[Ed. note: The article comes from a much larger set of essays attempting to give
some analysis and definition to modern fascism, the broader reactionary currentsthat fascism often emerges from-but can break from, too-and what kinds ofthinking our side needs to develop a working practice of countering fascism. Onthis last bit, Bowman starts with a comradely review of the three way fightconcept of revolutionary antifascism and builds on this with his own experiences,analysis, and estimates. ---- Bowman came of age in the mid-80s and was afounding member of Leeds Anti-Fascist Action in 1986, remaining active within ituntil its self-dissolution in 2004 (folding into the 635 Group successor). Overthat period Leeds AFA was involved in removing the fascist presence from the citycenter and at the Leeds United FC football ground, as well as founding the AFANorthern Network, which later became the format for the AFA National Network.Aside from militant anti-fascism he was also involved in groups such as the ClassWar Federation (UK) and Workers Solidarity Movement (Ireland) and politicallyidentifies as an anarchist of the especifista tendency.]----------------I want to thank Three Way Fight for reaching out to me to solicit this article.All the usual disclaimers about whatever you find disagreeable or wrong about itis my fault alone, and not the editors of this blog. I also want to start bysaying I don't believe that theory is either right or wrong in any absolutesense, independent of what practical use it is to us in guiding our practice. SoI don't think that there is an objectively "correct" definition of fascism,simply more or less useful ones.Because this article is extracted from a chapter of a much longer draftwork[i]I'm going to start, however jarringly, with a brief list of points thatsummarise the ideas or themes of the longer text in the hopes that this will makewhat follows less puzzling than it might otherwise be. In no particular orderthen, the summary points of the broader theoretical framework of "Ideology andPractice" are as follows:1. A social materialist outlook which rejects idealism and the conceit thatideologies can be separated from practices and social situation-a conceit thatfollows the template of capitalist separation of mental and physical labour.2. Methodological collectivism-which is not the symmetrical inversion ofmethodological individualism, as collectives are composed of individuals-whichholds that the object of study is the dynamics of collectivities. This hascertain implications, such as the rejection of psychologising fascism, amongstother things.3. A three-dimensional distinction of collective processes and shared "commons"into ideological, political, and cultural categories. And that much of what iscommonly called "politics" is in fact ideology and vice versa. (This is without adoubt the most contentious bit, because it means challenging the generallyaccepted meaning of common terms, which as a rule is to be avoided like theplague, but sometimes needs must).4. A historical materialist appreciation of the upside down view of the dominantsuperstructural or "ideological classes," that the ideas and actions of thepolitical, legal, religious, police, military, and philosophical/academicalleaders and institutions are the main agents of social change-the superstructureas "protagonist" of history. The contrary historical materialist view being thatthe real origins of social change are within the so-called "base" of society,specifically the class struggle.5. The so-called "political" field of bourgeois democratic societies can becategorised into far left, centre left, centre right, and far right. And thatlogically these four categories all mutually rely on a working definition ofcentrism as an actual social process, rather than a casual slur.6. A fundamental distinction between power and counterpower as being not onlyquantitatively but qualitatively different. The liberal concept of "civilsociety" made up of organisations that are neither an extension of thesuperstructure and bourgeois class rule, nor organs of counterpower, is a delusion.7. A consequent difference in strategic orientation between "protagonistic" and"antagonistic" models of social change, left and right. Centrists beingprotagonistic more or less by definition and far left and right divided betweenprotagonistic, antagonistic, and confusionist tendencies.8. That the "antagonistic" strategy of counterpower is not exclusive toanarchists or the revolutionary left in general, but can be adopted even byradical reformists. In other words, the "antagonist left" and "revolutionaryleft" are not synonyms because there are ideologically self-identifyingrevolutionary leftists who are protagonistic or confusionist in strategicorientation, and there are