* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download capitalism, contextualisation and the political theory of possessive
Survey
Document related concepts
Social contract wikipedia , lookup
Development theory wikipedia , lookup
Sociological theory wikipedia , lookup
Unilineal evolution wikipedia , lookup
History of the social sciences wikipedia , lookup
The Dispossessed wikipedia , lookup
Social theory wikipedia , lookup
Frankfurt School wikipedia , lookup
Philosophy of history wikipedia , lookup
Marx's theory of history wikipedia , lookup
Anti-intellectualism wikipedia , lookup
Social history wikipedia , lookup
Political spectrum wikipedia , lookup
Origins of society wikipedia , lookup
Political opportunism wikipedia , lookup
Political philosophy wikipedia , lookup
Political economy in anthropology wikipedia , lookup
Transcript
! CAPITALISM, CONTEXTUALISATION AND THE POLITICAL THEORY OF POSSESSIVE INDIVIDUALISM Geoff Kennedy Durham University Abstract: This article critically assesses C. B. Macpherson’s contribution to historical approaches to the study of political theory and his thesis of ‘possessive individualism’ in seventeenth-century English political thought. While Macpherson’s work remains highly problematic on both counts, the spirit of his interpretation remains significant. The article concludes with some methodological principles necessary to reinvigorate a social interpretation of political thought that seeks to contextualise seventeenth-century English political theory within the context of capitalist development. Keywords: capitalism, property, individualism, bourgeois, liberty. C. B. Macpherson’s The Political Theory of Possessive Individualism enjoys a similar status to that of Isaiah Berlin’s Two Concepts of Liberty: both theses have been subjected to substantive and sustained criticism to the point where few scholars unconditionally associate themselves with them anymore; but both theses continue to serve as the thematic entry-point for many studies in the history of English political thought and in studies in concepts of liberty. Published in 1962, Macpherson’s thesis of possessive individualism presented a provocative interpretation of seventeenthcentury English political thought. The basic thesis argues that most Capitalism, Contextualism and Possessive Individualism 229! of the major political thought of the seventeenth century rests upon a foundational ‘bourgeois’ ontology, which is said to form the ‘root’ of nineteenth century liberal-democratic theory. These ontological roots are contained in a conception of freedom stemming from the notion of ‘self-propriety’ that was understood to refer to one’s ownership over themselves and the fruits of their labour. A series of ‘rights’ were then deduced from this conception of self-propriety that are invested within the individual in ways that ‘freed’ them from any moral obligation to the society within which that individual lived. As a result of this, Macpherson argues, Society becomes a lot of free equal individuals related to each other as proprietors of their own capacities and of what they have acquired by their exercise. Society consists of relations of exchange between proprietors. Political society becomes a calculated device for the protection of this property and for the maintenance of an orderly relation of exchange.1 This ‘possessive individualism’ leads to the creation of a ‘thin’ bourgeois subject that is motivated by nothing other than narrow self-interest, and doctrines of morality and virtue become meaningless. In terms of the political theory of the period, all of the major contributions fall under this rubric of possessive individualism. The seventeenth century is characterised by a kind of bourgeois consensus that anticipates the Lockean liberal consensus articulated by Louis Hartz for eighteenth-century America.2 The difference, of course, is that Macpherson’s possessive individualism reflects – yet obscures – the underlying class relations constitutive of England’s possessive market society. What is more, English political thought of the seventeenth century lays the foundation for the problems !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 1 2 Macpherson 1962, p. 3. Hartz 1955. 230 Intellectual History and Political Thought faced by nineteenth-century British liberalism: namely, how to ensure social cohesion in a possessive market society in the context of the enfranchisement of the working class. Thus, Macpherson draws a lineage of ‘bourgeois’ political thought from the protoliberal work of Hobbes to the bourgeois utilitarianism of Bentham. The differences between Hobbesian absolutism and materialism, Harringtonian republicanism, Leveller radicalism and Lockean liberalism are flattened out, and a line of continuity is drawn between them and Benthamite utilitarianism: all of these different forms of political thought are essentially different variations of an underlying political theory of possessive individualism.3 Macpherson’s critics are legion, and most aspects of his thesis of possessive individualism have been subject to substantive critiques.4 Indeed, the unpopularity of Macpherson’s work today fits within a larger context of the repudiation of ‘social interpretations’ of historical phenomena altogether, be they the great revolutions of the early modern and modern periods, or the development of !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 3 Macpherson writes: ‘Locke completed an edifice that rested on Hobbes’s sure foundations. Locke’s other contribution, his attaching to this structure a façade of traditional natural law, was by comparison unimportant. It made the structure more attractive to the taste of his contemporaries. But when tastes changed, as they did in the eighteenth century, the façade of natural law could be removed, by Hume and Bentham, without damage to the strong and well-built utilitarian structure that lay within. Hobbes, as amended by Locke in the matter of the self-perpetuating sovereign, thus provided the main structure of English liberty theory’. Macpherson 1962, p. 270. 