Sociology and Communism Coming To Terms PDF
Sociology and Communism Coming To Terms PDF
Sociology and Communism Coming To Terms PDF
SOCIOLOGY
Comparative Sociology 10 (2011) 670–690 brill.nl/coso
Abstract
In this introduction we provide a brief overview over the various periods of the
sociological engagement with communism. We argue that the relationship has
often been an uneasy, in some cases even a highly questionable one. However, on
occasion the discipline also produced some decent research on the subject of com-
munism. We conclude that it is still a long way to a proper sociology of commu-
nism worthy of the name.
Keywords
sociology, communism, disciplinary history, Marxism, dissent
parties or their functional equivalents. The term can also take on the mean-
ing of a worldwide social movement of members, organized in various
communist parties (often taking on other names such as ‘Workers Party’ or
‘Party of Labor’ or similar terms which signal an attachment to communist
ideals and aspirations) and maintaining an attachment to the Third or
Communist International.
Additionally, the label ‘communism’ can also be applied to an ideology
that was shared by sympathetic intellectuals in the West, often individuals
who never lived under communism but who nevertheless had some sym-
pathy with its ideas such as its politics and policies of enforced equality. A
fellow traveler attitude of that kind often included the practice of admiring
leaders such as Lenin, Stalin, Mao and Pol Pot uncritically. To paint a more
comprehensive picture, we will also be sensitive to the observation that
communism caused a counter-movement of almost equal devotion and
passion, occasionally leading to hysterical anti-communist reaction.
We are restricting ourselves to the period roughly from 1917 (the Rus-
sian Revolution) to 1989/91 (the regime change starting in Poland, con-
tinuing with the since then iconographic ‘Fall of the Berlin Wall’ and the
political events which followed). However, the collapse of the Soviet Union
neither brought history to an end nor communism to a complete stop.
China, North Korea and Cuba are still under communist rule and in some
corners of the world communist or post-communist parties are still around,
holding on to some voting or vetoing power, not to mention the ongoing
attraction that communist ideals hold for certain (sub)populations and
voters – in both developing and developed countries.
It is indeed remarkable that more than twenty years after the revolutions
in Eastern Europe a sociology of communism, worthy of that name, is still
lacking. The present special issue of a journal which is devoted to com-
parative sociology can of course not fill this hole but our hope is to make a
contribution to a more comprehensive sociology of communism by offer-
ing a critical perspective, presenting specialized contributions and thereby
making inroads for what might one day become an important strand or
subfield in sociology.
While we cannot cover all aspects in our issue, we shall nevertheless
formulate some attempts to deal with communism as a subject. How
exactly can sociology contribute to an understanding of communism?
Sociologists could start, firstly, by breaking up the subject into parts.
672 C. Fleck, A. Hess / Comparative Sociology 10 (2011) 670–690
An Uneasy Relationship
If we focus on sociology in the more narrow and academic sense of the
field, we only find a handful of really outstanding contributions to the
sociology of communism. Immediately after the Bolshevik Revolution sev-
eral European social scientists responded with commentaries and analyses.
For example, the German Sociological Association devoted its Third Con-
ference in 1922 to the topic “Das Wesen der Revolution” (The Nature of
Revolution, Verhandlungen 1923). Two well-known liberal sociologists,
both of somewhat nationalist orientation, tried to rise to the new commu-
nist challenge. The late Max Weber took issue with the Russian Revolu-
tions and how they fitted into the iron cage and bureaucracy scenario
(Weber 1995) while Ernst Troeltsch was preoccupied with communist
ideas and how they impacted on the Weimar Republic (Troeltsch 1994).
Emil Lederer, one of the outstanding social scientists in Weimar Germany,
published several articles on Bolshevism, the Russian Revolution and the
development of the Soviet Union (Lederer 1919); he contributed for
example to the 13th edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica entries on
Communism and The Third (Communist) International (Lederer 1926a,
1926b). The polymath Pitirim A. Sorokin discussed Russian contributions
in his Contemporary Sociological Theories (1928) and published not only a
Sociology of Revolution (1925), where he referred to the Bolshevik Revolu-
tion, but also commented on the rise of communism in his magisterial
Social Mobility (1927). However, mainstream American sociology did not
develop any interest in communism and the Bolshevik revolution. The
674 C. Fleck, A. Hess / Comparative Sociology 10 (2011) 670–690
impact. The lack of proper alternatives went hand in hand with changes in
the academic and intellectual fields, that is, the decline of merely negative
philosophies of history and related pessimistic world views and the simul-
taneous rise of structural-functionalist explanations, particularly in sociol-
ogy. In an age of abundance it seemed that Marxian schemes of social
progress had lost their wider appeal while the Parsonian model of social
evolution argued convincingly that communist controlled Eastern Europe
was in many ways deficient when compared to the blossoming Western
capitalist countries of the period 1960–1973.
