessions were marked by irreducible antagonism between the two camps, resulting in debates that were far poorer than at the two previous congresses. This hostility was exacerbated by three days of wrangling over credentials. The representation of delegates was indeed skewed, not reflecting the true relationship of forces within the organization. French sections had been driven underground, and their mandates were highly debatable, yet the largest group of delegates was French; Germany had no sections of the International, yet nearly one-quarter of the delegates. Other representatives had been delegated as members of the General Council and did not express the will of any section.

Approval of the Hague Congress resolutions was possible only because of its distorted composition. The most important decision taken at The Hague was to incorporate Resolution IX of the 1871 London Conference into the statutes of the Association, as a new article 7a. Political struggle was now the necessary instrument for the transformation of society since: “the lords of land and the lords of capital will always use their political privileges for the defence and perpetuation of their economic monopolies, and for the enslavement of labour. The conquest of political power has therefore become the great duty of the working class.”[59]

The International was now very different from how it had been at the time of its foundation: the radical-democratic components had walked out after being increasingly marginalized; the mutualists had been defeated and many converted; reformists no longer constituted the bulk of the organization (except in Britain); and anticapitalism had become the political line of the whole Association, as well as of recently formed tendencies such as the anarcho-collectivists. Moreover, although the years of the International had witnessed a degree of economic prosperity that in some cases made conditions less parlous, the workers understood that real change would come not through such palliatives but only through the end of human exploitation. They were also basing their struggles more and more on their own material needs, rather than the initiatives of particular groups to which they belonged.

The wider picture, too, was radically different. The unification of Germany in 1871 confirmed the onset of a new age in which the nation-state would be the central form of political, legal and territorial identity; this placed a question mark over any supranational body that financed itself from membership dues in each individual country and required its members to surrender a sizeable share of their political leadership. At the same time, the growing differences between national movements and organizations made it extremely difficult for the General Council to produce a political synthesis capable of satisfying the demands of all.

It is true that, right from the beginning, the International had been an agglomeration of trade unions and political associations far from easy to reconcile with one another, and that these had represented sensibilities and political tendencies more than organizations properly so called. By 1872, however, the various components of the Association – and workers’ struggles, more generally – had become much more clearly defined and structured. The legalization of the British trade unions had officially made them part of national political life; the Belgian Federation of the International was a ramified organization, with a central leadership capable of making significant, and autonomous, contributions to theory; Germany had two workers’ parties, the Social Democratic Workers’ Party of Germany and the General Association of German Workers, each with representation in parliament; the French workers, from Lyon to Paris, had already tried “storming the heavens”; and the Spanish Federation had expanded to the point where it was on the verge of becoming a mass organization. Similar changes had occurred in other countries.

The initial configuration of the International had thus become outmoded, just as its original mission had come to an end. The task was no longer to prepare for and organize Europe-wide support for strikes, nor to call congresses on the usefulness of trade unions or the need to socialize the land and the means of production. Such themes were now part of the collective heritage of the organization as a whole. After the Paris Commune, the real challenge for the workers’ movement was a revolutionary one: how to organize in such a way as to end the capitalist mode of production and to overthrow the institutions of the bourgeois world.

It was no longer a question of how to reform the existing society, but how to build a new one. [60] For this new advance in the class struggle, Marx thought it indispensable to build working-class political parties in each country. The document To the Federal Council of the Spanish Region of the International Working Men’s Association, written by Engels in February 1871, was the most explicit statement of the General Council on this matter:

Experience has shown everywhere that the best way to emancipate the workers from this domination of the old parties is to form in each country a proletarian party with a policy of its own, a policy which is manifestly different from that of the other parties, because it must express the conditions necessary for the emancipation of the working class. This policy may vary in details according to the specific circumstances of each country; but as the fundamental relations between labour and capital are the same everywhere and the political domination of the possessing classes over the exploited classes is an existing fact everywhere, the principles and aims of proletarian policy will be identical, at least in all western countries…. To give up fighting our adversaries in the political field would mean to abandon one of the most powerful weapons, particularly in the sphere of organization and propaganda. [61]

