254 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
254 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
Libertarian Labor Review #14
|
|
Winter 1992-93, pages 31-33
|
|
|
|
Reviews
|
|
|
|
Revolutionary Syndicalism: An International Perspective, edited by
|
|
Marcel van der Linden and Wayne Thorpe. Scolar Press (Old Post
|
|
Road, Brookfield VT 05036), 1990, $59.95 (hard-cover).
|
|
The editors of this important volume have compiled 12 essays
|
|
offering an overview of revolutionary syndicalism in Argentina,
|
|
Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Holland, Italy, Mexico, Portugal,
|
|
Spain, Sweden and the United States. An opening essay by the
|
|
editors offers an international perspective, noting that
|
|
revolutionary syndicalism was--at least for a time--a strong (if
|
|
minority) international movement which "incorporated more fully
|
|
than any current within the organized workers' movement a vision of
|
|
the revolutionary power and creative efficacy of self-reliant
|
|
workers, an insistence on their right to collective self-
|
|
management, and a faith in their capacity to administer their own
|
|
affairs" (p. 1). While it took different forms, syndicalist
|
|
movements appeared in the opening decades of this century virtually
|
|
everywhere there was a working class. Syndicalists published daily
|
|
newspapers in Argentina, Spain, Sweden and the United States (the
|
|
latter in Finnish). For a short time revolutionary syndicalism
|
|
appeared on the verge of overtaking all other radical currents.
|
|
Several chapters acknowledge that the organizations and
|
|
movements they discuss continue to exist to this day, a welcome
|
|
change from the common academic sport of burying us back in 1918,
|
|
1920, 1925, 1939 (take your pick). However, the editors set out to
|
|
chart "the rise and fall" of revolutionary syndicalism. A list of
|
|
the 12 organizations or movements discussed in the book puts their
|
|
"period of maximum influence" as over, in most cases, by 1920 (the
|
|
SAC's is listed from 1924-34, the CNT's from 1936-37). A footnote
|
|
explains that they have "usually used" the number of members to
|
|
reach this conclusion--however, while they list the IWW as peaking
|
|
in 1916-17 it reported its largest paid-up membership (on an annual
|
|
basis) in 1924.
|
|
Similarly, the contributors usually treat their subjects as
|
|
national movements, even though revolutionary syndicalism was
|
|
avowedly internationalist from its inception. Lennart Persson's
|
|
chapter on the Central Organisation of Swedish Workers (SAC)
|
|
acknowledges this, noting in particular the organization of SAC
|
|
sections in Norway (which ultimately formed the Norwegian
|
|
Syndicalist Federation in opposition to efforts by other
|
|
syndicalists to bore from within the trade unions). And Wayne
|
|
Thorpe offers a useful, if too brief, chapter on Syndicalist
|
|
Internationalism before World War II. (Readers interested in more
|
|
detail might turn to his book, The Workers Themselves:
|
|
Revolutionary Syndicalist and International Labour, reviewed in LLR
|
|
#10.) Thorpe stresses the "inherently international" nature of
|
|
revolutionary syndicalism and the close personal and organizational
|
|
relations between syndicalist movements around the world.
|
|
Many chapters focus on the debate between "syndicalists" who
|
|
favored working within the established trade unions to reorganize
|
|
them on a revolutionary basis (boring from within), and those who
|
|
argued that revolutionary syndicalists needed to build their own
|
|
unions. Thorpe makes it clear that from the outset the IWA was
|
|
committed to the latter approach: "Only through revolutionary
|
|
unions, the natural locus of producers' power, could the workers
|
|
hope ultimately to end economic exploitation and political
|
|
oppression.... Workers' groups founded on syndicalist principles
|
|
were therefore to be established at every economic level, from
|
|
trade unions up through international industrial federations... At
|
|
each level these organizations were to have a dual objective: the
|
|
immediate one of improving conditions within the existing
|
|
capitalist system, and the final one of destroying capitalism and
|
|
taking possession and control of the means of production" (p. 245).
|
|
The IWA, in 1925, called for the immediate formation of
|
|
international federations of seamen, construction workers and
|
|
metalworkers (industries in which their sections had particular
|
|
strength; the IWW's Marine Transport Workers IU was for several
|
|
years affiliated as well). Thorpe notes the intense repression
|
|
visited on IWA sections, which included the destruction of its
|
|
headquarters in 1933 by the Nazis. He discusses the conflicts
|
|
within the International over how to respond to events in Spain,
|
|
when IWA sections were torn between solidarity and criticism of the
|
|
CNT's disastrous collaboration with the Spanish government. And
|
|
while there is little discussion of the IWA from the 1940s on,
|
|
Thorpe is clear that it continues to exist, if in weakened form.