Insofar as communism appeared on the sociological radar screen at all,
it was restricted to studying and revealing some of the social consequences
of the (mainly American) anti-communist hysteria and witch hunts of the
1950s. It should be acknowledged that during that crucial period some
outstanding empirical social research was conducted, which helped to
diagnose the devastating consequences of McCarthyism. Samuel A.
Stouffer’s Communism, Conformity & Civil Liberties: A Cross Section of the
Nation Speaks its Mind (1955) showed, for example, that some strata of the
American population expressed less tolerance towards non-conformists
than others. Paul F. Lazarsfeld and Wagner Thielens Jr.’s The Academic
Mind: Social Scientists in a Time of Crisis (1958) surveyed various college
and university faculties and showed that even those who had no reason to
be apprehensive seemed cautious, even anxious. These studies and others,
such as that of Marie Jahoda, stressed the ruinous consequences of wide-
spread, even popular, anti-intellectualism during the McCarthy years
(Jahoda and Cook 1952). Popular and high culture joined in the rebuff of
McCarthyism (e.g. Miller 1953).
Edward Shils (1954) went one step further than the previously men-
tioned studies by alleging that the famous Authoritarian Personality study
conducted by Theodor Adorno et al. (1950) had clearly failed to take the
existence of left authoritarianism into consideration. Adorno perceived
this as a vaguely veiled personal threat and decided to leave America before
the potentially harmful revelations appeared in print. His sense of threat
and particularly his preemptive exit seem now to have been somewhat
premature. Although surveillance by the FBI was directed towards left-
leaning and liberal sociologists, later documentation and research (Keen
1999) also shows what several contemporaries had already suspected,
namely that FBI agents were mostly unfit or intellectually simply incapable
678 C. Fleck, A. Hess / Comparative Sociology 10 (2011) 670–690
of putting information into the correct social and political context. Still,
the surveillance or the threat of it caused real and widespread anxiety and
apprehension.
During the 1950s only a few analyses of communist societies by West-
ern sociologists actually caught the attention of non-specialists. Analyzing
the Soviet Union and its satellites was then mainly the business of political
scientists who had practically turned into ‘Sovietologists’, a specialty which,
although well-funded, always remained on the fringes of academic scholar-
ship. Its main proponents were always regarded more as Cold War warriors
motivated by political agendas rather than committed to detached research.
However, a few sociological studies are worthwhile mentioning. In 1958,
with the help of both the Russian Institute at Columbia and the Russian
Research Center at Harvard University, emigrant scholar Herbert Marcuse
published a highly critical study, Soviet Marxism. The study aimed at eval-
uating “some main trends of Soviet Marxism in terms of an ‘immanent
critique,’ that is to say, it starts from the theoretical premises of Soviet
Marxism, develops their ideological and sociological consequences, and
reexamines the premises in the light of these consequences” (1958:1).
Marcuse used an approach very similar to the one Barrington Moore
(1950) proposed when he contrasted official statements with what was
then known about the conditions of everyday life in Russia under Leninist
rule. Moore’s later book, The Social Origins of Dictatorship and Democracy
(1966) became a classic in the field of comparative and historical sociol-
ogy; in contrast to many other studies it was actually based on the extraor-
dinarily research which he had conducted at the Russian Center at
Harvard.
When the former high-ranking member of Yugoslavia’s nomenklatura,
Milovan Djilas, published The New Class: An Analysis of the Communist
System in 1957 very few Western social scientists took notice. Similarly,
Western sociologists remained remarkably silent about the topic of forced
labor and internment camps which formed part of the Gulag. They also
remained silent about the devastating consequences of Mao’s Great Leap
Forward with its devastating famine and the death of hundredth of thou-
sand Chinese people. Not only did social scientist remain largely silent,
they also remained stumm when their own disciples who became part of
the New Left discovered the class-cleansing ‘advantageous’ effects of Mao’s
Cultural Revolution. Once again, naïve Westerners traveled to China and
C. Fleck, A. Hess / Comparative Sociology 10 (2011) 670–690 679
brought back eye-witness reports about the glory of the communist revo-
lutions much as visitors of the thirties had romanticized the Stalinist Soviet
Union. A decade earlier former American civil rights activist, NAACP
founder and trained sociologist W.E.B. Du Bois had already fallen under
that spell, as his travel reports, his biographies and a remarkable obituary
of Stalin and memories of encounters with Mao show (for a representative
selection see Du Bois 1995).