reformists who are antagonistic in their strategy.9. That militant anti-fascism is a strategy of counterpower and thus an elementof the antagonistic left, even if not all participants are necessarilyrevolutionary leftists.10. That fascism is a combination of far right ideology with an insurgentpolitics of counterpower. Not all far right movements are necessarily fascist. Adistinction that cannot be made or acted on without properly distinguishingideology from politics.That final point is the main job of this article to outline and support as bestpossible. Again, my apologies for front-loading the article with a litany ofabstractions, but hopefully it will illuminate some of what follows.Three-way fight concept as opposed to the two-way perspectiveThe[Popular Front]line, albeit a U-turn from the disastrous Third Periodideology, still persist[ed]in framing fascists as a simple tool or instrument ofthe bourgeoisie, with no autonomy of their own. In other words, this was also atwo-way fight perspective. Significantly, although dressed up in economisticlanguage - the necessity of siding with the "good capitalists" of themanufacturing and "progressive" national bourgeoisie, and their liberal middleclass supporters, against the "bad" finance capitalists - effectively alignedPopular Front anti-fascism along the same line as liberal "subjectivist"anti-fascism.As this article will be published on the Three Way Fight blog, I'm going to takefamiliarity with the concept (as outlined in the "About" statement here and theassociated basic texts list) as a given. The aspect of the three-way concept Iwant to focus on is that the struggle between anti-fascists and fascists and thestate cannot be conceived as a two way fight, on a political (as opposed toideological) level. This needs a little unpacking.Schematically speaking, liberal anti-fascism sees the struggle against fascism asa two-way fight between the defenders of liberal democracy and the fascists andfar-right forces that would overthrow it. The reluctance of the police and otherstate forces to properly repress the enemies of democracy may be seen as aproblem (even denounced as "fascist pigs" in the more radlib variants), butessentially the struggle is seen as between the partisans of liberal,anti-racist, egalitarian democracy, against the forces ranged against it. Inother words, the struggle is seen primarily as an ideologically motivated one, inwhich class conflict and capitalist crisis play no agential role. This is theliberal two-way fight perspective.So far, so orthodox, from a class-conscious leftist perspective. The secondparagraph here really spells out the heterodoxy of the three-way fight conceptcompared to an orthodox Marxist perspective. Elsewhere[ii]I related the story ofthe disastrous Third Period where the consensus of the Communist partiesfollowing the Comintern line was that fascism was simply a violent adjunct orauxiliary to the class struggle between the proletariat and the bourgeoisie. Thatis, the problem or challenge of fascism was subsumed under the two-way fight ofthe class struggle, as seen through the orthodox Marxist lens. If the ThirdPeriod was on the threshold of a new revolutionary period, then all defenders ofcapitalism - i.e. non-Communists - were equally "fascist," and those claiming todo so in the name of the workers, i.e. the hated Social Democrats, were thebiggest threat of all, before even the Nazis.After the Nazis came to power and liquidated the German Marxist movement, theComintern belatedly realised the need to make a drastic U-turn and drop all the"social fascist" BS. The new line, in preparation for coming Popular Frontpolicy, was expressed by the then Comintern leader Georgi Dimitrov in thefollowing formulation that "Fascism is the open terrorist dictatorship of themost reactionary, the most chauvinistic, the most imperialistic elements offinance capital." Which is often since referred to as the "Dimitrov line."However, the new line, albeit a U-turn from the disastrous Third Period ideology,still persists in framing fascists as a simple tool or instrument of thebourgeoisie, with no autonomy of their own. In other words, this was also atwo-way fight perspective. Significantly, although dressed up in economisticlanguage - the necessity of siding with the "good capitalists" of themanufacturing and "progressive" national bourgeoisie, and their liberal middleclass supporters, against the "bad" finance capitalists - effectively alignedPopular Front anti-fascism along the same line as liberal "subjectivist"anti-fascism. In the post-war period, this aspect of popular frontism has beencriticised at times by the radical left as reformist and opportunist. But theseare functionalist or even ad hominem arguments, compared to recognising thestructural effect of