4 Some of the more influential criticisms of Macpherson’s thesis are: Thomas 1965; Wood 1980; Hampsher-Monk 1976; Davis 1968; Wood and Wood 1997; Pocock 1977; Tully 1980; Wood 1984. This list is by no means exhaustive. Capitalism, Contextualism and Possessive Individualism 231! ‘modern’ society, in either its bourgeois or capitalist manifestations.5 In general, attempts to situate political ideas within a social context have been associated with forms of ‘reductionism’, treating ideas as functional responses to underlying social forces that have no causal role to play in politics.6 I would like to assess two aspects of Macpherson’s work: his approach to historical contextualisation in the history of political thought and his conceptualisation of a seventeenth-century England as a ‘possessive market society’. While both aspects of Macpherson’s work suffer from some serious shortcomings, the subsequent abandonment of a social history of political thought that eschews any attempt to situate political thought within a social context constituted by social property relations, is throwing the baby out with the bathwater. The problem with Macpherson’s work I argue, does not inherently stem from a general attempt to relate the development of seventeenth-century political theory to its social context, but rather, from his attempt to define the relationship between capitalism and political theory as an ontological one based on what he considers to be the essential subjective criteria derived from an abstractly defined possessive market society. This is a problem because, as I argue below, the seventeenth century remains !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! On challenges to the social interpretation of the English Revolution/Civil War, see: Zagorin 1959; Russell 1973; Maclachlan 1996. On the refutation of the development of a ‘bourgeois’ or capitalist society in seventeenth century England, see Clark 1985; 1986; Pocock 1985. On historical ‘revisionism’ that rejects social history in general, see Burgess 1990. In the history of political thought, the challenge to the social interpretation has come largely from the so-called ‘Cambridge School’ that stresses the autonomy of political language. See Skinner 1969; Pocock 1971. 6 Skinner includes Marxism in his critique of Namierite approaches that treat political ideas as mere rationalisations of material interests and motives, thereby denuding political ideas of any causal role in political life. 5 232 Intellectual History and Political Thought a period of social transition that is best understood empirically and historically; one in which intellectual constructs and discourses were contested and re-articulated. More specifically, it is the way in which Macpherson attempts to socially contextualise seventeenthcentury political thought and the way he characterises his possessive market society that is the fundamental problem. His approach to the issue of capitalism and political thought ultimately leads him to subordinate a variety of different contributions to seventeenthcentury political discourse to the totalising rubric of ‘possessive individualism.’ Contextualising Political Thought Macpherson’s approach to historical context seeks to relate political thought to the tacit ‘social assumptions’ of the author, assumptions that were shared with the intended audience but were never explicitly elaborated in the text. In order to uncover the real meaning of a text, therefore, a historical analysis of the relationship between prevailing ideological assumptions and the social relations of that society is necessary. Meaning, therefore, cannot be understood solely in terms of references to the text itself. At the time, at least within the North American context of political theory, this was a rather provocative statement to make, as the ‘history’ of political thought firmly ensconced within the sub-field of political theory, which defined itself increasingly in relation to the discipline of political philosophy and largely dismissed the significance of history.7 Macpherson’s claim that the persuasiveness of a political !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! John Gunnell has argued that political theory, as a subfield of American political science, was largely the creation of German émigré intellectuals working within the tradition of German idealist philosophy (e.g., Strauss, Voeglin, Arendt, Marcuse, Adorno, Horkheimer) who migrated to the United States during the rise to power of the Nazis. Political theory as a sub-discipline was created after 1945 and provoked the behaviouralist 7 Capitalism, Contextualism and Possessive Individualism 233! argument does not rely solely on logic – and that the standards of ‘logic’ must also be subject to historicisation – but rather on the ability to tap into unstated social assumptions that are necessarily historically specific, was a significant challenge to those who believed that the meaning of political theory is intrinsic to the text itself.8 The question remains: how do we excavate the unstated assumptions upon which this approach to contextualisation depends? Macpherson provides us with some insights. The first two conditions are necessary but insufficient for imputing to a theorist a particular social assumption. The first is that it was a common assumption of the period to the extent that the theorist feels that it does not need to be explicitly stated, or that it has become a kind of ‘common sense’ to the point that he is unconscious of holding that assumption (of course, how we ascertain whether something has attained the status of ‘common sense’ is not sufficiently addressed). The second is that it fills a logical gap in the argument, thereby reconciling a contradiction or redressing an incoherent sequence of argumentation. But these two conditions are not enough; the third condition is that the social assumption is ‘mentioned or used by the writer in some context other than the one in which we think it is required’.9 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! revolution as a response. The increasingly philosophical identity of ‘political theory’ represented a qualitative break from the more historically informed approaches of the pre-war period, such as the work of George Sabine and J. W. Allen. These earlier approaches blended together the study of political ideas and the historical development of political institutions. As a consequence, historical context was essential to the study of the discipline. 