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Post-Marxian Socialism. Fabian Socialism. Fabian Society formed in 1883; destined to become one of the most influential forces in British politics Middle class intellectuals: the Webbs (Sidney & Beatrice), G.B. Shaw, H.G. Wells, Annie Besant
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Fabian Socialism • Fabian Society formed in 1883; destined to become one of the most influential forces in British politics • Middle class intellectuals: the Webbs (Sidney & Beatrice), G.B. Shaw, H.G. Wells, Annie Besant • Looked to “utopians” and John Stuart Mill for inspiration
Their Principles • Competitive capitalism has outlived its usefulness • Careful and gradual transition to socialism was both necessary and practical Their Program • Unlimited democracy in the political sphere • Socialism in the economic sphere
Their Tactics • Initial approach • “Permeate” middle class • Gain control of parties and Parliament • Later approach • Turn to working class • Called for abandoning Liberal Party and for formation of a “Trade Union party” (1893) • Labour Party organized (1900) by coalition of Fabian Society, Independent Labour movement, and Trades Union Congress
Christian Socialism • Center Party in Germany; Christian Socialist Party in Austria – organized by Catholic Church to promote socio-economic reform to “Christianize” capitalism and draw the working classes away from Marxist parties. • Pope Leo XIII, Rerum Novarum, 1891, an attempt to give Church’s blessings to many of the social/intellectual forces of the 19th century which had been condemned in . . . • Pius IX’s Syllabus of Errors, 1864
Marxist “Revisionism” • Eduard Bernstein (1850-1932) • Leader of German Social Democratic Party (the party Marx originally established) • Worked with Fabians while in England • Collapse of capitalism was NOT imminent • “Peasants do not sink; middle class does not disappear; crises do not grow more frequent nor last longer; misery and serfdom do not increase” • Agreed with Shaw that socialism “must be rescued from the barricades.” (meaning from the lower classes/proletariat) • Must stress social regeneration (improvement of the lot of the working class) by democratic means: renounce class struggle and revolution and use the opportunities provided by the parliamentary systems becoming common in Europe
Vladimir Lenin • Russian context did not lend itself to Marx’s analysis in any acceptable timeframe • To be viable, it must be adapted to Russia’s situation • Need for a conspiratorial, elite party rather than a broad, mass proletarian party • Insignificant proletariat in Russia • No possibilities for political parties prior to 1905 • “Voluntarism” – party can accelerate the revolutionary timetable rather than “letting nature take its course” • Skip (or telescope) stages of development (go straight from feudalism to socialism, bypassing the capitalist stage altogether) • Dispute over these tenets became basis of Bolshevik-Menshevik split in the Russian Social Democratic Party in 1903 • Lenin bitterly accused Bernstein and others of “revisionism” while stoutly rejecting his critics’ claims that he was as guilty of revisionism himself; he actually revised Marx more significantly than Bernstein and others did but always managed to wrap himself in the mantle of orthodox Marxism