viewing a three-way fight through two-way fight blinkers.A perspective that constrains you to choosing one side as the "main enemy" andallying with the other as the "lesser evil."The failure of the economistic dogmatic doctrine of official Marxism in 1930sGermany led some thinkers, particularly individuals associated with the FrankfurtSchool, like Wilhelm Reich or Erich Fromm, to retry an analysis of Nazism andfascism by switching to a psychoanalytic framework instead. But in many ways thiswas a case of jumping from the frying pan into the fire, metaphorically speaking,as psychoanalysis was no less of a totalising discourse than the economicdeterminism of Comintern doctrine. Wilhelm Reich's The Mass Psychology of Fascismis recognised as a classic of the genre. But it has to be said that despite itsseminal role in forming the problematic of "how did the masses come to turn totheir own repression," his proposed answer boils down to sexual repression, whichis frankly absurd. Admittedly not as dementedly self-annihilating as the KPD's"Nach Hitler, uns!" perspective. But that's a very low bar. Not to mentionReich's post-war spiral into orgone accumulators and other such woo nonsense.Fromm's more existential Escape from Freedom has stood the test of time better,but is ultimately no more convincing as an analysis of the causes of the rise topower of Nazism in Germany than Reich's sexual repression thesis.If we can now appreciate the relative novelty of the three-way fight perspective,that doesn't mean that the concept in itself presents a finished analysis. It isa political starting point that demands the elaboration of a worked outstrategic, ideological, and theoretical analysis. So I'm going to propose ananalytical framework in that general orientation.Towards a multi-dimensional analysis of fascismThe conservative believes that the traditional order is under threat fromsubversion and "society must be defended." The fascist believes that theconservative is too timid to face the truth that there's nothing left worthdefending and "society" can only be re-established by violent insurrection.My proposed model is a "portable" definition[iii], in that we don't restrictfascism to a historical phenomenon specific to the 1920-1940 period. The modelrecognises the significantly protean nature of fascism in its ideologicalflexibility in terms of perceived main internal enemy, which has historicallyranged from anti-communist, anti-Jewish, anti-Black, anti-Islam, you name it,conspiracies of enemies & "traitors."The first question of any multi-dimensional model is how many dimensions?Clearly, in order to properly reflect the distinction between ideology andpolitics, a minimum of two dimensions is required. But I propose that it isimpossible to grasp the specificity of fascist energies without including acultural dimension. "Culture" is a hopelessly ill-defined word and my attempts togive it a more specific meaning here (the collective commons ofsocially-constructed shared hedonic practices-music, food, fashion, sex, sports,dancing, gaming, anything a subculture can be defined by) are obviously arbitrary.Let's start with the big one. Griffin and liberal anti-fascism may be erring inmaking this the sole dimension, but there's no denying that it's a major one.Dimension 1 - Ideological- Far right/anti-centrist/anti-populistDespite occasional bad faith attempts to pose as being "neither left or right,"fascism is both determinedly outside and against the political centre ground andvery much to the right - they are violently opposed not only to socialism, butalso to liberalism and democracy. But if all fascists are far right, it doesn'tnecessarily mean that all devotees of far right ideologies are fascists. Farright is a relative ideological position defined against the centre ground. Whenpoliticians try to drag the Overton window towards a far-right position usingconventional electoral means, they are far-right but not fascist. Fascists don'twant even a racially exclusive democracy, but race war and dictatorship - therevolutionary overthrow of the existing electoral representative system. Forsimilar reasons, even though fascists often try to pass themselves off asright-populists for tactical reasons, they distrust and despise "mere populists"as simple opportunists and tail-enders without any real beliefs. Ascounter-intuitive as it may appear, given the contradictory mess that is fascistideology, they sincerely believe in the absolute necessity of people havingbeliefs strong enough to kill and die for.