State and Revolution, Part 0
Lenin’s The State and Revolution
Short General
Introduction
The State and
Revolution is a book of Lenin’s
that was written in the months between the February and October Russian
Revolutions of 1917.
“The State and Revolution” is
an uncompromising description of The State and of how it can be revolutionised,
written as a revisit to and critique, of the writings of Marx and Engels on the
one hand, and of those of various reformist, opportunist and anarchist
characters on the other hand, all the way up to Karl Kautsky.
Kautsky had been the leading
renegade among the German Social Democrats of the 2nd International,
at the outbreak in 1914 of the war that was still going on in 1917, and which only
came to an armistice, in the West, in the following year. Kautsky continued to
be a renegade until his death in 1938.
The State and Revolution is well
worth studying in its entirety of six chapters. In form, it is ideal for the
Freirean method of pedagogy through study circles. Each of the six chapters is
of a suitable length for reading and discussion by a group that meets weekly.
This Communist University course also includes parts of some of the documents
mentioned by Lenin in the book, with other relevant and related material, and
is thereby extended to our standard course-length of ten parts.
One problem that appears in
relation to the State is whether, or to what extent, the State can be treated
as benign, or developmental? In the SACP we do not repudiate Lenin, yet we
still praise state ownership and state “delivery”. How are these things
reconciled?
If the State is benign, then
why would we want it to wither away?
But if the state is but “a committee for managing the common affairs
of the whole bourgeoisie” [Marx/Engels, Communist Manifesto], and “an Instrument for the Exploitation of the
Oppressed Class” [Lenin, State & Revolution] then how can it at the
same time be beneficial?
We will reflect on these
matters, among others, as we go through the work.
Lenin realised that the
eventual transition to communism had to be secured in the process of the
transition to socialism. He realised that there would be a moment of danger
when it would be possible that the worker’s state could redevelop the
characteristics of the bourgeois state.
This is what happened in the
Soviet Union under Stalin, and the eventual consequence was the collapse and break-up
of the Soviet Union into a scattering of bourgeois states. The revolution was
not permanent, after all. The undead bourgeois state re-grew itself like a
“Terminator”.
The next post will open the
discussion of Lenin’s The State and Revolution with Lenin’s return to Petrograd
in April 1917, and his declaration, at the Finland Station, of the “April
Theses”.
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