Break Their Haughty Power : Loren Godner

Loren Goldner – Contemporary American left communist notable for his historical work on the communist left, fictitious capital, race, and literary criticism. Goldner has written extensively on postmodernism and current working class struggles.

Break Their Haughty Power
“The working class and the employing class have nothing in common.”
IWW Preamble, 1905

 

The following texts were written between 1973 and the present. Some of them, beginning in the late 1980s, were published in US journals such as Against the Current, New Politics, Critique, Collective Action Notes and Race Traitor; some have appeared in French, German, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Korean, Swedish, Polish, Lithuanian, Czech, Romanian,  Russian, Greek and Turkish translations. Others are appearing in the Marx / Third Millennium series of Queequeg Publications. The majority, however, were consigned by circumstance to what Marx called “the gnawing critique of the mice.” As such, they circulated only in xerox format to very limited circles of readers. I am posting them today, not because they necessarily possess any overarching coherence or because the evolution of one individual is of any particular importance. Rather, since different readers over the years have found different texts to be useful, I am using the new possibilities opened by the web to make them more generally available than they have been in my file cabinets.

Critique and comment are invited.

The Break Their Haughty Power website is affiliated with Queequeg Publications, which can be contacted at the e-mail address below.

Queequeg Publications has made available in book format some of the following texts. They include:

Loren Goldner: Ubu Saved From Drowning: Class Struggle and Statist Containment in Portugal and Spain, 1974-1977 (2000). ISBN 0-970-03080-0. 113 pp. Order directly from Amazon: click here

Loren Goldner: Vanguard of Retrogression: “Postmodern” Fictions as Ideology in the Era of Fictitious Capital (2001). ISBN 0-9700308-1-9. 131 pp. Order directly from Amazon: click here

Loren Goldner. Herman Melville: Between Charlemagne and the Antemosaic Cosmic Man. Race, Class and the Crisis of Bourgeois Ideology in an American Renaissance Writer.
(2006). ISBN 0-9700-308-2-7. 291 p. Order directly from Amazon: click here.

Libri e saggi di Loren Goldner in italiano: Capitale fittizio e crisi del capitalismo, L’Avanguardia della regressione, Il “socialismo in un solo paese” prima di Stalin e le origini dell'”anti-imperialismo” reazionario. Il caso della Turchia (1917-1925), L’immensa sorpresa di ottobre: Un collasso de mondo capitalista alle Edizioni PonSin Mor

Livre de Loren Goldner en francais: Nous vivrons la revolution. Revolution in our lifetime. (tome 1). Editions Ni patrie ni frontieres
Loren Goldner
lgoldner@alum.mit.edu

Links to Other Sites

What’s New

June 2012

“Globalization of Capital, Globalization of Struggle”

Globalization of Capital, Globalization of Struggle (2012)
Italian Translation: Globalizazzione del Capitale, Globalizazzione delle Lotte

The Sky Is Always Darkest Just Befor the Dawn: Class Struggle in the U.S. From the 2008 Crash to the Eve of Occupy (2011)
Korean Translation: 2008년 이후 미국에서의 계급투쟁
French Translation: La lutte de classes aux Etats-Unis depuis le krach de 2008 jusqu’a la veille d’Occupy Wall Street
Portuguese Translation: A luta de classes nos EUA desde a crise financeira de 2008
Italian Translation: La lotta di classe negli Stati Uniti dal Crollo del 2008
German Translation: Klassenkampf in den USA seit dem Crash von 2008
Czech Translation:  Současný třídní boj v USA

Theses for Discussion
Korean Translation: Toron-ul wihan Tejedul

Anti-Capitalism or Anti-Imperialism?
Interwar Authoritarian and Fascist Sources of A Reactionary Ideology:
The Case of the Bolivian MNR
(2011)
Spanish Translation: Anti-capitalismo o anti-imperialismo?

Fuentes autoritarias y fascistas de la epoca entreguerras de una ideología reaccionaria:

El caso del MNR boliviano

http://home.earthlink.net/~lrgoldner/

Worker Insurgency and Statist Containment in Portugal and Spain, 1974-1977 – Loren Goldne

http://libcom.org/library/worker-insurgency-portugal-spain

giovedì 4 ottobre 2012

Incontro con Loren Goldner

http://connessioni-connessioni.blogspot.it/2012/10/incontro-con-loren-goldner.html

“Radical Interpretations of the Present Crisis”: A panel discussion with Loren Goldner, David Harvey, Andrew Kliman, and Paul Mattick

 