- Redemptive ultranationalismFascists believe in the nation, but that the nation is currently "fallen" andcorrupt and needs a violent, revolutionary rebirth, to remake the social. This isGriffin's palingenesis. The difference between mere patriotism or "ordinary"nationalism and ultranationalism is qualitative as well as quantitative. It is the fervent belief in the utopian possibilities for a reborn nation as anideal society. The need for violent redemption is tied intimately to a narrativeof national humiliation. "Death to the traitors!" is the rallying cry. There is adeep emotional need for revenge, not just on chosen scapegoats, but for thecurrent social order itself. We have to see the difference between therevolutionary revenge fantasies of the fascist and the conservative's fear ofchange. The conservative believes that the traditional order is under threat fromsubversion and "society must be defended." The fascist believes that theconservative is too timid to face the truth that there's nothing left worthdefending and "society" can only be re-established by violent insurrection.- "This is what they took from you"-Imagined bereavement for a past solidaritythat never wasThe idea of a lost golden age of past social solidarity (whether "white" or"national" or other exclusionary far right identitarian category) haunts thepresent day resentment of the far right. The real relative absence of socialsolidarity in existing capitalist society is projected backwards into nostalgiafor a lost age of cross-class "white" (or other) solidarity. A Kübler-Ross style"stages of grief" of denial, anger, bargaining, despair is the simultaneouslyexperienced turmoil of fascism's emotional monologue. The grand irony being, ofcourse, that this mythical age of cross-class solidarity between bosses andworkers on the grounds of shared "whiteness," never really existed. As anyknowledge of actual class history will show.There is a particular danger here from radical liberal responses to this fascistmourning for a past white solidarity that never was, which is to reinforce thatfantasy by, effectively, saying that that imagined past did in fact really exist.Here, strategically, the line must be drawn between militant, class-consciousanti-fascism and the liberal and radical liberal deformations.The only sustainable counter to the fantasy of a lost racial or nationalsolidarity that never was, is to build a real class solidarity in the present.Even militant anti-fascism can never be the whole answer to the threat offascism. Ultimately the positive side of anti-fascist counterpower is to buildeffective models of functioning class solidarity here in the real world.- Conspiratorial by instinct and ideological necessity-"Who is ‘they'?"If both liberals and the left mainly persist in seeing the fascist vsanti-fascist struggle as a two-way fight, fascists take the two-way fightperspective to extremes. To do this they rely on conspiratorial narratives of howall the apparently mutually hostile forces ranged against them, from liberals,the left, the state, the oligarchs, the migrant poor, etc., are all part of aunited conspiracy against them, the "true people." These conspiracies don't haveto make any logical sense; they just need to support the main narrative of a twoway fight in which they, the fascists, are the forces of good, and all the othersare pawns of the darkness. Similarly social conflicts do not arise from"structural" causes (like class conflict) because "structural" doctrines are partof the conspiracy.Dimension 2 - Political- Politically insurgentIn this model this political character of fascism as a "revolutionary" force orfollowing the strategy of counterpower - or political "antagonism" in theparlance here - is the real differentia specifica that separates fascists properfrom mere adherents of far right ideological beliefs. It doesn't just need todream like a duck, it needs to quack like a duck, walk like a duck, swim like aduck, and generally make aggressively duck-like actions to be a duck. Fascist is,as fascist does. "By their deeds shall you know them." In a collapsing socialorder (whether that collapse is institutionally real or politically subjective),the fascist ability to project force where the state is no longer able to (orwilling to, from a fascist perspective) is the power to transform a "corrupt"society into a new fascist utopia. At the risk of sounding arch or wantonlyDeleuzian, it is the strategy of violent reterritorialisation of the terrain ofreproduction and civil society that marks out fascism from the far right or populism.