The emerging field of professional public opinion research that devel-
oped constantly and which became rather sophisticated and which, as a
consequence, flourished in the West, encountered at first serious obstacles
when researchers tried to apply the same methods to the study of commu-
nist societies, particularly when it came to the role of the public there.
Sociologist Alex Inkeles, who investigated Soviet mass media in 1950,
became immediately aware of the severe restrictions when he learned that
he had to use official data: “If we are to make effective progress in compre-
hending and dealing with the force represented by Soviet Communism,
we are under obligation to make the best of our available resources for
studying that phenomenon. Clearly, one would not seriously attempt to
state what the people of the U.S.S.R. are actually thinking on the basis of
official Soviet assertions on the subject. On the other hand, we have real
confidence in our scholarly studies on the Soviet economic and political
systems, although they are based almost entirely on Soviet sources. It is my
hope that this book will demonstrate that it is possible to achieve the same
degree of knowledge about and insight into a social phenomenon like the
system of mass communication (p. xiii).” The 1956 study of sociologists
Kracauer and Berkman, who filed a report for the Bureau of Applied Social
Research of Columbia University, tried to circumvent such problems by
relying on interviews that were conducted in some refugee camps in Europe
in 1950/51. Inkeles and Bauer followed three years later with an attempt
to study living conditions in the Soviet Union (1959). While both the
Columbia and the Harvard project used data from interviews with refu-
gees from the Eastern parts of Europe, conducted in refugee camps in Ger-
many, Inkeles and Bauer developed their ideas inside the larger conceptual
framework to ‘national character’ formation, comparing their results on the
Soviet Union with earlier and similar investigations on German character
traits. In stark contrast, Kracauer and Berkman (1956) painted an almost
ethnographic portrait of lived experiences in communist countries.
680 C. Fleck, A. Hess / Comparative Sociology 10 (2011) 670–690
was the so-called Budapest School, a network of social scientists and social
theorist that gathered first under the auspices of Budapest Academy and
that consisted mainly of disciples of the late Georg Lukács. Although a
lifelong committed communist, Lukács himself had voiced some serious
criticism that was certainly known to and circulated by his circle (Lukács
1987). Particularly in the 1970s and early 1980s the less austere environ-
ment of Hungarian ‘Gulasch’ Communism produced a number of critical
studies (for a representative sample of their work see Lukács, Heller et al.
1975).
However, by the mid-80s all official links with either the academy or the
Party had been severed, which produced an even more critical outlook of
‘actually existing socialism’. Particularly enlightening were the critical
observations of two dissidents, György Dalos (1982 and 1986) and Miklos
Haraszti (1975 and 1984). As happened with these two writers but also
with a good number of other Eastern European dissidents, the critical lit-
erature was bootlegged and sent back into the country of origin where it
became part of the Samizdat. Other Samizdat editions, such as translations
of Western sociological publications, served various underground study
groups. Sometimes Samizdat publications would become famous. In 1964
Jacek Kuroń and Karol Modzelewski published an Open Letter to the Party
(1972), appealing to the party and arguing for radical reform, such as abol-
ishing the system of party domination, for example. This critical pamphlet
was widely distributed and read underground. Furthermore, it had a mobi-
lizing effect when it became popular amongst students during the 1968
protest movement. Another example is that of Andrei Amalrik who became
well-known in the West for his prophetic essay Will the Soviet Union Sur-
vive Until 1984?, published in 1969 in Amsterdam, first in Russian and a
year later in German and English (1970). Amalrik had spent years in Sibe-
ria before publishing his devastating prognosis about the future of the
Soviet system. He was again imprisoned after its appearance. A third
prominent example is the publication of Intellectuals on the Road to Class
Power (1979), written by György Konrád and Iván Szelényi, both well
known in the Hungarian academic world. After the manuscript had been
published in the West both were arrested. Szelényi was expelled from Hun-
gary. Konrád remained in Budapest (later he would became one of the
leading voices of the opposition). Finally, there was the case of Rudolf
Bahro. Bahro became a famous GDR dissident when his manuscript The
682 C. Fleck, A. Hess / Comparative Sociology 10 (2011) 670–690
stuck very much to Marxist ideas even after he had become a professor of
sociology at the University of Leeds. During his later years he transformed
himself into a post-modern theoretician, which brought him tremendous
applause and celebratory acclaim from several cliques of adherents in cul-
tural studies and other branches of postmodern thinking. In 2007, when a
Polish-German historian disclosed Bauman’s past as an officer of the Kor-
pus Bezpieczeństwa Wewnętrznego (KBW, Internal Security Corps) he was,
to say the very least, extremely economical with the truth and in respond-
ing to the revelations. His admirers did not seem to care anyway. Having
become firm believers of the new prophet they were apparently indifferent
to Bauman’s participation in the communists’ oppression of their oppo-
nents in Poland after the Second World War.
