In the Tracks of Historical Materialism. Perry Anderson

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      PERRY ANDERSON was born in London in 1938. He is a member of the editorial committee of New Left Review, and the author of Passages from Antiquity to Feudalism (1974), Lineages of the Absolutist State (1974), Considerations on Western Marxism (1976), and Arguments Within English Marxism (1980).

      Perry Anderson

      Verso

      In the Tracks of Historical

      Materialism

       The Wellek Library Lectures

      © Perry Anderson 1983

      Verso Books

      UK: 6 Meard Street, London W1F 0EG

      USA: 20 Jay Street, Suite 1010, Brooklyn, NY 11201

       www.versobooks.com

      ISBN-13: 978-0-86091-776-2 (PB)

      ISBN-13: 978-1-78478-791-2 (US EBK)

      ISBN-13: 978-1-78478-790-5 (UK EBK)

      Contents

      Foreword

      1Prediction and Performance

      2Structure and Subject

      3Nature and History

      Postscript

      Index

       Foreword

      The text of this short book needs some explanation. When the Programme in Critical Theory at the University of California at Irvine invited me to give three lectures in a series associated with the Wellek Library, I elected to discuss the contemporary situation of just one such theory. As I had already attempted a sketch in the mid seventies of the evolution of Marxism in Western Europe since the First World War, offering some predictions as to its likely future directions, it seemed opportune to review intellectual developments since then and to look at how my earlier conjectures had fared. The result is not exactly a sequel to Considerations on Western Marxism. This is partly because the period with which it deals is too short — scarcely a decade, in effect. Such an interval does not permit the kind of settled retrospect that half-a-century of history can afford. Proportions and relations are always liable to foreshortening from such a close distance — with consequent distortions. The form of the analyses presented here also differs from that earlier account. Spoken as lectures, in an academic setting, they employ a more informal address than would the ordinary page, one involving more frequent use of the personal pronoun. It seemed artificial to alter this after the event; but it remains a feature to be excused. Another peculiarity of the text, as will be seen, is its initial set at the subject: introduced under the rubric of general remarks on the notion of ‘critical theory’ itself, and its ambiguities.

      One other departure from the lines of the previous study may be noted. On this occasion, a survey of recent developments within Marxism was not practicable without some consideration of concurrent philosophical developments outside it, as they affected, or appeared to affect, its fortunes. For this reason, the second lecture is largely devoted to a discussion of French structuralism and post-structuralism. My debts here are two-fold. The general inspiration for my treatment of this field I owe to Sebastiano Timpanaro, whose combination of critical scholarship and political fortitude are an example to every socialist of my generation. For more local reflections I owe very much to Peter Dews. His forthcoming book on the subject, A Critique of French Philosophical Modernism, incomparably wider in scope and finer in grain, is written with an authority and sympathy I do not possess: its appearance will soon render these pages more or less obsolete. They will have served their purpose if they in any way prepare, albeit in a somewhat dissenting register, for his.

      To round off the lectures, I have included a postscript that raises a few problems not directly broached in them – issues which concern the relationship between Marxism and socialism, essentially. In all, the book tries to track the movements of historical materialism over the past years, which took more than one direction. The results could of necessity be no more than an interim reading. As such, they are intended simply to provide a rough guide to some of the changes in the intellectual environment as the seventies passed into the eighties. I am pleased that they appear under a series linked to the name of René Wellek, a doyen of comparative literature and master of the history of criticism itself. His easy internationalism of mind, and committed defence of classical standards of rational argument and appraisal, should command the admiration of anyone attached to the values of Marxism – a body of thought far from his own. At all events, they do mine. At the end of Discriminations, Wellek offered his readers ‘A Map of Contemporary Criticism in Europe’. Something like that, for historical materialism in North America and Western Europe, is attempted here. I would like to thank especially Frank and Melissa Lentricchia, Mark Poster and Jon Wiener for the opportunity to make the attempt; and for the warmth of their hospitality at Irvine.

       1 Prediction and Performance

      The term ‘critical theory’, which brings us here tonight, contains its own peculiar, if productive, ambiguities. Theory, in the first instance, of what? Usages oscillate between two main poles: of literature, most familiarly, as the name and collection which we are honouring remind us. But also of society, as a less widespread but more polemical and pointed tradition would have it. In this second version, the two words that make up the formula often acquire capital letters, as the token of their diacritical distance from the first. The other component of the term raises similar questions. What sort of criticism is being theorized? From what ground, and on what principles? A broad range of possible stances are at stake here, as this series itself, in its catholicity, makes plain. In practice, the very variety of positions within literary criticism, with the attendant attritions and collisions between them, has always tended to implicate the literary with the social, as readers of René Wellek’s own History of Criticism will be aware. The compulsive connection between the two has often been attested even by those who have most strenuously repudiated the notion of ‘theory’ itself. Criticism of literature, Leavis after all proclaimed, is ‘criticism of life’. This involuntary movement, stated or suggested, from the literary to the social has not so generally been reversed in a movement from the social to the literary. The reasons are not hard to seek. For literary criticism, whether ‘practical’ or ‘theoretical’, is typically just that, criticism — its irrepressibly evaluative impulse spontaneously tending to transgress the frontiers of the text towards the associated life beyond it. Social theory as such paradoxically lacks a comparable discriminatory charge built into it. The mainstream action theory that dominated North American sociology for so long is a case close to hand. Whereas most theories of literature propose, directly or obliquely, some discourse on society, the theories of society that contain, even indirectly, a discourse on literature are relatively few. It is difficult to imagine a Parsonian poetics; but it is easy enough to discern a sociology or a history at work in the New Criticism.

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