- Führerprinzip (ultra-factionalism)Again following the political typology sketched out in the summary points above,fascist politics compensates for the contradictory and tendentially incoherentcharacter of their conspiracy-addled ideologies by ultra-factional politicalpractices. Leadership and loyalty to leaders is a necessity for fascistgroup-formation at all levels from smallest to highest. US fascist Louis Beam mayhave popularised the concept of "leaderless resistance" amongst the American farright in his essay of the same name. But in my definition, politics is the process of forming collective bodiescapable of exercising collective agency, and from that specific perspective,isolated cells and lone wolf terror attacks, while generally ideologicallyinspired, are functionally apolitical. We'll come back to this in the discussionon incels below. At a movement level, the leadership principle produces theelevation of a maximum leader, demanding ultimate personal loyalty from everymember and cast in the role of messianic saviour of the nation.Two things must be specified about this characteristic. First, it is notnecessarily specific to fascists alone. Most right-wing populist movements alsorely on a charismatic saviour/leader figure. Bolsonaro, Trump, Orbán (Modi, notso much) are all charismatic leaders in the right-populist mode, without so farreally empowering the fascist fraction of their fanbase. Second, within fascismproper the leadership principle is often in tension or even conflict with thelust for revolutionary counterpower amongst the acolytes. In the late 80s I oncehad a member of the "Political Soldier" wing of the NF, a self-declared"Strasserite," declare to us in all seriousness that we couldn't accuse him ofbeing a Hitler fanboy "...because Hitler was a reactionary who sold out themovement." Which, within his ideological framework actually made sense (didn'tstop us laughing at him, though). The leadership principle is a pragmaticnecessity for a fascist mass movement, but that doesn't mean that fascists arealways happy with their current incumbent Führer, to say the least. And itdoesn't mean that the leadership will not sell out the followers whose musclebrought them to the negotiating table when it's time to cut a deal with thecaptains of industry and the armed forces of the permanent state, as theBrownshirts found out to their peril.Dimension 3 - Cultural- Cultural machismo and misogynyMachismo is the cultural glue that binds all the elements of the other dimensionsof fascism together. It's the cultural chauvinist part of ultranationalism. Thewillingness to kill, indifference to mass death of non-nationals, is not just anideological value but also a matter of pride and emotional pleasure. The "deathcult" aspect lurks within the cultural-hedonic darkness of fascism. Speakingmetaphorically, if the toxins in toxic masculinity could be extracted as anessential oil, it would be the engine fuel of the fascist war machine. It goeswithout saying that this all presupposes the general rightist view of masculineand feminine roles as natural, biologically rooted binaries and essentially unequal.However, if cultural machismo was as much part and parcel of fascism a centuryago as it is today, there have been substantial changes in recent years. Sexismand misogyny used to be combined within the unitary body, behaviour, and speechof an identified individual in the company of their peers. Now the disaggregatingeffect of online virtual spaces have allowed misogyny to strike out on its own,find its own line of flight and end up dispensing with many of the macho stancesthat real-world performative masculinity imposed. Now the misanthropic aspect("sympathy is for the weak") of machismo is separated from the misogynistic("sympathy is for p--s"). Incel beta male culture is emblematic of the culturalforms that could not have existed prior to the new virtual terrains opened by theinternet.- The aestheticization of politics[sic]Ever since Walter Benjamin declared, in the epilogue of his 1936 essay "The Workof Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction," that "The logical result ofFascism is the introduction of aesthetics into political life," the concept offascism as somehow the "aestheticization of politics" has entered the discourse.The first paragraph of Benjamin's epilogue is worth quoting in full:"The growing proletarianization of modern man and the increasing formation ofmasses are two aspects of the same process. Fascism attempts to organize thenewly created proletarian masses without affecting the property structure whichthe masses strive to eliminate. Fascism sees its salvation in giving these massesnot their right, but instead a chance to express themselves. The masses have aright to change property relations; Fascism seeks to give them an expressionwhile preserving property. The logical result of Fascism is the introduction ofaesthetics into political life. The violation of the masses, whom Fascism, withits Führer cult, forces to their knees, has its counterpart in the violation ofan apparatus which is pressed into the production of ritual values."