Next Conservatism - Commentary #15:
What is Cultural Marxism?
By William S. Lind
October 25, 2005
In his columns on the next conservatism, Paul Weyrich has several times referred
to “cultural Marxism.” He asked me, as Free Congress Foundation’s resident
historian, to write this column explaining what cultural Marxism is and where it
came from. In order to understand what something is, you have to know its
history.
Cultural Marxism is a branch of western Marxism, different from the
Marxism-Leninism of the old Soviet Union. It is commonly known as
“multiculturalism” or, less formally, Political Correctness. From its beginning,
the promoters of cultural Marxism have known they could be more effective if
they concealed the Marxist nature of their work, hence the use of terms such as
“multiculturalism.”
Cultural Marxism began not in the 1960s but in 1919, immediately after World War
I. Marxist theory had predicted that in the event of a big European war, the
working class all over Europe would rise up to overthrow capitalism and create
communism. But when war came in 1914, that did not happen. When it finally did
happen in Russia in 1917, workers in other European countries did not support
it. What had gone wrong?
Independently, two Marxist theorists, Antonio Gramsci in Italy and Georg Lukacs
in Hungary, came to the same answer: Western culture and the Christian religion
had so blinded the working class to its true, Marxist class interest that
Communism was impossible in the West until both could be destroyed. In 1919,
Lukacs asked, “Who will save us from Western civilization?” That same year, when
he became Deputy Commissar for Culture in the short-lived Bolshevik Bela Kun
government in Hungary, one of Lukacs’s first acts was to introduce sex education
into Hungary’s public schools. He knew that if he could destroy the West’s
traditional sexual morals, he would have taken a giant step toward destroying
Western culture itself.
In 1923, inspired in part by Lukacs, a group of German Marxists established a
think tank at Frankfurt University in Germany called the Institute for Social
Research. This institute, soon known simply as the Frankfurt School, would
become the creator of cultural Marxism.
To translate Marxism from economic into cultural terms, the members of the
Frankfurt School - - Max Horkheimer, Theodor Adorno, Wilhelm Reich, Eric Fromm
and Herbert Marcuse, to name the most important - - had to contradict Marx on
several points. They argued that culture was not just part of what Marx had
called society’s “superstructure,” but an independent and very important
variable. They also said that the working class would not lead a Marxist
revolution, because it was becoming part of the middle class, the hated
bourgeoisie.
Who would? In the 1950s, Marcuse answered the question: a coalition of blacks,
students, feminist women and homosexuals.
Fatefully for America, when Hitler came to power in Germany in 1933, the
Frankfurt School fled - - and reestablished itself in New York City. There, it
shifted its focus from destroying traditional Western culture in Germany to
destroying it in the United States. To do so, it invented “Critical Theory.”
What is the theory? To criticize every traditional institution, starting with
the family, brutally and unremittingly, in order to bring them down. It wrote a
series of “studies in prejudice,” which said that anyone who believes in
traditional Western culture is prejudiced, a “racist” or “sexist” of “fascist” -
- and is also mentally ill.
Most importantly, the Frankfurt School crossed Marx with Freud, taking from
psychology the technique of psychological conditioning. Today, when the cultural
Marxists want to do something like “normalize” homosexuality, they do not argue
the point philosophically. They just beam television show after television show
into every American home where the only normal-seeming white male is a
homosexual (the Frankfurt School’s key people spent the war years in Hollywood).
After World War II ended, most members of the Frankfurt School went back to
Germany. But Herbert Marcuse stayed in America. He took the highly abstract
works of other Frankfurt School members and repackaged them in ways college
students could read and understand. In his book “Eros and Civilization,” he
argued that by freeing sex from any restraints, we could elevate the pleasure
principle over the reality principle and create a society with no work, only
play (Marcuse coined the phrase, “Make love, not war”). Marcuse also argued for
what he called “liberating tolerance,” which he defined as tolerance for all
ideas coming from the Left and intolerance for any ideas coming from the Right.
In the 1960s, Marcuse became the chief “guru” of the New Left, and he injected
the cultural Marxism of the Frankfurt School into the baby boom generation, to
the point where it is now America’s state ideology.
The next conservatism should unmask multiculturalism and Political Correctness
and tell the American people what they really are: cultural Marxism. Its goal
remains what Lukacs and Gramsci set in 1919: destroying Western culture and the
Christian religion.
It has already made vast strides toward that goal. But if the average American
found out that Political Correctness is a form of Marxism, different from the
Marxism of the Soviet Union but Marxism nonetheless, it would be in trouble. The
next conservatism needs to reveal the man behind the curtain - - old Karl Marx
himself.
William S. Lind is Director for the Center for Cultural Conservatism of the Free
Congress Foundation.
http://www.freecongress.org/commentaries/2005/051025.aspx
(The Free Congress Foundation’s website, www.freecongress.org, includes a short book on the history and nature of cultural Marxism, edited by William S. Lind. It is formatted so you can print it out as a book and share it with your family and friends.)
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