8 The ‘textualist’ position was most notably represented by the ‘esoteric’ method of Leo Strauss and his followers, as well as those working within the tradition of analytical political philosophy. 9 Macpherson 1962, p. 5. 234 Intellectual History and Political Thought Yet, Macpherson never successfully articulated or executed an historical approach to contextualisation. The Political Theory of Possessive Individualism contains little in the way of methodological guidelines; there is no real discussion of the significance of history, nor is there any discussion of the historical method as a tool of interpretation. Indeed, there is very little discussion of how to go about excavating the tacit ‘social assumptions’ that are so crucial to interpreting the text.10 While the last condition of Macpherson’s criteria may require straightforward methods of research (e.g., assessing the entire corpus of a political theorist and subjecting them to rigorous analytical critique), it remains unclear how we go about ascertaining whether a social assumption is in fact commonly held within a particular historical period. To be able to identify a social assumption requires us to engage in the kind of historical contextualisation that allows us to construct a body of meaning that is shared by the relevant audience. It needs to be evidence based. At the very least, this requires the kind of intellectual history conducted by proponents of the so-called ‘Cambridge School’. Without an understanding of the dominant intellectual context, we cannot know what social assumptions are common enough to be assumptions in the first place. This kind of intellectual contextualisation is lacking in Macpherson’s work. The problem with emphasising the importance of unstated assumptions as the basis of the context lies precisely in the fact that they are unstated: an absence of evidence is not enough to disprove the connection between the theory and the assumption, and the argument relies largely on the strength of the logic employed to make the argument in the first place. Ironically, Macpherson falls victim to the same kind of problem that applies to the esoteric method of Strauss: the !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Indeed, Macpherson does not seriously engage with the insights of the social historians (Marxist and non-Marxist alike) writing in the same period. See Hobsbawm 1997. 10 Capitalism, Contextualism and Possessive Individualism 235! lack of empirical evidence proves the existence of the hidden meaning, and in the end, we are convinced on the basis of the persuasiveness of the logic as opposed to the evidence.11 Indeed, one of the problems with Macpherson’s method of contextualisation – to which I will return below – is that it relies for its context on a self-acknowledged ideal type of a possessive market society that precludes our ability to establish any concrete relationships between the political thought being studied and that social context. One of the virtues of Skinner’s methodological forays of the late 60s and early 70s was to emphasise the importance, not of the unstated assumptions of political theorists or the hidden meaning in their text, but rather of the stated intentions of the authors themselves. More problematically, however, is the idea that a political theory can be rendered coherent or complete by reference to an un-stated social assumption. Filling in the gaps and addressing the ‘silences’ of a political theorist’s work can be a very problematic methodological precept and result in the creation of associations that cannot be supported by the evidence. This is a point that was initially made by Skinner.12 To presume an overarching coherence to a political !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! The irony here is that, although one of Macpherson’s methodological targets is the ‘textualist’ political philosophy of Leo Strauss that is predicated upon the idea that all political theorists conceal their true meaning due to the prospect of persecution – a practice referred to as ‘esoteric writing’ – Macpherson is making a similar case that the meaning of political thought is to be found not in what is said, but what is hidden from view. The difference between the two is that for Strauss, the meaning of the theory is deliberately hidden within the text, for Macpherson it is unintentionally concealed due to the belief that the intended audience already knows what is being said. In both cases, it is extremely difficult to empirically verify the interpretation being produced (indeed, Macpherson is somewhat sympathetic to Strauss’s notion of esoteric writing). 12 Skinner 1969. 11 236 Intellectual History and Political Thought theorist’s work is – in a sense – to imply that their work is immune to the contingent political conflicts and developments of their own time; it is to imply a certain detachment that a historical approach to contextualisation is meant to reject.13 Having said all this, I think there is something significant in the attempt to historicise political thought within a social context as opposed to merely an intellectual context. Those who sympathise with Macpherson’s work remain convinced that – despite the problems of the thesis itself – there is value in attempting to relate the meaning of political theory to a larger social context defined by social relationships that form an integral part of the relations of power that are constitutive of politics in any particular society. The task, however, is to articulate and practice an approach to contextualisation that doesn’t collapse political thought into the social in ways that are reductionist. Thus, a more historically informed approach to social contextualisation needs to go further beyond the text than Macpherson is willing to go: it needs to establish evidence-based linkages between the ideas being articulated and the social processes at work within the social context. This is no small feat, and will be discussed further in the final section. Capitalism as ‘Possessive Market Society’ The second aspect of Macpherson’s work I want to discuss is his conceptualisation of a ‘possessive market society’ as the requisite context of seventeenth century English political thought. Macpherson characterised England as a ‘possessive market society’, distinguishing it – on the basis of a number of significant factors – from what he called a ‘status’ or ‘customary’ society on the one !