From this point on, therefore, the party was considered essential for the struggle of the proletariat: it had to be independent of all existing political forces and to be built, both programmatically and organizationally, in accordance with the national context. At the GC session of 23 July 1872, Marx criticized not only the abstentionists (opposed to any political engagement by the working class) but the equally dangerous position of “the working classes of England and America,” “who let the middle classes use them for political purposes.”[62] On the second point, he had already declared at the London Conference that “politics must be adapted to the conditions of all countries,” [63] and the following year, in a speech in Amsterdam immediately after the Hague Congress, he stressed:

Someday the worker must seize political power in order to build up the new organization of labour; he must overthrow the old politics which sustain the old institutions, if he is not to lose Heaven on Earth, like the old Christians who neglected and despised politics. But we have not asserted that the ways to achieve that goal are everywhere the same.… We do not deny that there are countries … where the workers can attain their goal by peaceful means. This being the case, we must also recognize the fact that in most countries on the Continent the lever of our revolution must be force; it is force to which we must some day appeal in order to erect the rule of labour.[64]

Thus, although the workers’ parties emerged in different forms in different countries, they should not subordinate themselves to national interests. [65] The struggle for socialism could not be confined in that way, and especially in the new historical context internationalism must continue to be the guiding beacon for the proletariat, as well as its vaccine against the deadly embrace of the state and the capitalist system.

During the Hague Congress, harsh polemics preceded a series of votes. Following the adoption of article 7a, the goal of winning political power was inscribed in the statutes, and there was also an indication that a workers’ party was the essential instrument for this. The subsequent decision to confer broader powers on the General Council – with 32 votes in favour, 6 against and 12 abstentions – made the situation even more intolerable for the minority, since the Council now had the task of ensuring “rigid observation of the principles and statutes and general rules of the International,” and “the right to suspend branches, sections, councils or federal committees and federations of the International until the next congress” [66].

For the first time in the history of the International, a congress approved the GC’s decision to expel an organization: namely, the New York Section 12. Its motivation was that “The International Working Men’s Association is based on the principle of the abolition of classes and cannot admit any bourgeois section.”[67] The expulsions of Bakunin and Guillaume also caused quite a stir, having been proposed by a commission of enquiry that described the Alliance for Socialist Democracy as “a secret organization with statutes completely opposite to those of the International.”[68] The call to expel Adhemar Schitzguébel, on the other hand, one of the founders and most active members of the Jura Federation, was rejected.[69] Finally, the congress authorized publication of a long report, The Alliance for Socialist Democracy and the International Working Men’s Association, which traced the history of the organization led by Bakunin and analysed its public and secret activity country by country. Written by Engels, Lafargue and Marx, the document was published in French in July 1873.

The opposition at the congress was not uniform in its response to these attacks. On the final day, however, a joint declaration read out by the worker Victor Dave (1845-1922) from the Hague section stated:

  1. We … supporters of the autonomy and federation of groups of working men shall continue our administrative relations with the General Council….
  2. The federations which we represent will establish direct and permanent relations between themselves and all regular branches of the Association. […]
  3. We call on all the federations and sections to prepare between now and the next general congress for the triumph within the International of the principles of federative autonomy as the basis of the organization of labour[70].

This statement was more a tactical ploy – designed to avoid responsibility for a split that by then seemed inevitable – than a serious political undertaking to relaunch the organization. In this sense, it was similar to the proposals of the “centralists” to augment the powers of the General Council, at a time when they were already planning a far more drastic alternative.

For what took place in the morning session on 6 September – the most dramatic of the congress – was the final act of the International as it had been conceived and constructed over the years. Engels stood up to speak and, to the astonishment of those present, proposed that “the seat of the General Council [should] be transferred to New York for the year 1872-1873, and that it should be formed by members of the American federal council.” [71] Thus, Marx and other “founders” of the International would no longer be part of its central body, which would consist of people whose very names were unknown. The delegate Maltman Barry, a GC member who supported Marx’s positions, described better than anyone the reaction from the floor:

Consternation and discomfiture stood plainly written on the faces of the party of dissension as [Engels] uttered the last words…. It was some time before anyone rose to speak. It was a coup d’état, and each looked to his neighbour to break the spell. [72]

Engels argued that “inter-group conflicts in London had reached such a pitch that [the GC] had to be transferred elsewhere,” [73] and that New York was the best choice in times of repression. But the Blanquists were violently opposed to the move, on the grounds that “the International should first of all be the permanent insurrectionary organization of the proletariat” [74] and that “when a party unites for struggle … its action is all the greater, the more its leadership committee is active, well armed and powerful.” Vaillant and other followers of Blanqui present at The Hague thus felt betrayed when they saw “the head” being shipped “to the other side of the Atlantic [while] the armed body was fighting in [Europe].”[75] Based on the assumption that “the International had had an initiating role of economic struggle,” they wanted it to play “a similar role with respect to political struggle” and its transformation into an “international workers’ revolutionary party.”[76] Realizing that it would no longer be possible to exercise control over the GC, they left the congress and shortly afterwards the International.