The Bauman case is telling for several reasons. First, it comes as a sur-
prise that someone who argues on moral grounds kept silent about his own
involvement in Stalinist cleansing operations. Second, when seen in his-
torical context, Western double standards can sometimes be baffling in
both academic and intellectual circles. Just to illustrate a few examples:
Herbert Marcuse was once accused of having served as a CIA-agent due to
his service to the OSS (Office of Strategic Services) during WWII (Der
Spiegel, Nr. 27, 1969). Similarly, intellectuals who named and shamed
friends and colleagues during McCarthy hearings in the 1950s were dis-
credited by former friends and comrades. When it was revealed that the
Congress for Cultural Freedom was secretly financed by the CIA anyone
who had been affiliated with this anti-Communist movement but did not
care to know about its secret financial sources got into trouble and was
inquired about his or her misgivings. Finally, if we compare the handling
of the past of former Nazi party members, most of them having commit-
ting hate speech crimes at the most, the indifferent and nonchalant reac-
tions towards the Bauman revelations must strike any critical observer as
either involving double standards or as defending hypocrisy publicly.
Whereas Bauman probably was involved in arrests, deportations and
maybe even complicit with killings, so far most Western communist or
ex-communist intellectuals have revealed deviance of the “captive mind”
type only (Miłosz 1953). Even worse, up to now not one Western social
scientist has published a self-critical memoir of his or her Red past. Chang-
ing political and party affiliation seems to count for very little when com-
pared to changes in philosophical or theoretical outlook and orientation.
684 C. Fleck, A. Hess / Comparative Sociology 10 (2011) 670–690
Given all the culture of omnipresent self-references and sharing of this and
that with every Tom, Dick and Harry, the all-encompassing silence and
hypocritical stand about changing political affiliations and/or its relegation
to the private (i.e. must be kept secret and personal) sphere is worrisome,
particularly for social scientists whose profession it is to deal with such
attitudes in a critical way. Whatever happened to the much celebrated self-
reflexivity?
exhibited in communist countries, nor its bureaucratic face, nor its role as
a social movement has caught the systematic attention of sociologists.
Forced labor, terror and surveillance by the KGB, its extended network
brotherhood elsewhere, and the Gulag Archipelago were almost exclusively
dealt with by literary writers such as Arthur Koestler (1941), eye-witnesses
like Margarete Buber-Neumann (1949), Alexander Weissberg-Cybulski
(1951), Alexander Solzhenitsyn (1974), Nadeshda Mandelstam (1999),
Varlam Shalamov (1995), and Vasilij Grossman (2008). There was no
equal output of a sociological nature – sociology’s maxima culpa.
Maybe sociology is more short-sighted or historically increasingly
impoverished, or maybe the discipline was historically more a Western-
centered discipline than is usually acknowledged. For example, the actions of
communists in Western countries caught the attention of sociologists more
than did the crimes committed in the East. An outstanding example is still
Franz Borkenau’s eye-witness account of the Spanish Civil War, which
explicitly condemned the harsh Stalinist policies against syndicalists and
anarchists (1937). In the United States, Lewis Coser (together with literary
critic Irwin Howe) wrote a critical analysis of the history of the U.S. Amer-
ican CP (1957). In 1957, Karl A. Wittfogel, who like Borkenau had been
a party member himself, painted an even more comprehensive picture of
Soviet domination, referring to it now simply as ‘oriental despotism’.
In contrast to what we have described here as the limited sociological
views and accounts of communism, it seems other disciplines and histori-
cal accounts were better tuned in; also in some countries and national
debates these disciplines seemed to be doing better than others. Flawed as
it may have been, the totalitarianism debate in politics (Arendt 1951,
Friedrich and Brzezinski 1956; Fraenkel [1964] 1991), and the debate
about the nature of dictatorships in history (Furet 1999, Kershaw and
Lewin 1997, Kershaw 1998) at least raised the level of awareness. Sociol-
ogy, in contrast, seems a long way away and has maybe even a longer
way to go. Bizarre as it first may sound, the famous German Historian
Debate of the 1980s may turn out to be holding a few lessons for the
future. While a sociologically inspired philosopher, Jürgen Habermas,
started the debate, he had, apart from well-founded moral arguments, very
little to offer. There seemed to be some speculative thinking adequate to
deal with such extremes as National Socialism, mainly based on contribu-
tions from the first-generation Frankfurt School, but in the end Habermas
686 C. Fleck, A. Hess / Comparative Sociology 10 (2011) 670–690
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