(Redirected from Anti-revisionism)
In the
Marxist-Leninist movement, an 'anti-revisionist' is one who favors the line of theory and practice associated with
Marx-
Engels-
Lenin-
Stalin-
Mao, usually stated in this way so as to show direct opposition to the
Marx-
Engels-
Lenin-
Trotsky path of
Trotskyism. Anti-revisionists claim that the
Soviet Union under Stalin's leadership represented the '''last and final''' correct and successful practical implementation of the ideas of the
scientific socialist ideas of
Marx,
Engels and
Lenin in the
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR). However, the anti-revisionist movement is also split with regard to the status of Mao: those that hold to
Maoism basically uphold him and his ideas and policies, whereas
Hoxhaist groups do not.
Anti-revisionism is seen by its followers as a healthy, solid,
scientific ideological road, devoid of both the alleged
corruption and
elitism of
Trotskyism, and the perceived
idealism of
Left Communism. Nevertheless, "anti-revisionism" can also be a vague and controversial label, particularly in those cases where groups will argue over which of them is really the "true" anti-revisionist.
Anti-revisionism is based on the view that the Soviet Union successfully implemented Marxism-Leninism during approximately the first thirty years of its existence — from the time of the
October Revolution until the
Secret Speech and
peaceful coexistence of
1956. Anti-revisionists point out that Stalin's policies not only achieved impressive rates of economic growth and argue that such growth could have been sustained and a prosperous communism could have been achieved if the Soviet Union had remained on this same course (see also the article ''
Theory of Productive Forces''); they also typically further allege that the worldwide ideological impact and leadership of the Soviet Union in the 1930s and 1940s world labor movement represent a superior ideological and social model of real "
workers' power" that was first ruined by the
Secret Speech and was later to reemerge with China's
Cultural Revolution, only to be ruined again by the capture and deposition of the
Gang of Four by China's "
state capitalists." According to anti-revisionists, these later attempts to 'fix' or ''revise'' the socialist system represented a betrayal of socialism and ultimately led to the downfall of the Soviet Union and the betrayal of communist principles in all self-proclaimed communist countries. Thus, ''
revisionism'' is seen as the cause of the fall of the Soviet Union and the East European
socialist republics.
After years of direct experience with China that led him first to write the book ''
Fanshen'', author
William Hinton then experienced
Chinese economic reform and, with this experience, wrote an angry anti-revisionist book entitled ''
The Great Reversal: The Privatization of China''. Both books, as well as Hinton's work generally, still tend to have much resonance among many anti-revisionists in the communist movement today.
Background
Self-proclaimed anti-revisionists firmly oppose the reforms initiated in
Communist countries by leaders like
Nikita Khrushchev in the
Soviet Union and
Deng Xiaoping in
China. They generally refer to such reforms and states as
state capitalist and
social-imperialist. They also reject
Trotskyism and its "
Permanent Revolution" as
hypocritical by arguing that
Trotsky himself had at one time thought it acceptable that socialism could work in a single country as long as that country was
industrialized, but that Trotsky had considered Russia too backward to achieve such industrialization — what it later in fact did achieve, mostly through his archenemy
Stalin's
Five Year Plans. In their own right, anti-revisionists also acknowledge that the
Soviet Union contained a "
new class" or "'red' bourgeoisie," but they generally place the blame for the formation of that class on
Nikita Khruschev and his successors. Therefore, in anti-revisionist circles, there is very little talk of
class conflict in the
Soviet Union before
1956, except when talking about specific contexts such as the
Russian Civil War (when some agents of the former
feudal ruling class tried to retake
state power from the
Bolsheviks) and
World War II (fought principally between
communists and
fascists, representing the interests of the proletariat and the bourgeoisie respectively).
During the
Sino-Soviet split, the governments of the
People's Republic of China under
Mao Zedong and
Albania under
Hoxha proclaimed themselves to be taking an anti-revisionist line and denounced Khrushchev's policies in the Soviet Union. In the
United States, those who supported China or Albania at the time were expelled from the
United States Communist Party under orders from Moscow, and in
1961 they formed the
Progressive Labor Movement. Anti-revisionist groups were further divided by the
Sino-Albanian split, with those following Albania being loosely described as
Hoxhaist.
Several
communist parties in the
United States still see themselves as explicitly anti-revisionist. Not every contemporary
communist party around the world adhering to elements of anti-revisionism necessarily adopts the label "anti-revisionist"; many such organizations may call themselves
Maoist,
Marxist-Leninist or even just simply "
revolutionary communist". The
Workers Party of Korea still claims an anti-revisionist political line; however, this may not be an accurate label either in self-description or description by others, because of the official 'supersedence' of Marxist-Leninist thought in
North Korea by the ideology of
Juche.
Anti-Revisionist leaders
Those at a
state level claiming an anti-revisionist orientation actually vary widely in their ideological perspectives from within
communism. An amalgamated list of the more famous self-proclaimed anti-revisionist leaders:
★
Kim Il-Sung
★
Enver Hoxha
★
Mao Tse-Tung
★
Hardial Bains
★
Bill Bland
★
Harry Haywood
★
Bob Avakian
★
Prachanda (of ''Prachanda Path'')
★
Hua Guofeng
★
Gang of Four
★
Ludo Martens
★
Tron Øgrim
★
Harpal Brar
★
Jose Maria Sison
Some Anti-Revisionist Groups
★
Workers Party of Korea
★
Communist Party of Great Britain (Marxist-Leninist)
★
Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist)
★
Communist Party of the Philippines
★
Freedom Road Socialist Organization
★
Maoist Internationalist Movement
★
Communist Party of India (Maoist)
★
Ray O. Light Group
★
Revolutionary Communist Party, USA
★
Parti marxiste-léniniste du Québec
★
Khmer Rouge
External links
★
Stand for Socialism Against Modern Revisionism
★
List of Anti-Revisionist Parties/Groups
★
★
Communist Party of India (Maoist)