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! See Hampsher-Monk’s critique of Macpherson’s reading of the Levellers for an example of this point. 13 Capitalism, Contextualism and Possessive Individualism 237! hand, and a ‘simple market society’ on the other. A customary society is characterised by a number of factors that make it antithetical to a modern, possessive market society: all producers are tied to the land; labour – and the rewards stemming from labour – is authoritatively allocated on the basis of status; and absolute and unconditional rights to private property are absent from the economy, preventing the development of a market in land. A simple market economy – while possessing some of the necessary conditions for the development of a possessive market economy – is not sufficient for its development and existence; it remains a society dominated by petty commodity producers who remain in possession or ownership of their own means of subsistence despite the fact that their economic activity is oriented towards the market. In other words, while a simple market economy is characterised by a market in goods, it lacks a market in land and labour. In contrast to this, a possessive market society is characterised by the full development of markets in land and labour, thereby resulting in the polarisation of society along the lines of owners of capital and owners of labour power. Thus, the existence of proletarianisation is a key factor in defining the nature of a possessive market society. Given this presumption, Macpherson then argues that English society –!being a possessive market society –!was primarily divided along class lines that pitted a class of proletarianised wage-labourers (constituting the majority) against the small class of capitalists. In the context of this possessive market society, a number of social assumptions are then prevalent amongst the elite. First, that the labour of the wage-labourer is not rightly considered to be his property despite the prevalence of conceptions of self-propriety. Secondly, that the working class lacks the rational capacity to make informed political decisions that allow them to be considered part of the body politic. Given that wage-labourers are dependent on the wills of others as a means of selling their labour power in return for the wages necessary to procure their means of subsistence, they 238 Intellectual History and Political Thought cannot be said to be ‘free’ in the sense articulated in the discourse of self-propriety prevalent in the seventeenth century. These social assumptions about labour and the labouring class are identical to those shared by nineteenth-century liberals writing within the context of the development of industrial capitalism and constitute the most enduring problem of liberalism. The problem with Macpherson’s ideal type of possessive market society, however, is precisely its idealism: it represents an ideal type of nineteenth-century industrial capitalism superimposed on seventeenth-century England. What is striking about Macpherson’s discussion of possessive market society is the extent to which it is understood as an abstraction rather than as a depiction of the characteristics of an actually existing market society. Macpherson is aware of this, pointing out that the models employed in his study ‘would not be sufficient or appropriate for general sociological or historical analysis’.14 Indeed, the model of a ‘possessive market society’ is derived from the works of Sombart, Weber and Marx and identified within the works of Hobbes, the Levellers, Harrington and Locke. In fact, Macpherson argues that his model of a possessive market society ‘does not require any particular theory of the origin or development of such society. It is not concerned about the primacy or relative importance of various factors such as Marx’s primary accumulation, Weber’s rational capital accounting, or Sombart’s spirit of enterprise. Its use does not require acceptance of the whole of any of these contentious theories’.15 The significance of this is that the possessive market society – despite Macpherson’s allusions to the contrary –! is depicted in rather static terms and is divorced from the politics of the period. The glossing over of the differences between Marx’s and Weber’s accounts of the development of capitalism removes from the picture !