|
|
The authors address several issues that remain important to
|
|
this day, ranging from the futility of labor partyism (once widely
|
|
acknowledged, even outside syndicalist circles), to the degree to
|
|
which a revolutionary movement can function within collective
|
|
bargaining regimes hostile to its principles (which remains very
|
|
much an issue for the IWW and the SAC, and which played a central
|
|
role in the split in the post-Franco CNT), to the previously
|
|
mentioned "boring from within" controversy. Several chapters make
|
|
it clear that far from syndicalists imposing revolutionary, anti-
|
|
parliamentary and anti-militarist views these positions had wide
|
|
support. Indeed, syndicalist "leaders" often proved more prone to
|
|
compromise than did the rank-and-file. When prominent Italian
|
|
revolutionary syndicalists came out in favor of Italy's war against
|
|
the Ottoman Empire they were quickly repudiated. "As the
|
|
syndicalists and the anarchists denounced the war, support for the
|
|
Committee for Direct Action increased dramatically" (p. 143), and
|
|
the Italian Syndicalist Union was quickly established as an
|
|
independent revolutionary union.
|
|
The contributions are, of course, uneven in quality. Melvyn
|
|
Dubofsky, for example, holds to his line that the IWW was "put out
|
|
of business as a functioning syndicalist labor organization" by the
|
|
end of 1918, though he at least acknowledges that the organization
|
|
continued. But even the weakest essays include useful bibliographic
|
|
information. And while it is far from comprehensive, many readers
|
|
will be unfamiliar with several of the syndicalist movements
|
|
discussed in Revolutionary Syndicalism's 260 pages. The price is,
|
|
of course, a bit steep for us wage slaves, but if your library
|
|
doesn't own a copy they could certainly obtain one through inter-
|
|
library loan.
|
|
|
|
The Overworked American: The Unexpected Decline of Leisure, by
|
|
Juliet Schor. Basic Books, 1991.
|
|
"We could now reproduce our 1948 standard of living... in less
|
|
than half the time it took in 1948. We actually could have chosen
|
|
the four-hour day..." So reads the jacket copy for Harvard
|
|
economist Juliet Schor's important new book. Important not because
|
|
it says anything anarcho-syndicalists have not been saying for the
|
|
last five decades, but because it forces issues into the public
|
|
spotlight that have been too long swept under the rug.
|
|
Schor documents that American workers are putting in on
|
|
average 163 hours more per year than we were 20 years ago as a
|
|
result of women's increased participation in the paid workforce
|
|
(men's hours increased by 98 hours a year, women's by 305),
|
|
increased overtime, moonlighting (required by falling real wages
|
|
over the same period), unpaid hours expected of salaried and
|
|
"professional" workers and shorter vacations. This figure excludes
|
|
commuting time, which increased by 23 hours per year over the last
|
|
twelve years.
|
|
While working hours have fallen from the monstrous 70-hour
|
|
work weeks that prevailed in the mid 1800s, today we put in
|
|
hundreds more hours each year than did workers in thirteenth
|
|
century England. As Schor notes, capitalism has literally sentenced
|
|
workers to "a life at hard labor."
|
|
(Nor are long hours necessarily productive--Schor cites
|
|
examples that have demonstrated that small cuts in hours actually
|
|
increase productivity.)
|
|
However, Schor accepts the common wisdom that we have traded
|
|
off productivity increases for increased income (even though
|
|
elsewhere acknowledging that wages have indeed been falling, when
|
|
adjusted for inflation), suggesting that workers be allowed to
|
|
choose between pay hikes and shorter hours. Surveys indicate that
|
|
most workers would choose shorter hours; over a mere ten years such
|
|
a trade-off would allow two-month vacations or a 6 1/2 hour day.
|
|
But we have already earned those shorter hours by the
|
|
uncompensated productivity increases of the past 25 years, even as
|
|
our working hours (by Schor's data) have been increasing. Now its
|
|
up to us to organize to take them back from the employers who have
|
|
been robbing us of our wages, our dignity, and enormous (and
|
|
growing) chunks of our lives for centuries. [JB]
|
|
|
|
With Just Cause: Unionization of the American Journalist, by Walter
|
|
Brasch. University Press of America (4720 Boston Way, Lanham MD
|
|
20706), 1991, 448 pages, $24.50 (paper).
|
|
With Just Cause collects 44 articles addressing unionization
|
|
in U.S. print and broadcast journalism. The preface indicates that
|
|
the book was conceived as a corrective to the anti-union sentiments
|
|
imparted in many journalism programs, and it might well prove a
|
|
useful introduction to unionism for many media workers. However, as
|
|
a survey of historical work in the area--let alone advancing in its
|
|
own right our understanding of media unions--it falls seriously
|
|
short.
|
|
The book opens with a series of congratulatory articles (often
|
|
by officers) about several trade unions in the field, then turning
|
|
to the claim that federal labor law "protecting" collective
|
|
bargaining is the bedrock of workers' rights (but including an
|
|
excellent article on how non-union newspapers abuse their workers),
|
|
even though the first newsworkers union predates these laws by
|
|
nearly 150 years. The third section addresses historical roots,
|
|
including an article by Brasch claiming (on scanty evidence) that
|
|
William Randolph Hearst, among others, was a voice for labor--but
|
|
also discussing the foreign-language and socialist press. Daniel
|
|
Leab's book on The Newspaper Guild is excerpted to demonstrate the
|
|
shabby pay and working conditions faced by reporters before they
|
|
organized. It offers useful case studies of several labor disputes
|
|
from the past three decades, and concludes with several articles on
|
|
current issues facing media unions and media workers.
