After my brief foray into styles of writing, let me continue my series on the future of the left. Jeremy Gilbert and Hilary Wainwright are 2 writers I very much respect – the first for his Common Ground – democracy and collectivity in an age of individualism (2014), the second for her Public Service Reform – but not as we know it (2009). Here I’m offering two (shorter) books by these 2 authors - first
A New Politics from the Left Hilary Wainwright (2018). Only 89 pages!
By the late 1950s, however, a ‘new left’ was emerging, mainly among the intelligentsia broadly defined – media professionals and self-educated workingclass intellectuals, as well as academics – that rejected both sides of the Cold War. It was 1956, with Soviet tanks on the streets of Budapest and British ships and troops in the Suez Canal, that was the catalyst. One of the new left’s most eloquent early voices was E. P. Thompson. With the instincts of the social historian, he was attentive to what was happening beneath the surface of the institutions of the Cold War. While the international show of the Stalinist Soviet bloc versus NATO and the capitalist West proceeded, he noticed the young people who had slunk out of the theatre to make their own music on the streets.
Prompted by ‘the positives of Aldermaston and the negatives of ‘“hip” and the
“beats”’, he spied a new critical temper. It offered a future outside the political
culture shaped by the Cold War. ‘Beneath the polarisation of power and ideology
in the Cold War world’, he wrote, ‘a new, rebellious human nature was being
formed, just as the new grass springs up beneath the snow’. In “The Making of the English Working Class”, Thompson, writing of the 1820s in a comparable period of retreat and defeat and mild prosperity, quotes a London artisan alerting nineteenth-century historian Henry Mayhew: ‘People fancy that when all’s quiet that all’s stagnating. Propaganda is going on for all that. It’s when all’s quiet that the seed’s a-growing. Republicans and Socialists are pressing their doctrines.’
The quiet decades of the 1950s and early 1960s were the years in which workers’ strength and organization in the workplace began to grow, benefiting from the bargaining power of the economic boom and creating the conditions for an increasingly militant workplace trade unionism, with some autonomy from the
alliance of trade union leaders with the parliamentary Labour Party (PLP); years
in which networked activists against the nuclear bomb converged to create the
Aldermaston Marches, through which, every Easter weekend, over 50,000
marchers from all parts of the left and dissenting opinion created a radical left
politics independent of political parties (though periodically engaging with it)
and a space in which politics and culture came together creatively and
experimentally – even renewing, through the Committee of 100 and the
campaign against regional seats of post-nuclear government, the tradition of
direct action. They were years in which film-makers documented everyday
working-class life, its ingenuity and its forms of cultural rebellion; in which
Simone de Beauvoir’s Second Sex gave women marginalized by domesticity and subordinated by Hollywood culture the confidence to experiment with autonomy and ways of living that refused male domination; in which popular music provided a language for escaping the narrow constraints of conventional values and morals. Fertile ground, then, for the burgeoning new left which was, in its own way, searching to theorize both the failures and defeats of the Russian
Revolution and the limits of Labourism.
By the end of the 1960s, and most visibly in the rebellions of 1968, a new
consciousness was emerging among the generation that did not itself experience the war, that benefited from the material advantages and expanded educational opportunities of the welfare state and, as if echoing their victorious forebears, expected something more than material security. In different ways, they demanded democratic control and, drawing on the new traditions of direct
action, took autonomous initiatives to achieve it, whether as students, workers,
women, tenants, or civic activists more generally. In particular, the bond between
knowledge and authority, which was at the centre of the benevolent paternalism
of the post-war settlement, was in their sights and began to be broken.
Moreover, the new contradictions – distinctive to post-war capitalism – posed
problems to which the previous nostrums of socialism, as it was known then,
also had no adequate answer: socialism had become rather vague and confused after the experiences of communism and the nationalizations of the Attlee government. So these were also years of searching, questioning and
experimenting with alternatives in the here and now, rather than promoting a
ready-made programme.