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 14 15 Macpherson 1962, p. 47. Macpherson 1962, p. 48. Capitalism, Contextualism and Possessive Individualism 239! the profound social and political struggles that were bound up with the transition to capitalism –! both at the level of class conflict between landlords and peasants and at the level of intra-class conflict between members of the landed class itself. For Weber, the development of ‘modern’ capitalism resulted from the development of a particular ethic peculiar to forms of Puritanism; it resulted in a particular kind of attitude towards time, work and reward, one that rested on a religiously inspired form of asceticism.16 For Marx, the origin of capitalism was an intrinsically violent process entailing the dispossession of the peasantry. This history, Marx wrote in Capital, ‘the history of their [the peasants] expropriation, is written in the annals of mankind in letters of blood and fire’.17 Thus, despite seventeenth century England being a century characterised by a civil war, two revolutions and persistent forms of social conflict over landed property in the form of enclosures, none of these play a prominent role in Macpherson’s model of a possessive market society. There is another sense, however, in which the relationship between the context of a possessive market society and the political theory of possessive individualism is rather static. While the context of a possessive market society is crucial for an understanding of the theory, the assessment of the theory remains a largely philosophical and intra-textual analysis with very little sustained relationship to the history that is considered to be important for illuminating the meaning of the theory. A possessive market society is referred to only to validate the existence of unstated social assumptions; there is little, if any, reference made to the actual historical process of capitalist development. One critic has gone so far as to argue that Macpherson’s ‘basic argument tends to be circular, for the initial premise of a market society seems to be derived from those very !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 16 17 Weber 2002. Marx 1973, p. 875. 240 Intellectual History and Political Thought traits of the political thought of Hobbes and Locke that he proposes to identify, namely characteristics of a market mentality, “possessive individualism”’.18 The bracketing off from the analysis of the actual social struggles and power relations bound up with the development of capitalism leads Macpherson to attempt to define the relationship between capitalism and political theory as an ontological one, based on what he considers to be the essential criteria of an abstractly defined possessive market society.19 As mentioned above, Macpherson underscored the significance of conceptions of ‘self-propriety’ or ‘self-ownership’ as the foundation for this market conception of man. This conception of self-propriety enjoyed a dual status in Macpherson’s thesis: it could exist either as an independent postulate, or it could be deduced from two other propositions –! namely that one’s ‘humanity’ stems from ‘freedom from dependence on the wills of others’ which subsequently entails a conception of freedom defined in terms of engagement in voluntary relations out of self-interest. From this basis, Macpherson makes a number of theoretical moves. First, he suggests that conceptions of freedom as independence, voluntary self-interest, self-propriety and the freedom to alienate one’s labour are all contained –!explicitly or implicitly –! within a conception of society as a ‘series of market relations’. The ‘concept of market relations necessarily implies individual freedom as defined in terms of voluntary self-interest,’ conceptions of self-propriety and alienable labour; and finally, the ‘postulate that human society consists of market relations necessarily implies that an individual’s humanity is a function of his freedom’ as !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Wood 1984, p. 8. This is a problem because the seventeenth century remains a period of social transition that is best understood empirically and historically; one in which intellectual constructs and discourses were contested and rearticulated. 18 19 Capitalism, Contextualism and Possessive Individualism 241! independence from the wills of others.20 The second move is therefore to reduce morality to a function of market relations. Establishing an essentialist relationship between the political theory of possessive individualism and capitalism opens him up for the severe criticism levelled at him by his critics: and breaking the link between the two denies the relationship, thereby necessitating the abandonment of any social interpretation of political thought. For example, the inclusion of the idea of freedom as independence from the will of others into the notion of possessive individualism neglects to take into account the contested nature of ‘independence.’ Freedom as independence need not imply the bourgeois notion of being free to voluntarily pursue one’s own interest; it is also perfectly compatible with oligarchic notions of ‘republicanism’ that can trace their lineage back to Roman antiquity and are perfectly compatible with the existence of a traditional landowning aristocracy.21 But freedom as independence also has a place in the popular struggles of peasants against the exploitation of that very same landowning aristocracy; the idea of being free from dependent forms of labour –! be it corvée labour, labour services stemming from ‘servile tenures’ and even wagelabour –! has a long tradition dating back to the Athenian democracy.22 Indeed, the ideological significance of the social struggles between peasants seeking their freedom and the landlords attempting to maintain their dominance over those very peasants was noted by Rodney Hilton –! the Marxist social historian of the medieval period –! as a key development in the history of English conceptions of freedom.23 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Macpherson 1962, pp. 263-4. Skinner 1998; Pettit 1997. 22 Wood 1988. 23 Hilton 1973. 