|
|
In fairness, the book does sometimes point in more promising
|
|
directions, as in an article by Upton Sinclair about Boston
|
|
pressmen refusing to print an issue of Life magazine until an
|
|
offensive cartoon was removed (p. 197) or in discussions of recent
|
|
efforts by some unions to establish their own channels of
|
|
communication. But the book is wholly uncritical of the disastrous
|
|
effects of trade unionism in this and other industries, and largely
|
|
ignores efforts to unite media workers into industrial unions that
|
|
could exercise real power. [JB]
|
|
|
|
Through Jaundiced Eyes: How the Media View Organized Labor, by
|
|
William Puette. ILR Press (School of Industrial & Labor Relations,
|
|
Cornell University, Ithaca NY 14853-3901), 1992, 228 pages, $.
|
|
Labor studies professor William Puette argues that the labor
|
|
movement has been unfairly depicted (when it is shown at all) in
|
|
films, television news and drama, newspapers and cartoons. This
|
|
general overview is supplemented with two case studies and a
|
|
discussion of recent efforts by labor unions to document anti-labor
|
|
bias and to improve their public image. Although no serious
|
|
observer of the media could dispute Puette's claim that the media
|
|
exhibit consistent, often virulent, anti-labor bias, his
|
|
methodology is often questionable and his historical discussion
|
|
shows little awareness of research in the field (for example, on
|
|
efforts to make labor films and newsreels spanning the period from
|
|
before WWI through the 1950s).
|
|
Puette's methods are badly flawed, as when he argues that
|
|
labor stories regularly run next to reports of criminal activity,
|
|
thereby associating labor with crime in readers' minds. But in
|
|
today's New York Times an ad for Texaco runs underneath two crime
|
|
articles, while an article on New York's mayor runs beside. On
|
|
another page, an article on the elections runs beside one on a rape
|
|
trial, while a prison brawl is boxed into an article on Long
|
|
Island's electric utility (next to one on the NY Daily News). This
|
|
jumble is natural in newspaper design--the only way to isolate
|
|
labor articles from such juxtapositions would be to bury them in
|
|
the Sports pages or the stock market listings. (I couldn't find any
|
|
articles about unions, though unions are mentioned briefly in an
|
|
article on layoffs at TWA and a piece on worker's compensation.)
|
|
Similarly, while some of his readings of cartoons are clearly on
|
|
target, Puette sees anti-union bias in the strangest places--such
|
|
as a Wizard of Id strip in which unionized soldiers stop the mayhem
|
|
for a coffee break, or another in which jailed strikers demonstrate
|
|
for better treatment.
|
|
Puette's book is strongest when it discusses unions' efforts
|
|
to improve their public image, although it is largely uncritical of
|
|
the AFL-CIO and their efforts to reshape the labor movement as a
|
|
responsible service agency within the broader corporate order.
|
|
Symptomatic of this is his total disregard of rank-and-file efforts
|
|
to counter this media bias by producing and distributing their own
|
|
media images--on cable television, through independent labor
|
|
newspapers, on computer networks and over the airwaves. [JB]
|
|
|
|
The Anarchist Press
|
|
Direkte Aktion is the monthly newspaper of the Freie Arbeiter
|
|
und Arbeiterinnen Union (FAU--Free Workers' Union), German section
|
|
of the International Workers Association (AIT). The most recent
|
|
issue reports on government attacks including plans to eliminate
|
|
sickness pay for the first three days of an illness, proposed tolls
|
|
on motorways, higher rent for public housing, efforts to lengthen
|
|
the work week, reducing the advance notice given to fired workers,
|
|
etc. "The 'good years' for the people in Germany are over. The
|
|
Welfare state is being taken to bits. The state wants to take
|
|
hundreds of marks out of ordinary people's pockets. So it is high
|
|
time to get in gear and show the ruling class what is what: for bad
|
|
wages, bad work; instead of a few days sick without a doctor's
|
|
certificate, a long certified sickness break paid for by the boss;
|
|
more frequent stoppages and working to rule; and better
|
|
organization."
|
|
The paper also reports on labor struggles in Germany and
|
|
around the world (including a report on the ongoing struggle by
|
|
Texan Levi Strauss workers whose jobs were moved to Central
|
|
America--the FAU has endorsed the international boycott against
|
|
Levis), and interviews members of the British Direct Action
|
|
Movement on their efforts to build industrial networks. Direkte
|
|
Aktion also, as usual, reports on the growth of neo-Naziism and
|
|
resistance to it, and criticizes links between the Green Party and
|
|
the extreme right-wing ODP (Ecological Democratic Party).
|
|
|