Many even in the ranks of the majority voted against the move to New York as tantamount to the end of the International as an operational structure. The decision, approved by a margin of only three votes (26 for, 23 against), eventually depended on 9 abstentions and the fact that some members of the minority were happy to see the General Council relocated far from their own centres of activity. Another factor in the move was certainly Marx’s view that it was better to give up the International than to see it end up as a sectarian organization in the hands of his opponents. The demise of the International, which would certainly follow the transfer of the GC to New York, was infinitely preferable to a long and wasteful succession of fratricidal struggles.

Still, it is not convincing to argue – as many have done[77] – that the key reason for the decline of the International was the conflict between its two currents, or even between two men, Marx and Bakunin, however great their stature. Rather, it was the changes taking place in the world around it that rendered the International obsolete. The growth and transformation of the organizations of the workers’ movement, the strengthening of the nation-state as a result of Italian and German unification, the expansion of the International in countries like Spain and Italy (where the economic and social conditions were very different from those in Britain or France), the drift towards even greater moderation in the British trade union movement, the repression following the Paris Commune: all these factors together made the original configuration of the International inappropriate to the new times.

Against this backdrop, with its prevalence of centrifugal trends, developments in the life of the International and its main protagonists naturally also played a role. The London Conference, for instance, was far from the saving event that Marx had hoped it would be; indeed, its rigid conduct significantly aggravated the internal crisis, by failing to take account of the prevailing moods or to display the foresight needed to avoid the strengthening of Bakunin and his group.[78] It proved a Pyrrhic victory for Marx – one which, in attempting to resolve internal conflicts, ended up accentuating them. It remains the case, however, that the decisions taken in London only speeded up a process that was already under way and impossible to reverse.

In addition to all these historical and organizational considerations, there were others of no lesser weight regarding the chief protagonist. As Marx had reminded delegates at a session of the London Conference in 1871, “the work of the Council had become immense, obliged as it was to tackle both general questions and national questions.”[79] It was no longer the tiny organization of 1864 walking on an English and a French leg; it was now present in all European countries, each with its particular problems and characteristics. Not only was the organization everywhere wracked by internal conflicts, but the arrival of the Communard exiles in London, with new preoccupations and a variegated baggage of ideas, made it still more arduous for the General Council to perform its task of political synthesis.

Marx was sorely tried after eight years of intense activity for the International. Aware that the workers’ forces were on the retreat following the defeat of the Paris Commune – the most important fact of the moment for him – he therefore resolved to devote the years ahead to the attempt to complete Capital. When he crossed the North Sea to the Netherlands, he must have felt that the battle awaiting him would be his last major one as a direct protagonist.

From the mute figure he had cut at that first meeting in St. Martin’s Hall in 1864, he had become recognized as the leader of the International not only by congress delegates and the GC but also by the wider public. Thus, although the International certainly owed a very great deal to Marx, it had also done much to change his life.

Before its foundation, he had been known only in small circles of political activists. Later, and above all after the Paris Commune – as well as the publication of his magnum opus in 1867, of course – his fame spread among revolutionaries in many European countries, to the point where the press referred to him as the “red terror doctor.” The responsibility deriving from his role in the International – which allowed him to experience up close so many economic and political struggles – was a further stimulus for his reflections on communism and profoundly enriched the whole of his anticapitalist theory.