20 21 242 Intellectual History and Political Thought This approach to the issue of capitalism and political theory also leads Macpherson to downplay certain aspects of seventeenthcentury political thought that do not fit the model of possessive individualism or that may indeed be antithetical to the ‘bourgeois’ society that it represents. For example, the emphasis that Macpherson places on the role of individualistic notions of selfinterest at the expense of civic-minded values leads him to downplay the enduring significance of conceptions of virtue and ‘manners’ as an antidote to vice and corruption. As Pocock demonstrates, there exists within seventeenth-century English political thought a political language rooted in the civic humanism of Renaissance republicanism that exalts the civic mindedness of the virtuous citizen acting in the interests of the common good often against his own interest.24 Not only is this not a manifestation of possessive individualism, it is, according to Pocock, fundamentally anti-bourgeois. There is also a sense in which, as James Tully has pointed out, the thesis of possessive individualism ‘misidentifies the primary problems’ that were being addressed by seventeenth century English theorists.25 Even if we accept that aspects of Macpherson’s possessive market society were reflective of English society in the seventeenth century, it is not necessarily the case that the political theorists of Macpherson’s study were primarily concerned with the socio-economic problems identified by him (e.g., Hobbes and obligation in a capitalist society, Locke and unlimited accumulation, etc). Reliance on an abstract model of a possessive market society as opposed to an historical examination of English society leads !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Pocock 1975. However, Pocock’s work is equally problematic in the way in which he has relegated any vestiges of a ‘bourgeois’ political thought to the insignificant margins of English society during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. 25 Tully 1993. 24 Capitalism, Contextualism and Possessive Individualism 243! Macpherson to focus on particular problems that may not have been of primary concern amongst theorists of the time. By overstating the extent to which capitalism had developed in the seventeenth century (as well as the ways in which it developed), Macpherson may have been throwing up the wrong issues –!or, to put it more accurately, framing the issues in the wrong way. As historians working within the Cambridge tradition have demonstrated, it is more often the case that seventeenth-century political theorists were concerned with political problems that were thrown up by more contingent and immediately identifiable political crises such as the Civil War, the Regicide, the Engagement Controversy of the Revolution, the Protectorate, the Restoration, the Exclusion Crisis and the Glorious Revolution. To say this, however, is not to suggest that these political events are disconnected from a broader social context. To do so would be to embrace what one scholar has referred to as an ‘episodic’ conception of history, in which a series of contingent political events exist independently of any notion of long term socio-historical processes of development.26 This is the task of a renewed social interpretation: connecting the social to the political in a way in which the former forms part of the context in non-reductionist, and non-teleological ways. Agrarian Capitalism and the Social History of Political Thought In the broader context of the history of political thought, Macpherson’s thesis represents an influential contribution to the prevailing ‘bourgeois paradigm’ that seeks to explain and interpret the development of European ‘modernity’. The general outline of the bourgeois paradigm is one that associates the development of !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 26 Nederman 1985. 244 Intellectual History and Political Thought capitalism with the ‘rise’ of a commercially oriented bourgeoisie (either mercantilist or industrial, depending upon the particular contribution) against the entrenched interests of the landed, feudal aristocracy. From this a number of dichotomies are brought to the forefront of the analysis: the tensions between feudal landed property and mobile bourgeois property; the socio-economic tensions between commercially oriented town and agrarian oriented countryside; and, in Macpherson’s case, the ideological confrontation between traditional doctrines of communitarianism versus the liberal doctrines of bourgeois individualism.27 Given the agricultural aspects of capitalist development that made England unique in Europe, England has always occupied a distinctive position within this paradigm. Yet, persistent attempts have been made to incorporate the English case into this larger pan-European framework of bourgeois social, economic and political development. In this sense, Macpherson’s Marxian thesis accorded well with the prevailing liberal interpretations of European modernity at the time, and were subsequently subject to the same revisionist critique from which it has never fully recovered. Indeed, as one sympathetic critic has observed, despite the new ground that Macpherson broke, the book ‘proved to be little more than a detour from the mainstream of Anglo-American scholarship’.28 However, sympathetic critics of Macpherson have sought to further pursue the importance of the development of capitalism on the character of seventeenth-century English political thought. I would argue that despite all of the flaws, Macpherson was right to emphasise the importance of the development of something we would today identify as ‘capitalism’ to the development of seventeenth century English political theory. As Gordon Schochet !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! For a critical overview of the ‘bourgeois paradigm’, see Wood 2002 and Comninel 1987. 28 Wood 2008, p. 6. 