It was not until 1973 that anything remotely comparable with the levels of selfconfidence and radicalization seen in the 1940s flowed through the institutions of the Labour Party again. At that time, it was a result of wider economic and social processes rather than inner-party dynamics. Debates within the Labour Party followed the impact of the growing self-confidence, expectations and militancy of shop-floor trade unionism, together with the reverberations of the anti-colonial liberation movements, the events of 1968 and the assertive rebellions of the first post-war generation as students, women, gay people, black people and other subordinated groups. They wanted more than the material security they had come to take for granted and were seeking to transform the power relations towards which they no longer had deference.
The second book is Twenty First Century Socialism Jeremy Gilbert (2020) 116 pages
Capitalism is characterised by the unlimited pursuit of capital accumulation, by the tendency to commodify resources and social relations, and by the tendency to generate a plutocracy. It’s quite common to refer to a society in which these tendencies predominate as a ‘capitalist society’. This is a useful shorthand. But it’s worth sounding a note of caution here. The idea that we live in a ‘capitalist society’ can often lead to the assumption that ‘capitalism’ is a totally integrated and self-enclosed system, which subsumes every element of contemporary social life.
Some theorists have certainly seen it this way. But this can be misleading. We live in societies in which capitalism has some effect on every aspect of social life and presents an obstacle to the realisation of many social goals. But there are all kinds of things going on all the time that are not capitalism, from teaching in public schools to the commercial activity of medium-sized businesses or to ordinary interaction between friends. Capitalists are absolutely committed to finding ways of using all these activities for the purpose of accumulating capital: they sell services to schools, lend money to businesses, mine every online conversation for data. But those activities can carry on perfectly well without capitalists or capital accumulation.
This is why, when we make statements such as ‘we live in a capitalist society’, we should be careful. This can give the impression that the only way in which we could emancipate ourselves from capitalism at all would be to overturn
completely the social system we inhabit. There might be times and situations when this is true. But there might also be times when resisting the encroachment of capitalism doesn’t require such total transformation. Sometimes it can simply mean creating, defending or building up institutions that are not organised along capitalist lines – public libraries, non-commercial broadcasters, cooperatively owned social media platforms, the National Health Service, and so on – and pushing back against the inevitable capitalist attempt to take them over.
I do not, however, recommend Warring Fictions – left populism
and its defining myths Christopher Clarke (2019) - a book which,
for some reason, has 2 different titles – the other being
“Dark Knight and the Pupper Master”. Clarke is a journalist and
son of Charles who was a minister in the Blair/Brown governments and his right-wing credentials are very much on display in the book which excoriates Jeremy Corbyn.
There are three belief systems which sustain these new movements.
The first is the belief in a common enemy – ‘us versus them’. Populists rely on a malign foe.
The second is an anti-establishment default.3 Populists imply that omnipotent and self-serving elites block the ‘will of the people’.
The third is a sense of decline – often expressed through opposition to growing inter-dependence between countries. This lends urgency to the populist cause.
Drilling down, there are three key areas where we perceive things differently. These can be summed up by three myths, which the far left holds dear and the centre left mistrusts.
The first myth is the Dark Knight, which concerns morality and the political spectrum. The far left usually believes the right is motivated by self-interest or spite. As a result, they regard as immoral many of the causes, methods, interests and institutions which they think are closer to the right. The centre left doesn’t tend to interpret issues through this lens.
The second is the Puppet Master, which concerns power and society. The far left often believes that society’s problems are coordinated and deliberately created by those in power. The centre left, by contrast, leans towards chaos-based explanations, and is less suspicious of government.
The third myth is the Golden Era. This relates to change, decline and the past. The far left’s interpretation is usually that society is becoming increasingly right-wing, and has been for decades. The centre left is inclined to see the positives in globalisation, or to feel Labour has made as many advances as retreats.
Whether we believe in these myths governs our approach, and how we try to turn values into strategies and policies.
Other relevant posts
https://nomadron.blogspot.com/2025/10/making-sense-of-left.html