Scholar Gary Saul Morson sees disturbing parallels between Russia before the Revolution and contemporary America
By Barton Swaim
The Wall Street Journal
June 5, 2020
The
similarities between this week’s riots and the Los Angeles riots of
1992 are obvious. Both were occasioned by appalling video images, and
both divided the nation along partisan and ideological lines. The
differences between the two events, however, are more revealing. The
violence in 1992 came after a court verdict; the beating and arrest of
Rodney King had happened more than a year before. This year’s riots came
within days of George Floyd’s killing by Minneapolis officers. The
riots of 1992 were mostly confined to poor and working-class areas of
Los Angeles. This week saw mayhem all over America, and in Los Angeles,
New York and elsewhere the rioters targeted wealthy streets and
neighborhoods.
But
perhaps the most striking difference is the rationalization, and
sometimes full-throated defense, of violence from left-wing elites: the
glorification of havoc, the vilification of cops and their middle-class
admirers, highfalutin defenses of vandalism. The sense of revolution and
class warfare was everywhere this week: the cognoscenti and underclass
arrayed against the petty bourgeois shop owners; the elite and those
they claim to represent against everybody else.
Gary
Saul Morson says he has no special insight regarding police actions and
the death of George Floyd. But he does have a provocative thesis about
America’s current political moment: “To me it’s astonishingly like late
19th-, early 20th-century Russia, when basically the entire educated
class felt you simply had to be against the regime or some sort of
revolutionary.”
Mr.
Morson, 72, is a professor of Russian literature at Northwestern
University and an accomplished interpreter of Fyodor Dostoevsky, Anton
Chekhov and Leo Tolstoy. Obviously we haven’t arrived at anything like
what Lenin called a “revolutionary situation,” Mr. Morson says, but we
have arrived at a situation in which well-intentioned liberal people
often can’t bring themselves to say that lawless violence is wrong.
In
late czarist Russia, some political parties and other groups—the Social
Democrats, the anarchists, the Marxists—explicitly endorsed terrorism.
“The liberal party—the Constitutional Democrats, they called
themselves—did not condone terrorism,” Mr. Morson says. “But they
refused to condemn it. And indeed they called for the release from
prison of all terrorists, who were pledged to continue terrorism right
away. . . . A famous line from one of the liberal leaders put it this
way: ‘Condemn terrorism? That would be the moral death of the party.’ ”
The
lesson seems highly relevant today. “When you’re dragged along into
something you don’t really believe yourself—because otherwise you are
identified with those evil people, and your primary identity is being a
‘good guy,’ not like those people—you
will wind up supporting things you know to be wrong. And unless there
is some moral force that will stop it, the slide will accelerate.”
Mr.
Morson, ensconced in his delightfully untidy and book-laden office in
Chicago as we chat on Zoom, concedes that a scholar who spends much of
his time thinking and writing about Russia’s revolutionary period will
tend to look for parallels between that time and our own. The parallels
don’t obtain in every way.
But
some of them make the analogy worth considering. One is that many of
today’s revolutionaries are wildly successful and privileged. Take
Colinford Mattis and Urooj Rahman, both New York lawyers in their 30s,
who have been criminally charged for attempting to firebomb a police
vehicle with a Molotov cocktail. Mr. Mattis was educated at Princeton
and New York University, Ms. Rahman at Fordham.
Why
do people at the top want to destroy the system that enabled them to
get there? “No,” Mr. Morson says, “you have it wrong. When you’re such a
person, you don’t feel you’re at the top. The people at the top are
wealthy businesspeople, and you’re an intellectual. You think that
people of ideas should be at the top.”
The
word “intelligentsia,” he notes, comes from Russian. In the classic
period, from about 1860 to the First Russian Revolution in 1905, “the
word did not mean everybody who was educated. It meant educated people
who identified with one or another of the radical movements.
‘Intelligents’ believed in atheism, revolution and either socialism or
anarchism.
“The
idea was that since they knew the theory, they were morally superior
and they should be in charge, and that there was something fundamentally
wrong with the world when ‘practical’ people were. So what you take
from your education would be the ideology that would justify this kind
of activity—justify it because the wrong people have the power, and you
should have it. You don’t feel like you’re the establishment.”