Marx versus Bakunin
The battle between the two camps raged in the months following the Hague Congress, but only in a few cases did it centre on their existing theoretical and ideological differences. Marx often chose to caricature Bakunin’s positions, painting him as an advocate of “class equalization” (based on the principles of the 1869 programme of the Alliance for Socialist Democracy) or of political abstentionism tout court. The Russian anarchist, for his part, who lacked the theoretical capacities of his adversary, preferred the terrain of personal accusations and insults. The only exception that set forth his positive ideas was the incomplete Letter to La Liberté (a Brussels paper) of early October 1872 – a text which, never sent, lay forgotten and was of no use to Bakunin’s supporters in the constant round of skirmishes. The political position of the “autonomists” emerges from it clearly enough:

There is only one law binding all the members … sections and federations of the International…. It is the international solidarity of workers in all jobs and all countries in their economic struggle against the exploiters of labour. It is the real organisation of that solidarity through the spontaneous action of the working classes, and the absolutely free federation … which constitutes the real, living unity of the International. Who can doubt that it is out of this increasingly widespread organisation of the militant solidarity of the proletariat against bourgeois exploitation that the political struggle of the proletariat against the bourgeoisie must rise and grow? The Marxists and ourselves are unanimous on this point. But now comes the question that divides us so deeply from the Marxists. We think that the policy of the proletariat must necessarily be a revolutionary one, aimed directly and solely at the destruction of States. We do not see how it is possible to talk about international solidarity and yet to intend preserving States … because by its very nature the State is a breach of that solidarity and therefore a permanent cause of war. Nor can we conceive how it is possible to talk about the liberty of the proletariat or the real deliverance of the masses within and by means of the State. State means dominion, and all dominion involves the subjugation of the masses and consequently their exploitation for the sake of some ruling minority. We do not accept, even in the process of revolutionary transition, either constituent assemblies, provincial government or so called revolutionary dictatorships; because we are convinced that revolution is only sincere, honest and real in the hand of the masses, and that when it is concentrated into those of a few ruling individuals it inevitably and immediately becomes reaction.[80]

Thus, although Bakunin had in common with Proudhon an intransigent opposition to any form of political authority, especially in the direct form of the state, it would be quite wrong to tar him with the same brush as the mutualists. Whereas the latter had in effect abstained from all political activity, the autonomists – as Guillaume stressed in one of his last interventions at the Hague Congress – fought for “a politics of social revolution, the destruction of bourgeois politics and the state.”[81] It should be recognized that they were among the revolutionary components of the International, and that they offered an interesting critical contribution on the questions of political power, the State and bureaucracy.
How, then, did the “negative politics” that the autonomists saw as the only possible form of action differ from the “positive politics” advocated by the centralists? In the resolutions of the International Congress of Saint-Imier, held 15-16 September 1872 on the proposal of the Italian Federation and attended by other delegates returning from The Hague, it is stated that “all political organization can be nothing other than the organization of domination, to the benefit of one class and the detriment of the masses, and that if the proletariat aimed to seize power, it would itself become a dominant and exploiting class.” Consequently, “the destruction of all political power is the first task of the proletariat,” and “any organization of so-called provisional and revolutionary political power to bring about such destruction can only be a further deception, and would be as dangerous to the proletariat as all governments existing today.”[82]

As Bakunin stressed in “The International and Karl Marx” (another incomplete text), the task of the International was to lead the proletariat “outside the politics of the State and of the bourgeois world”; the true basis of its program should be “quite simple and moderate: the organization of solidarity in the economic struggle of labour against capitalism.” [83]In fact, while taking various changes into account, this declaration of principles was close to the original aims of the organization and pointed in a direction very different from the one taken by Marx and the GC after the London Conference of 1871.[84]

This profound opposition of principles and objectives shaped the climate in The Hague. Whereas the majority looked to the “positive” conquest of political power,[85] the autonomists painted the political party as an instrument necessarily subordinate to bourgeois institutions and grotesquely likened Marx’s conception of communism to the Lassallean Volksstaat that he had always tirelessly combated. However, in the few moments when the antagonism left some space for reason, Bakunin and Guillaume recognized that the two sides shared the same aspirations. In The Alleged Splits in the International, which he wrote together with Engels, Marx had explained that one of the preconditions of socialist society was the elimination of the power of the state:

All socialists see anarchy as the following program: Once the aim of the proletarian movement — i.e., abolition of classes — is attained, the power of the state, which serves to keep the great majority of producers in bondage to a very small exploiter minority, disappears, and the functions of government become simple administrative functions.