Radical Interpretations of the Present Crisis

LOREN GOLDNER ┇ DAVID HARVEY ┇ ANDREW KLIMAN ┇ PAUL MATTICK

// November 14th, 2012
7-10PM

// Wollman Hall
Eugene Lang building, 6th floor
65 W 11th St
New York, NY 10011

The present moment is arguably one of unprecedented confusion on the Left.  The emergence of many new theoretical perspectives on Marxism, anarchism, and the left generally seem rather than signs of a newfound vitality, the intellectual reflux of its final disintegration in history.  As for the politics that still bothers to describe itself as leftist today, it seems no great merit that it is largely disconnected from the academic left’s disputations over everything from imperialism to ecology.  Perhaps nowhere are these symptoms more pronounced than around the subject of the economy.  As Marxist economics has witnessed of late a flurry of recent works, many quite involved in their depth and complexity, recent activism around austerity, joblessness, and non-transparency while quite creative in some respects seems hesitant to oppose with anything but nostalgia for the past the status quo mantra, “There is no Alternative.”  At a time when the United States has entered the most prolonged slump since the Great Depression, the European project founders on the shoals of debt and nationalism.  If the once triumphant neoliberal project of free markets for free people seems utterly exhausted, the “strange non-death of neo-liberalism,” as a recent book title has it, seems poised to carry on indefinitely.  The need for a Marxist politics adequate to the crisis is as great as such a politics is lacking.

And 2011 now seems to be fading into the past.  In Greece today as elsewhere in Europe existing Left parties remain largely passive in the face of the crisis, eschewing radical solutions (if they even imagine such solutions to exist).  In the United States, #Occupy has vanished from the parks and streets, leaving only bitter grumbling where there once seemed to be creativity and open-ended potential.  In Britain, the 2011 London Riots, rather than political protest, was trumpeted as the shafted generation’s response to the crisis, overshadowing the police brutality that actually occasioned it.  Finally, in the Arab world where, we are told the 2011 revolution is still afoot, it seems inconceivable that the revolution, even as it bears within it the hopes of millions, could alter the economic fate of any but a handful.  While joblessness haunts billions worldwide, politicization of the issue seems chiefly the prerogative of the right.  Meanwhile, the poor worldwide face relentless price rises in fuel and essential foodstuffs.  The prospects for world revolution seem remote at best, even as bankers and fund managers seem to lament democracy’s failure in confronting the crisis. In this sense, it seems plausible to argue that there is no crisis at all, but simply the latest stage in an ongoing social regression. What does it mean to say that we face a crisis, after all, when there is no real prospect that anything particularly is likely to change, at least not for the better?

In this opaque historical moment, Platypus wants to raise some basic questions: Do we live in a crisis of capitalism today and, if so, of what sort — political? economic? social? Why do seemingly sophisticated leftist understandings of the world appear unable to assist in the task of changing it? Conversely, can the world be thought intelligible without our capacity to self-consciously transform it through practice? Can Marxism survive as an economics or social theory without politics? Is there capitalism after socialism?

Featuring:

• LOREN GOLDNER

// Chief Editor of Insurgent Notes; ┇ Author: — Ubu Saved From Drowning: Class Struggle and Statist Containment in Portugal and Spain, 1974-1977 (2000), — “The Sky Is Always Darkest Just Before the Dawn: Class Struggle in the U.S. From the 2008 Crash to the Eve of Occupy” (2011)

• DAVID HARVEY

// Distinguished Professor of Anthropology and Geography at the CUNY Grad Center; ┇ Author: — The Limits to Capital (1982), — The Condition of Postmodernity (1989), — A Brief History of Neoliberalism (2005), — “Why the US Stimulus Package is Bound to Fail” (2008)

• ANDREW KLIMAN

// Professor of Economics at Pace University; ┇ Founding member of the Marxist-Humanist Initiative (MHI) in 2009; ┇ Author: — Reclaiming Marx’s Capital: A Refutation of the Myth of Inconsistency (2006), — The Failure of Capitalist Production: Underlying Causes of the “Great Recession” (2011)

• PAUL MATTICK

// Professor of Economics, Chair of the Department of Philosophy at Adelphi University; ┇ Editor of The Brooklyn Rail ┇ Author: — Social Knowledge: An Essay on the Nature and Limits of Social Science (1986), — Business as Usual: The Economic Crisis and the Failure of Capitalism (2011)

 

http://rosswolfe.wordpress.com/2012/10/21/radical-interpretations-of-the-present-crisis-a-panel-discussion-with-loren-goldner-david-harvey-andrew-kliman-and-paul-mattick/

Loren Goldner, Oakland, September 2010 from amiri on Vimeo.

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