27 Capitalism, Contextualism and Possessive Individualism 245! once wrote, Macpherson was ‘almost right –! but not at all for the right reasons.’29 The task then, is to move beyond Macpherson while working within the broad themes that motivated his work. To start with, the entry point needs to be reframed: it is not a matter of attempting to demonstrate how unstated bourgeois assumptions illuminate the political thought of the period, but rather, raising a number of questions that treats both capitalist development and political theorising as historical and politically contested phenomena. The questions become: how did capitalism develop as a form of socio-economic organisation? How did it engender new forms of social conflict? How did the struggles around this development result in the re-articulation of pre-existing concepts and discourses as well as the introduction of new concepts and discourses? Can we then identify what is ideologically requisite for the development and reproduction of capitalism? The point is that we do need a conceptualisation of capitalist development –! as the relevant social context –! that is not just ‘sufficient or appropriate for general sociological or historical analysis’, but the product of sociological and historical analysis, if we are to engage in the kind of social interpretation of the history of political thought proposed by Macpherson. It is here that I would like to conclude with some suggestions as to how to reinvigorate a social interpretation of (English) political thought after the methodological challenge of the so-called Cambridge School. First, any method of historical contextualisation must be evidence based, building on the intentions of the authors. Unstated assumptions must be rejected as being unverifiable and potentially dangerously misleading. Political associations between political theorists and relevant ideological movements must be established through historical and biographical research. The same must be said for conceptualising the social context: the use of ideal types !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 29 Schochet 1989, p. 506. 246 Intellectual History and Political Thought constructed from a variety of different theoretical sources is not a sufficient method of historical contextualisation. Rather, an engagement with social history is necessary if we are to have a more accurate picture of the complexity of the social context as well as its conflictual nature. Secondly, building on the first point, historical contextualisation must treat mediating political institutions (such as the state) and social conflicts as constitutive of the context of social relations. It is not enough to treat them merely as a backdrop, as contingent events that serve to motivate the writing of political thought; nor is it acceptable to neglect them outright as Macpherson tends to do. The point is to conceptualise a social context that brings together political institutions, social conflicts and social property relations in a way that emphasises their interrelationships. Thirdly, and this pertains specifically to the way Macpherson approached the phenomenon of capitalism and its relationship to political thought, we must avoid the tendency to conceptualise capitalism at the ontological level, which then necessitates certain essentialising conceptions of the self that become identified as defining aspects of a bourgeois ideology. Macpherson tends to deduce the meaning of English political thought from unstated social assumptions that are reflective of a fully formed bourgeois subjectivity that precludes an analysis based on the fact that capitalism, as a form of social organisation, emerged out of an open-ended process of social conflict and struggle. The bourgeois subject is the result of these struggles. Fourthly, and at a more general level, an attempt to relate English political thought to the development of capitalism must reject the ‘bourgeois paradigm’ and the forms of political thought Capitalism, Contextualism and Possessive Individualism 247! that have been associated with its ascent to dominance.30 In the case of England, the agrarian origins of capitalism and its relationship to the economic transformation of a section of the landed aristocracy needs to be taken into account, along with the implications this has for the development of possessive individualist conceptions of society and the self; the persistence of traditional conceptions of moral conduct, personal virtue, etc. and its compatibility with aristocratic forms of agrarian capitalism. This is not the appropriate place to discuss the debates regarding the agrarian capitalism thesis; the point to be highlighted is that the development of capitalism occurred not through a displacement of the aristocracy and landed property, but rather through the transformation of a significant fraction of the aristocracy and the transformation of the social property relations existing between these landlords, their tenant farmers and the growing class of wage-labourers that came to work the land. What this means for any attempt to situate English political thought within a social context of capitalism is that it rejects the association of capitalist development with the rise to dominance of a classic ‘bourgeoisie’ and the subsequent association of capitalism with ‘liberal’ or ‘proto-liberal’ notions of political thought.31 Rather, it accommodates the development of an !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! The most important contribution to this literature is Robert Brenner 1987a; 1987b. The thesis of agrarian capitalism has been most forcefully articulated by Wood 2002. See also Comninel 2000. 31 It is a testament to the persistence of the ‘bourgeois paradigm’ that Perry Anderson, in his account of the development of English capitalism, can characterise it as the result of an incomplete bourgeois revolution that has been ‘over-determined’ by aristocratic accretions. In a word, Anderson argues that while the agrarian aspects of English capitalism are an incontrovertible fact, they are the peculiar result of a bourgeois revolution that deviates from the ‘norm’ of what a bourgeois revolution is supposed to be (the model being the French revolution, which occurs after the English). Anderson therefore spends most of his time characterising English 30 248 Intellectual History and Political Thought ‘aristocratic capitalism’ that can more effectively allow for the persistence of aristocratic values and an aristocratic culture that has remained dominant in English political culture up to the present day (not to mention the persistent importance of landed property within English political thought).32 At an empirical level, then, it can more effectively account for the fact that ‘bourgeois political economy’ did not supplant moral philosophy, but rather supplemented it, insofar as the classic contributions to moral philosophy were often penned by the same authors who broke new ground in political economy.33 The work being done on the basis of this understanding of the development of English capitalism has not only prompted a rethink of the way in which political theory is related to an historical context, it has prompted a rethink of the conceptual aspects of capitalist development.34 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! capitalism as an aberration, rather than as a socially specific process of capitalist development. Aristocratic political culture and ideology, therefore, are a testament to the ‘backward’ nature of English development. This sparked the polemical response of Thompson. 