The irreconcilable difference stemmed from the autonomist insistence that the aim must be realized immediately. Indeed, since they considered the International not as an instrument of political struggle but as an ideal model for the society of the future in which no kind of authority would exist, Bakunin and his supporters proclaim (in Marx’s description)

anarchy in proletarian ranks as the most infallible means of breaking the powerful concentration of social and political forces in the hands of the exploiters. Under this pretext, [they ask] the International, at a time when the Old World is seeking a way of crushing it, to replace its organization with anarchy.[86]

Thus, despite their agreement about the need to abolish classes and the political power of the state in socialist society, the two sides differed radically over the fundamental issues of the path to follow and the social forces required to bring about the change. Whereas for Marx the revolutionary subject par excellence was a particular class, the factory proletariat, Bakunin turned to the “great rabble of the people,” the so-called “lumpenproletariat,” which, being “almost unpolluted by bourgeois civilization, carries in its inner being and in its aspirations, in all the necessities and miseries of its collective life, all the seeds of the socialism of the future.”[87] Marx the communist had learnedthat social transformation required specific historical conditions, an effective organization and a long process of the formation of class consciousness among the masses; Bakunin the anarchist was convinced that the instincts of the common people, the so-called “rabble,” were both “invincible as well as just,” sufficient by themselves “to inaugurate and bring to triumph the Social Revolution.” [88]

Another disagreement concerned the instruments for the achievement of socialism. Much of Bakunin’s militant activity involved building (or fantasizing about building) small “secret societies,” mostly of intellectuals: a “revolutionary general staff composed of dedicated, energetic, intelligent individuals, sincere friends of the people above all,”[89] who will prepare the insurrection and carry out the revolution.Marx, on the other hand, believed in the self-emancipation of the working class and was convinced that secret societies conflicted with “the development of the proletarian movement because, instead of instructing the workers, these societies subject them to authoritarian, mystical laws which cramp their independence and distort their powers of reason.”[90] The Russian exile opposed all political action by the working class that did not directly promote the revolution, whereas the stateless person with a fixed residence in London did not disdain mobilizations for social reforms and partial objectives, while remaining absolutely convinced that these should strengthen the working-class struggle to overcome the capitalist mode of production rather than integrate it into the system.

The differences would not have diminished even after the revolution. For Bakunin, “abolition of the state [was] the precondition or necessary accompaniment of the economic emancipation of the proletariat”;[91] for Marx, the state neither could nor should disappear from one day to the next. In his Political Indifferentism, which first appeared in Almanacco Repubblicano in December 1873, he challenged the hegemony of the anarchists in Italy’s workers’ movement by asserting that

if the political struggle of the working class assumes violent forms and if the workers replace the dictatorship of the bourgeois class with their own revolutionary dictatorship, then [according to Bakunin] they are guilty of the terrible crime of lèse-principe; for, in order to satisfy their miserable profane daily needs and to crush the resistance of the bourgeois class, they, instead of laying down their arms and abolishing the state, give to the state a revolutionary and transitory form.[92]

It should be recognized, however, that despite Bakunin’s sometimes exasperating refusal to distinguish between bourgeois and proletarian power, he foresaw some of the dangers of the so-called “transitional period” between capitalism and socialism – particularly the danger of bureaucratic degeneration after the revolution. In his unfinished The Knouto-Germanic Empire and the Social Revolution, on which he worked between 1870 and 1871, he wrote:

But in the People’s State of Marx, there will be, we are told, no privileged class at all. All will be equal, not only from the juridical and political point of view, but from the economic point of view.… There will therefore be no longer any privileged class, but there will be a government, and, note this well, an extremely complex government, which will not content itself with governing and administering the masses politically, as all governments do today, but which will also administer them economically, concentrating in its own hands the production and the just division of wealth, the cultivation of land, the establishment and development of factories, the organization and direction of commerce, finally the application of capital to production by the only banker, the State.… It will be the reign of scientific intelligence, the most aristocratic, despotic, arrogant and contemptuous of all regimes. There will be a new class, a new hierarchy of real and pretended scientists and scholars, and the world will be divided into a minority ruling in the name of knowledge and an immense ignorant majority.… All states, even the most republican and most democratic states … are in their essence only machines governing the masses from above, through an intelligent and therefore privileged minority, allegedly knowing the genuine interests of the people better than the people themselves.[93]

Partly because of his scant knowledge of economics, the federalist path indicated by Bakunin offered no really useful guidance on how the question of the future socialist society should be approached. But his critical insights already point ahead to some of the dramas of the twentieth century.

