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changing the world without taking power - adarsh badri

Review of John Holloway’s Change the World Without Taking Power

Our understanding of revolution is about the capture of state power. There are two ways of doing so: You may join a party, rise to power, and change things. This is a reformist tendency. Second, you capture state power violently and then alter the state’s structure.

This is a revolutionary approach. In both these approaches, power and state are intrinsic to changing society. Suppose one were to examine the experiences of the twentieth century, including the revolutionary governments across the world โ€” more specifically, in China and Russia โ€” or the reformist governments that have gained power through elections, as elsewhere. In that case, we find that they have led to a terrific disappointment in terms of how they have changed our world.ย 

An Introduction to Change the World

John Holloway, a Marxist sociologist and philosopher, in his work Change the World Without Taking Power: The Meaning of Revolution Today, provides an essential critique of the present-day understanding of revolutions in terms of state and power relations. He interrogates four key issues: the state, the nature of power, fetishisation, and the meaning and relevance of revolution.

Holloway premises his thesis on the critique of capitalism. He believes that we all live in a dreadful capitalist society, and there is a dire need to create a more human society. Therefore, he writes, โ€œrevolution, in the sense of radical social change, is more urgent than ever.โ€

Holloway argues, โ€œthere is simply something wrong with the whole idea of trying to transform society through the state.โ€ This failure is due to the fact that the state is not just a neutral institution but a โ€œspecific form of social relations that arises with the development of capitalismโ€. And that social relation excludes, separates and fragments people from power. Therefore, our struggle must not focus on the state and on taking state power.ย 

SCREAM and the Signification of Change

In Hollowayโ€™s view, we must develop our structures and ways of doing things. He propounds his arguments with a reflection on the concept of โ€œSCREAMโ€ โ€” an enthusiasm for changing the world. Holloway writes, โ€œFaced with the mutilation of human lives by capitalism, a scream of sadness, horror, anger, a scream of refusal: NO.โ€

It is the starting point of the theoretical reflection of revolution, born out of rage and not from reason. He adds, โ€œOur scream is a refusal to acceptโ€ โ€” the unacceptable. It refuses to accept the inevitability of increased inequality, exploitation, violence and misery. The scream โ€œimplies an anguished enthusiasm for changing the worldโ€; the problem is โ€œhow we can do it.โ€ย 

Holloway further attempts to distinguish between the Leninist โ€œcounter-powerโ€ โ€” the capture of state power or the power to command โ€” and โ€œanti-power,โ€ which is the power to do things or our creative power. For this purpose, Holloway redefines power in terms of โ€œpower toโ€ rather than โ€œpower over.โ€ In his opinion, power means oneโ€™s capacity to do things.

The scream is not just rage but one of hope. The scream implies doing. This โ€œdoingโ€ implies being able to do, negating an existing state of affairs. Power is merely the ability to do. It is โ€œcan-nessโ€ โ€” the capacity to do. It is the โ€œpower toโ€ show our resentment, join together, and march under a standard banner of being able to do.

For Holloway, this power is social, as oneโ€™s doing of things depends on the doing of others. For example, we inherit language, technology, and knowledge from others. This is collective power, as โ€œour doing is always part of the social flow of doing.โ€ At this point, we realise that there is no clear division between the actions of one person and those of another. However, there are no clear distinctions, divisions, or identities.ย 

Zapatistas’ Critique of Power

Under capitalism, this social flow of doing is broken. One of the most significant contributors to this is the concept of โ€˜private property.โ€™ It is the power of the capitalist to command what others do. โ€œCapitalism is the process of breaking the social flow of doing, breaking our power to do, and transforming it into power over others,โ€ writes Holloway. He also critiques past revolutions as mere institutions of โ€œpower overโ€ authorities, which have not changed the power structure.ย 

change the world
Photo by Markus Spiske on Unsplash

Holloway criticised the Leninist โ€œcounter-powerโ€, which is based on seizing state power to transform society. Lenin noted: First, we win power; then, we create a society worthy of humanity. He argues, โ€œFor us, trying to think about how to change society means having confidence in our own form of action.โ€

No matter how much lip service is paid to the movement, the goal of conquest inevitably leads to the โ€œinstrumentalisation of power.โ€ The struggle has an aim โ€” the capture of state power. And all those aspects of the struggle that do not contribute to the end goal are given secondary status. This leads to the hierarchisation of struggles.

This hierarchy further impoverishes struggles, as it is a hierarchy of โ€˜selfโ€™ and โ€˜ourselvesโ€™. Holloway notes that the notion of capturing state power misses the point that revolution aims to eliminate such power relations. Thus, we must rethink how to change society without taking over state power.ย 

At this point, Holloway introduces us to Zapatistas and their renewed vocabulary on revolution. The Zapatista uprising in Mexico in January 1994 was of enormous importance for two reasons: One, they rebelled at a time when there was no longer any space for revolt in modern society. Second, they also proposed rethinking the entire concept of rebellion.ย 

In one such instance, when the dialogue between the Mexican government and the Zapatistas in San Andrรฉs, Chiapas, the negotiation was not seen as a symmetrical process between the two sides. It was asymmetrical in two ways: First, they werenโ€™t going to negotiate. They sought โ€˜timeโ€™ to respond to the government.

And the time to them was not โ€œclock,โ€ but their ability to talk to everyone in Zapatismo and respond. This shows us that their concept of politics is inherently anti-hierarchical. Second, they had asserted themselves by insisting on wearing their traditional attire and using their language.ย 

The fundamental break from traditional revolutionary approaches lies in the centrality given to the idea of dignity. Holloway writes, โ€œDignity speaks in the first words of the Zapatista uprising: Ya Basta! Enough!.โ€

The Zapatistas claim they rebel because they can no longer live in humiliation as they have for five hundred years. And the revolt is the revolt of dignity and not of power. It is dignity, not just of revolutionaries, but of ordinary people. This emphasis on dignity forms the basis of the Zapatismo vocabulary of revolution. And it invariably rejects taking over state power.ย 

Conclusion: In the Form of a Critique

While reading Holloway, the Italian sociologist Antonio Negri notes that Changing the World Without Taking Power is โ€œa beautiful but strange book.โ€ And this feeling sustains throughout. Holloway, through his thesis, asks how we can formulate our understanding of revolution as a struggle against power, rather than for power. He does not seek to understand revolution as an answer but only as a question.

โ€œThere is nothing fixed to which we can cling for reassurance,โ€ he writes. โ€œNot class, not Marx, not revolution, nothing but the moving negation of untruth.โ€ For Holloway, the central aim of a social revolution is to โ€œmake the world anew, to create a world of dignity, a world of humanity, but without taking power.โ€ 

Disclaimer: Unfortunately, I do not present a critique of the book, as there are many, as highlighted by several political philosophers and social scientists, particularly from the far-left scholarship.



1 thought on “Review of John Holloway’s Change the World Without Taking Power”

  1. To negate the idea of power, one must accept the idea of compromise. Thatโ€™s what makes Democracy in theory work. Yet itโ€™s not working too well in America right now.

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