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Intellectual Crisis or Paradigm Shift?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 December 2008

Anson Rabinbach
Affiliation:
The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art

Extract

Ira's paper begins with an apparent paradox: He agrees with William Sewell's statement that labor history is not in crisis, and yet, the remarkable historical occurrences and the powerful methodological and epistemological challenges of the past decade have produced nothing less than “labor history's loss of élan, directionality, and intellectual purpose.” These developments are so serious that labor historians are encouraged to undertake a dramatic departure from the well-trod methodological and thematic pathways of labor history.Marxism, which in varying guises was hegemonic in our discipline for at least two decades, has all but collapsed under the double pressure of events and theoretical challenges. Its political project is undermined by a disappearing working class, a declining welfare state, and the end of European communism, its theoretical preeminence shaken by new deconstructive and Foucauldian approaches. These approaches have questioned the timelessness and solidity of Marxist categories, arguing that the “historical subject” of the theory—the working class—is not a sociological given or an ontologically secure phenomenon; it is a category that is not merely undifferentiated, but constituted in such a way as to obliterate its constitutive “other,” most preeminently “woman.” Poststructuralist historiography undercuts the teleological and triumphalist assumptions of Marxist philosophy of history, just as the aforementioned events have shown them to be counterfactual, if not “sentimental reminders of times lost and aspirations disappointed.”

Type
ILWCH Roundtable: What Next for Labor and Working-Class History?
Copyright
Copyright © International Labor and Working-Class History, Inc. 1994

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References

NOTES

1. Eagleton, Terry, Literary Theory: An Introduction (Minneapolis, 1983), 200.Google Scholar

2. Scott, Joan Wallach, Gender and the Politics of History (New York, 1988), 197.Google Scholar

3. Fraser, Nancy, “False Antitheses: A Response to Seyla Benhabib and Judith Butler,” Praxis International 11 (07 1991):173.Google Scholar

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6. Bernstein, Richard J., The New Constellation: The Ethical-Political Horizons of Modernity/Postmodernity (Cambridge, Mass., 1992), 8.Google Scholar

7. See Habermas, Jürgen, “Nachholende Revolution und linker Revisionsbedarf. Was Heiβt Sozialismus heute?” in Die nachholende Revolution (Frankfurt, 1990), 184.Google Scholar

8. See Mouffe, Chantal, “Feminism, Citizenship, and Radical Democratic Politics,” in Feminists Theorize the Political, ed. Butler, Judith and Scott, Joan W. (London, 1992), 382.Google Scholar