Conclusion
The International would never be the same again. The great organization born in 1864, which had successfully supported strikes and struggles for eight years, and had adopted an anticapitalist program and established a presence in all European countries, finally imploded at the Hague Congress. In later decades, however, the workers’ movement adopted a socialist program, expanded throughout Europe and then the rest of the world, and built new structures of supranational coordination. Beyond the continuity of names (the Second International from 1889-1916, the Third International from 1919 to 1943), each of these structures constantly referred to the values and doctrines of the First International. Thus, its revolutionary message proved extraordinarily fertile, producing results over time still greater than those achieved during its existence.

The International helped workers to grasp that the emancipation of labour could not be won in a single country but was a global objective. It also spread an awareness in their ranks that they had to achieve the goal themselves, through their own capacity for organization, rather than by delegating it to some other force; and that – here Marx’s theoretical contribution was fundamental – it was essential to overcome the capitalist mode of production and wage labour, since improvements within the existing system, though necessary to pursue, would not eliminate dependence on employers’ oligarchies.

An abyss separates the hopes of those times from the mistrust so characteristic of our own, the antisystemic spirit and solidarity of the age of the International from the ideological subordination and individualism of a world reshaped by neoliberal competition and privatization. The passion for politics among the workers who gathered in London in 1864 contrasts sharply with the apathy and resignation prevalent today.

And yet, as the world of labour reverts now to conditions of exploitation similar to those of the nineteenth century, the project of the International has once again acquired an extraordinary topicality. Today’s barbarism of the “world order,” ecological disasters produced by the present mode of production, the growing gulf between the wealthy exploitative few and the huge impoverished majority, the oppression of women, and the blustery winds of war, racism and chauvinism, impose upon the contemporary workers’ movement the urgent need to reorganize itself on the basis of two key characteristics of the International: the multiplicity of its structure and radicalism in objectives. The aims of the organization founded in London 150 years ago are today more vital than ever. To rise to the challenges of the present, however, the new International cannot evade that twin requirement: it must be plural and it must be anticapitalist.