32 A recent attempt to situate Hobbes within this context of aristocratic or agrarian capitalism has been formulated by Michael Bray who argues that ‘the general trend of Macpherson’s argument only becomes more compelling if the rise of a ‘bourgeois’, or ‘market’, society in England is explained not simply the liberation of a nascent bourgeois class but by the rise of a capitalist aristocracy’. Bray 2007, p. 60. 33 The classic example here is Adam Smith, who wrote both The Wealth of Nations and A Theory of Moral Sentiments. For an account of Smith’s work within the context of agrarian capitalism, see McNally 1988. 34 Wood 1991. Capitalism, Contextualism and Possessive Individualism 249! Works Cited Anderson, Perry (1964). ‘Origins of the Present Crisis’ New Left Review 23, pp. 26-53. Bray, Michael (2007). ‘Macpherson Restored? Hobbes and the Question of Social Origins’ History of Political Thought 28.1, pp. 56-90. Brenner, Robert (1987a). ‘Agrarian Class Structure and Economic Development in Pre-Industrial Europe’ in The Brenner Debate: Agrarian Class Structure and Economic Development in Pre-Industrial Europe, eds. T. H. Aston and C. H. E. Philpin, Cambridge. (1987b). ‘The Agrarian Roots of European Capitalism,’ in The Brenner Debate: Agrarian Class Structure and Economic Development in Pre-Industrial Europe, eds. T. H. Aston and C. H. E. Philpin, Cambridge. Burgess, Glenn (1990). ‘On Revisionism: An Analysis of Early Stuart Historiography in the 1970s and 1980s’ The Historical Journal 33.3, pp. 609-27. Clark, J. C. D. (1985). English Society, 1688-1985, Cambridge. (1986). Revolution and Rebellion: State and Society in England in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries, Cambridge. Comninel, George (1987). Rethinking the French Revolution: Marxism and the Revisionist Challenge, London. (2000). ‘English Feudalism and the Origins of Capitalism’ Journal of Peasant Studies 27.4, pp. 1-53. Davis, J. C. (1968). ‘Levellers and Democracy’ Past & Present 40, pp. 174-180. Gunnell, John (1993). The Descent of Political Theory, Chicago. Hampsher-Monk, Iain (1976). ‘Political Theory of the Levellers – Putney, Property and Professor Macpherson’ Political Studies 24.4, pp. 397-422. Hartz, Louis (1955). The Liberal Tradition in America, San Diego, CA. 250 Intellectual History and Political Thought Hilton, Rodney (1973). Bond Men Made Free: Medieval Peasant Movements and the English Rising of 1381, London. Hobsbawm, Eric (1997). ‘From Social History to the History of Society’ in On History, London. Maclachlan, Alastair (1996). The Rise and Fall of Revolutionary England. New York: St. Martin’s Press. Macpherson, C. B. (1962). The Political Theory of Possessive Individualism, Oxford. Marx, Karl (1973). Capital, Vol. I, Harmondsworth. McNally, David (1988). Political Economy and the Rise of Capitalism, Berkeley, CA. Nederman, C. J. (1985). ‘Quentin Skinner’s State: Historical Method and Traditions of Discourse’ Canadian Journal of Political Science 18.2, pp. 339-52. Pettit, Philip (1997). Republicanism: a theory of government and freedom, Oxford. Pocock, J. G. A. (1971). Politics, Language and Time, New York, NY. (1975). The Machiavellian Moment, Princeton, NJ. (1977). ‘Historical Introduction,’ in The Political Works of James Harrington. Edited by J. G. A. Pocock, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. (1985). ‘Authority and Property: The Question of Liberal Origins’ in Virtue, Commerce and History, Cambridge. Russell, Conrad (1973). The Origins of the English Civil War New York, NY. Schochet, Gordon (1989). ‘Radical Politics and Ashcraft’s Treatise on Locke’ Journal of the History of Ideas 50.3, pp. 491-510. Skinner, Quentin (1969). ‘Meaning and Understanding in the History of Ideas’ History and Theory 8.1, pp. 3-53. (1974). ‘Problems in the Analysis of Political Thought and Action’ Political Theory 2.3, pp. 277-303. (1998). Liberty Before Liberalism, Cambridge. Capitalism, Contextualism and Possessive Individualism 251! Thomas, Keith (1965). ‘The Social Origins of Hobbes’s Political Theory’ in Hobbes Studies, ed. K. C. Brown, Oxford. Thompson, E. P. (1965). ‘The Peculiarities of the English’ Socialist Register. Tully, James (1980). A Discourse on Property: John Locke and his Adversaries, Cambridge. (1993). ‘The Possessive Individualism Thesis: A Reconsideration in Light of Recent Scholarship’ in Democracy and Possessive Individualism: The Intellectual Legacy of C.B. Macpherson, ed. Joseph H. Carens, New York, NY. Weber, Max (2002). The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, 3rd ed, Cary, NC. Wood, Ellen Meiksins (1988). Peasant-Citizen and Slave: the Foundations of Athenian Democracy, London. (1991). The Pristine Culture of Capitalism, London. (2002). The Origin of Capitalism: a longer view, London. (2008). Citizens to Lords: A Social History of Western Political Thought from Antiquity to the Middle Ages, London. Wood, Ellen Meiksins and Neal Wood (1997). A Trumpet of Sedition, New York, NY. Wood, Neal (1980). ‘Thomas Hobbes and the Crisis of the English Aristocracy’ History of Political Thought 1.3, pp. 437-52. (1984). John Locke and Agrarian Capitalism, Berkeley, CA. Zagorin, Perez (1959). ‘The Social Interpretation of the English Revolution’ Journal of Economic History 19.3, pp. 376-401.