Ever since the rise of mass labor movements in the late
nineteenth century, socialism has been seen as an inevi- table and
antagonistic response to capitalism and the spread of
industrialization. Over the course of the twentieth century,
however, socialism's failure to gain ground in the United States
and most of the non-Western world exposed the limited, Eurocentric
views of socialist theorists, and also the inadequacy of the theory
as it applied to Europe as well. John Kautsky argues that a key
factor in the development of social democratic labor movements was
the persistence of powerful remnants of aristocratic institutions
and ideologies whose survival into the industrial age preserved
exclusionary hierarchies. These led, in turn, to radicalism and
class consciousness among workers.
Kautsky traces the evolution of socialist labor movements in
Europe and Japan where aristocratic elements were still strong,
detailing the survival of aristocratic privilege and the
concomitants of worker class consciousness and demands for
equality. He shows how social democratic reliance on free elections
was primarily a weapon against the aristocracy rather than
capitalism. Contradicting socialist theory, working-class growth
came to an end, class lines became blurred, and a considerable
degree of equality was achieved through the welfare state.
Kautsky turns to those countries that were sufficiently
industrialized to have large numbers of workers, but also had
reasonably free elections, civil liberties, and less repression of
trade unions. Though the United States, Canada, post-Soviet Russia,
Mexico, and India have very different histories and societies,
their workers have not confronted a powerful aristocracy. Great
Britain, the first and for long the most advanced industrial
country, was virtually the last to develop a socialist labor
movement. In contrast, socialist movements in Canada and the United
States, where egalitarian traditions were strong, found little
support. Kautsky's concluding chapters treat the spread of
corruption, the rise of new oligarchies in Russia, and the position
of workers no longer honored and politically weak.
In its innovative perspective on long-held theories and its
currency for contemporary problems, "Social Democracy and
Aristocracy" is an important contribution to political thought in
the post-Marxist world. Its global approach makes it uniquely
valuable for the comparative study of labor history and economic
development.
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