Translated by Patrick Camiller

References
1. This article is based upon the “Introduction” to Marcello Musto (ed.), Workers Unite!: The International 150 Years Later (New York/London: Bloomsbury, 2014), an anthology of key documents of the International. Citations given here as GC and PI refer to multi-volume official Minutes published under the respective titles General Council of the First International and Première Internationale. See notes 1 and 4 to the Documents section in this issue.
2. David Ryazanov, “Zur Geschichte der Ersten Internationale,” in Marx-Engels Archiv, vol. 1 (1925), 100.
3. Near the end of the life of the International when considering for approval the revised statutes of the organization, members of the General Council (GC) raised the question of whether “persons” should be substituted for “men.” Friedrich Engels responded that “it was generally understood that men was a generic term including both sexes,” making the point that the association was and had been open to women and men, GC, V, 256.
4. Quoted in G. M. Stekloff, History of the First International, New York: Russell & Russell, 1968 [1928], ii.
5. Cf. Henry Collins and Chimen Abramsky, Karl Marx and the British Labour Movement, London: MacMillan, 1965, 34.
6. Johann George Eccarius to Karl Marx, 12 October 1864, in Marx-Engels-Gesamtausgabe, vol. III/13, Berlin: Akademie, 2002, 10.
7. Marx to Engels, 4 November 1864, in Karl Marx – Friedrich Engels, Collected Works, 50 vol., 1975-2005, Moscow: Progress Publishers [henceforth MECW], vol. 42, 1987, 16.
8. At the founding meeting of the International, a Standing Committee was struck to organize the association. This became its Central Council, which subsequently became known as the General Council. Henceforth, these committees are referred to here simply as the General Council.
9. See Oscar Testut, L’Association internationale des travailleurs, Lyon: Aimé Vingtrinier, 1870, 310.
10. The Times , 5 June 1871.
11. See Julius Braunthal, History of the International, New York: Nelson, 1966 [1961], 116.
12. Collins and Abramsky, Karl Marx and the British Labour Movement, 70; Jacques D’Hondt, “Rapport de synthèse,” in Colloque International sur la première Internationale, La Première Internationale: l’institution, l’implantation, le rayonnement, Paris: Editions du Centre national de la recherche scientifique, 1968, 475.
13. Ibid., 289.
14. GC, I, 340-351.
15. Musto, Workers Unite!, Document 2; also, Karl Marx to Paul Lafargue, 19 April 1870, in MECW, vol. 43, 491: “The General Council was not the Pope, that we allowed every section to have its own theoretical views of the real movement, always supposed that nothing directly opposite to our Rules was put forward.”
16. See Georges Haupt, L’Internazionale socialista dalla Comune a Lenin, Turin: Einaudi, 1978, 78.
17. Collins and Abramsky, Karl Marx and the British Labour Movement, 65.
18. Musto, Workers Unite!, Document 2.
19. Ibid.
20. Jacques Freymond, “Introduction,” in PI, I, xi.
21. Various Authors, “Report of the [French] General Council,” 1 September 1869, in PI, II, 24.
22. Henri Collins, “The International and the British Labour Movement: Origin of the International in England” in Colloque International, La Première Internationale, 34.
23. Collins and Abramsky, Karl Marx and the British Labour Movement, 290-91.
24. Marx in fact continued not to attend congresses, with the exception of the crucial Hague Congress (1872).
25. Musto, Workers Unite!, Document 49.
26. Ibid., Document 6.
27. Ibid., Document 32.
28. Freymond, “Introduction,” in PI, I, xiv.
29. Musto, Workers Unite!, Document 3.
30. PI, II, 74.
31. Mikhail Bakunin, “Programme of the Alliance [International Alliance of Socialist Democracy],” in Arthur Lehning (ed.), Michael Bakunin: Selected Writings, London: Jonathan Cape, 1973, 174. The translation provided in this book is inaccurate and misleading. In Fictitious Splits in the International (GC, V, 356-409),Engels and Marx quoted directly from Bakunin’s original document (“l’égalisation politique, économique et sociale des classes”).
32. Braunthal, History of the International, 173.
33. Freymond, “Introduction,” in PI, I, xix.
34. Jacques Rougerie, in “Les sections françaises de l’Association Internationale des Travailleurs,” in Colloque International sur la premieère Internationale, 111, spoke of “some tens of thousands.”
35. Jacques Freymond (ed.), Études et documents sur la Première Internationale en Suisse, Geneva: Droz, 1964, 295.
36. Ibid., x.
37. Musto, Workers Unite!, Document 54.
38. Arthur Lehning, ‘‘Introduction,” in Idem. (ed.), Bakunin – Archiv, vol. VI: Michel Bakounine sur la Guerre Franco-Allemande et la Révolution Sociale en France (1870-1871), Leiden: Brill, 1977, xvi.
39. Musto, Workers Unite!, Document 57.
40. Georges Haupt, Aspects of International Socialism 1871-1914, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1986, 25, warns against “the reshaping of the reality of the Commune in order to make it conform to an image transfigured by ideology.”
41. Karl Marx to Domela Nieuwenhuis, 22 February 1881, MECW, vol. 46, 66.