[iv]In the rest of the (brief) text of the epilogue, Benjamin goes on to quoteMarinetti's manifesto enthusing over the aesthetics of war and concludes that warand destruction is the inevitable perverse result of the aestheticization in thevein of Luxemburg's "socialism or barbarism." This was a very common perspectivein the 1930s for fairly obvious reasons. Today the age of colonial empires isover. The failed US invasions of Somalia, Afghanistan, and Iraq mean that whitesupremacists no longer dream of new colonial empires.If the original context of Benjamin's concept no longer plays, its evocativeresonances are still with us. Fascism does have a culture of victimisation, thatnarrative of national humiliation mentioned above under the heading of redemptiveultranationalism, which is founded in a specifically identitarian take on "We arenothing and yet we should be everything." We need to pare Benjamin's aestheticdimension from the "high culture" notions of art that haunt the intellectualmilieu of his time and the later Frankfurt School, and relocate it solidly inpopular shared pleasures (hedonics), like music.Fascism loves memes and music. Not in the literal sense of specific musicalgenres, be it Wagner, Skrewdriver, Neofolk, Scandi-death metal or whatever. Butbecause music represents the special power of aesthetics of being able to invokeemotions directly, especially amongst a mass audience. Viral memes can dolikewise. And so fascism can use these cultural mediums to inspire andcommunicate the emotions of fascist desires, hatreds, rages, and ecstatic visionsdirectly. Directly, that is, in a way that is obviously influenced by andchannelling ideological values, but not intermediated by them.Summing upAs I said at the outset, this article is a shortened extract from a longer text,"Fascism and the Three-Way Fight,"[v]which is a chapter in an unfinishedbook-length text "Ideology and Practice." In the original text I preface theproposed model above with an engagement with writers from the 3WF perspective,including Don Hamerquist, J. Sakai, and Matthew Lyons, before presenting my ownalternative framework. For brevity, I've omitted that critical engagement here,so for anyone further interested in those critiques I'll redirect you there.I discussed above the limitations of liberal anti-fascists' "two-way fight"perspective of the struggle as one in defence of democracy. But for those of uscoming from a radical left perspective, we shouldn't assume that all of theobstacles are coming from the liberal side of the fence. The radical left has itsown blindspots and long-lasting misapprehensions. As I've argued, in my view oneof the most damaging of these is the habit of confusing the ideological with thepolitical. The old sayings "my enemy's enemy is my friend" and "politics makesstrange bedfellows" mean that at a basic level we understand that politics cancut crossways to ideology, usually in damaging ways. But leftist discourse tendsto conflate the two dynamics, for contingent reasons of our own history. Weunderstand why liberals want to view fascism one-sidedly from a purelyideological viewpoint, because their political solution and only tactic,ultimately, is to call yet again for votes for a bankrupt Democratic zombieneoliberalism. As militant anti-fascists we need to distinguish between thehatefulness of far right ideologies and fascist politics of violent streetcounterpower. In the struggle for the hearts and minds of the working class, thelegitimacy of our direct action tactics is founded on the old maxim that "he wholives by the sword, shall die by the sword." And for that we need to be able toclearly discriminate between the fascists and the mere haters in a way that canbe witnessed and understood by all.[i]https://eidgenossen.medium.com/ideology-and-practice-43a7e512f0f7[ii]https://eidgenossen.medium.com/a-history-of-confusion-part-2-marxism-and-ideology-b49796cb8da0[iii]I have taken the term "a portable definition of fascism" from an essay byGeoff Eley, "What is Fascism and Where does it Come From?", published in HistoryWorkshop Journal, Issue 91, doi:10.1093/hwj/dbab003, and at the time of writing,available online at https://academic.oup.com/hwj/article/91/1/1/6329186. Althoughthe term appears earlier in the introductory chapter "Introduction: A PortableConcept of Fascism" by Julia Adeney Thomas, in the 2020 book "VisualizingFascism: The Twentieth-Century Rise of the Global Right",doi:10.1215/9781478004387, a collection of essays edited by both herself and Eley.[iv]https://www.marxists.org/reference/subject/philosophy/works/ge/benjamin.htm[v]https://eidgenossen.medium.com/fascism-and-the-three-way-fight-4a05b87a4eec_________________________________________A - I N F O S N E W S S E R V I C EBy, For, and About AnarchistsSend news reports to A-infos-en mailing listA-infos-en@ainfos.caSPREAD THE INFORMATION
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