Is
American society, shaped by Protestant Christianity and dominated by a
kind of dovish, humanitarian left-liberalism, ever likely to fall into
the barbarity of the Russian Revolution? Aren’t we too—I fumble for a
word as I formulate the question—soft for that sort of totalizing violence?
“I
don’t know,” Mr. Morson answers after a long pause. “I don’t know if
that means people won’t go as far as they did in Russia, or if it just
means there will be less resistance to it.”
The
danger begins, he thinks, when complex social and political problems
can’t be debated any longer. “You get into a revolutionary situation
because people can’t hear,” he says. “Can there be a dialogue on
important questions, or is there only one thing to say about every
question? Are people afraid to say, ‘Well, yes, but it’s not quite as
simple as that’? . . . When you can’t do that, you’re heading to a
one-party state or a dictatorship of some sort. If one party is always
wrong and another always right, why not just have the right one?”
Mr.
Morson speaks with conviction about the peril of “ideological
segregation”: “It was very easy for white people to believe evil things
of black people when they never met any. But when you live with
somebody, you realize that they’re no worse than you are. . . . We’ve
increasingly had ideological segregation on both sides. Each side has
caricature views of the other.”
The
assumption of historical inevitability may play a part here. You hear
it in our political language: A favored policy is “an idea whose time
has come,” a disfavored one is “on the wrong side of history.” This sort
of teleological thinking—history has a direction, and that direction is
identical with our political views—is fervently, if unconsciously,
embraced by highly educated people today. It was also “one of the
central arguments of late-19th-century Russian thought,” Mr. Morson
says.
“Does
history have a direction? And is later necessarily better? The greatest
thinkers—Tolstoy, Alexander Herzen—answered no, later is not always
better. They believed that sort of thinking was an importation of
religious providentialism into history—the determinism of Hegel and
Marx. The difficulty of this form of thinking is that it paralyzes you
from acting. Between the wars, it was common for people to say: ‘Yes,
you may like liberal democracy, but that’s of the past. We fascists are
of the future.’ Or ‘We communists are of the future.’ People would
resign themselves to the inevitable and conclude, ‘Well I can’t fight
the future, I can’t resist the fascists or the communists.’ ”
I
suggest that the American left is very fond of this teleological
language—Barack Obama spoke in his first inaugural address of the
“worn-out dogmas that for far too long have strangled our politics.” But
Mr. Morson reminds me that Ronald Reagan used similar rhetoric. “Part
of being a revolutionary is knowing that you don’t have to acquiesce to
the tired, old ideas of the past,” he said in a 1985 speech.
Another
marker of the Russian intelligentsia was the sheer contempt its members
had for the peasants and workers they claimed to represent. “How many
workers, how many peasants, were even in the Bolshevik Party? Very few.
. . . Lenin’s whole idea was that ‘the working class, left to itself,
will never develop more than a trade-union consciousness.’ That’s his
famous phrase. They had to be led by the intelligentsia and completely
disciplined. No matter what you say, they will do it, no matter how
violent. They don’t have to understand the reasons, they’ll just do it.
Because they’re the agents of history, as Marx described them. . . .
That implies a contempt for the working class and a greater contempt for
the peasantry.”
The
supposition that America is moving toward anarchy or revolution because
we’ve had a week of riots—or three years of bad faith and acrimony, or
three decades of polarization—still seems hard to accept. Mr. Morson is
careful not to predict the course of events. He uses the phrase “insofar
as the Russian example applies” more than once.
But,
he says, “we have a major depression, we have terrible fear from the
illness, and now we have mass riots in the street, which our leaders do
not seem to know how to handle. That’s a very rapid slide from only a
year ago. And there’s no reason to think it will slow down. The slide
could well continue.”
And
history can unfold in unpredictable ways. Who would have guessed 20
years ago, he asks, that the First Amendment’s free-speech guarantee
would become passé on the liberal left? “I used to get a laugh from
students by quoting a Soviet citizen I talked to once. He said to me,
‘Of course we have freedom of speech. We just don’t allow people to
lie.’ That used to get a laugh! They don’t laugh anymore.”
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