42. Karl Marx to Ludwig Kugelmann, 18 June 1871, in MECW, vol. 44, 157.
43. Collins and Abramsky, Karl Marx and the British Labour Movement, 222.
44. See Haupt, L’internazionale socialista dalla Comune a Lenin, 28.
45. Ibid., 93-95.
46. Nello Rosselli, Mazzini e Bakunin, Turin: Einaudi, 1927, 323-24.
47. Giuseppe Garibaldi to Giorgio Pallavicino, 14 November 1871, in Enrico Emilio Ximenes, Epistolario di Giuseppe Garibaldi, vol. I, Milan: Brigola 1885, 350.
48. Karl Marx, 15 August 1871, in GC, IV, 259.
49. Karl Marx, 17 September 1871, in PI, II, 152.
50. Miklós Molnár, Le déclin de la première internationale, Geneva: Droz, 1963, 127.
51. Musto, Workers Unite!, Document 74.
52. In the early 1870s the working-class movement was organized as a political party only in Germany. Usage of the word party, whether by followers of Marx or of Bakunin, was therefore very confused. Even Marx used the term more as synonymous with class. Debate in the International between 1871 and 1872 did not focus on the construction of a political party (an expression uttered only twice at the London Conference and five times at the Congress of The Hague), but rather on the “use … of the adjective ‘political’” (Haupt, L’Internazionale socialista dalla Comune a Lenin, 84).
53. Jacques Freymond and Miklós Molnár, “The Rise and Fall of the First International,” in Milorad M. Drachkovitch, The Revolutionary Internationals, 1864-1943, Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1966, 27.
54. Various Authors, “Circulaire du Congrès de Sonvilier,” in PI, II, 264-65.
55. Various Authors, Risoluzione, programma e regolamento della federazione italiana dell’Associazione Internazionale dei Lavoratori, in Gian Mario Bravo, La Prima Internazionale, Rome: Editori Riuniti, 1978,787.
56. See Freymond and Molnár, “Rise and Fall of the First International” (note 53), 27-28.
57. Haupt, L’Internazionale socialista dalla Comune a Lenin, 88.
58. See Karl Marx to Ludwig Kugelmann, 29 July 1872, in MECW, vol. 44, 413, where he noted that this congress would be “a matter of life and death for the International; and before I resign I want at least to protect it from disintegrating elements.”
59. Musto, Workers Unite!, Document 65.
60. Freymond, “Introduction,” in PI, I, x.
61. Musto, Workers Unite!, Document 69.
62. Karl Marx, 23 July 1872, in GC, V, 263.
63. Karl Marx, 20 September 1871, in PI, II, 195.
64. Musto, Workers Unite!, Document 56.
65. See Haupt, L’Internazionale socialista dalla Comune a Lenin, 100.
66. PI, II, 374.
67. Ibid., 376.
68. Ibid., 377.
69. Ibid., 378.
70. Various Authors, [“Statement of the Minority”], in Institute of Marxism-Leninism of the CC, C.P.S.U. (ed.) The Hague Congress of the First International, vol. 1: Minutes and Documents, Moscow: Progress, 1976, 199-200.
71. Friedrich Engels, 5 September 1872, in PI, II, 355.
72. Maltman Barry, “Report of the Fifth Annual General Congress of the International Working Men’s Association, Held at The Hague, Holland, September 2-9, 1872,” in Hans Gerth, The First International: Minutes of The Hague Congress of 1872, Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1958, 279-80. This report does not appear in The Hague Congress, vol. 1.
73. Friedrich Engels, 5 September 1872, in PI, II, 356.
74. Édouard Vaillant, Internationale et Révolution. A propos du Congrès de La Haye, in PI, III, 140.
75. Ibid., 142.
76. Ibid., 144.
77. Miklós Molnár, “Quelques remarques à propos de la crise de l’Internationale en 1872,” in Colloque International, La Première Internationale, 439.
78. Molnár, Le Déclin de la Première Internationale, 144.
79. Karl Marx, 22 September 1872, in PI, II, 217.
80. Mikhail Bakunin, “A Letter to the Editorial Board of La Liberté,” in Lehning (ed.), Michael Bakunin: Selected Writings, 236-37.
81. Musto, Workers Unite!, Document 76.
82. Ibid., Document 78.
83. Mikhail Bakunin, “The International and Karl Marx,” in Sam Dolgoff (ed.), Bakunin on Anarchy, New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1971, 303.
84. On Bakunin’s rejection of the conquest of the State by the working class organized in a political party, see Lehning, ‘‘Introduction” (note 38), cvii.
85. See James Guillaume, L’Internationale, Documents et Souvenirs (1864-1878), vol. II, New York: Burt Franklin, 1969 [1907], 342.
86. Musto, Workers Unite!, Document 75.
87. Bakunin, “The International and Karl Marx” (note 83), 294.
88. Ibid., 294-95.
89. Mikhail Bakunin, “Programme and Purpose of the Revolutionary Organization of International Brothers,” in Lehning (ed.), Michael Bakunin: Selected Writings, 155.
90. Karl Marx, “Record of Marx’s speech on Secret Societies,” in MECW, vol. 22, 621.
91. Mikhail Bakunin, “Aux compagnons de la Fédération des sections internationales du Jura,” in Arthur Lehning et al. (eds.), Bakunin – Archiv , vol. II: Michel Bakounine et les Conflits dans l’Internationale, Leiden: Brill, 1965, 75.
92. Karl Marx, “Political Indifferentism,” MECW, vol. 23, p. 393.
93. Mikhail Bakunin, Marxism, Freedom and the State, London: Freedom Press, 1950, 21 [translation edited].