Labour history as the history of multitudes.
van der Linden, Marcel
Peter Linebaugh and Marcus Rediker, The Many-Headed Hydra: The
Hidden History of the Revolutionary Atlantic (Boston: Beacon Press 2000)
LABOUR HISTORIANS STUDY the working class to examine its
development, composition, working conditions, lifestyle, culture, and
many other aspects. But what exactly do we mean when we use the term
"working class"? Over the past half-century, the answer to
this seemingly simple question has changed continuously. In the 1950s
and 1960s it usually denoted male breadwinners who earned a living in
agriculture, industry, mining, or transport. In the 1970s and 1980s
objections from feminists instigated a fundamental revision that
broadened the focus beyond the male head of the household to include the
wife and children. Occupational groups that tended to be overlooked in
the past, such as domestic servants and prostitutes, started to receive
serious consideration. The chronological and geographic scope of the
research expanded as well. Labour historians became interested in Latin
America, Africa, and Asia, and took a closer look at pre-industrial wage
earners. Out overall perspective on the working class has undergone a
paradigmatic revolution. The signs indicate that this first transition
is merely a harbinger of a second one.
However broadly labour historians have interpreted their discipline
thus far, their main interest has always been free workers and their
families. They perceived such a wage earner in the Marxian sense as the
worker who "as a free individual can dispose of his labour-power as
his own commodity" and "has no other commodity for sale."
(1) This restricted definition has become a focus of recent debate.
Sociologists, anthropologists, and historians studying the capitalist
periphery had observed decades ago that the distinctions between free
wage-earners and some other subordinate groups were very fine indeed. In
the early 1970s, V.L. Allen wrote: "In societies in which bare
subsistence is the norm for a high proportion of all the working class,
and where men, women, and children are compelled to seek alternative
means of subsistence, as distinct from their traditional ones, the
lumpenproletariat is barely distinguishable from much of the rest of the
working class." (2) Other scholars noted additional grey areas
between free wage labourers on the one hand and self-employed and unfree
labourers (slaves, indentured workers, etc.) on the other hand. (3)
The distinctions between free, self-employed, unfree, and
sub-proletarian workers are also challenged by Peter Linebaugh and
Marcus Rediker in their book The Many-Headed Hydra. These authors deal
less with the periphery of capitalism than with relations between the
core region emerging in the 17th and 18th centuries (Britain) and its
colonies across the Atlantic in North America and the Caribbean. They
consider the members of the underclass, whose labour made nascent
capitalism possible. These "hewers of wood and drawers of
water" were a "multiplicity" of social groups and
comprised "the multitudes who gathered at the market, in the
fields, on the piers and the ships, on the plantations, upon the
battlefields." (Linebaugh and Rediker, 6)
The Many-Headed Hydra has received quite extensive media coverage
in the three years since it was published. Reviews have appeared in
journals and newspapers such as The Washington Post; it has also led to
discussions such as in the New York Review of Book. (4) Part of the
reason why the book achieves such a strong impact is undoubtedly that it
is very well written and covers enthralling subjects, such as pirates,
mutinies, and conspiracies. To romance their readers, Linebaugh and
Rediker exaggerate mutual solidarity within the underclass now and then,
such as by suggesting that pirates were "class-conscious and
justice-seeking" without mentioning that pirates also killed
innocent people and participated in the slave trade. (5) Their
romanticized descriptions do not, however, conceal that beneath the
narrative of rebelliousness and bloody repression, there lies subject
matter that is immensely important for labour history as a discipline.
Linebaugh and Rediker transform our perspective entirely. (6)
The Many-Headed Hydra is a history of British capitalism in the
North Atlantic region from about 1600 to the early 19th century. It is
intended as a history "from below." (7) (Linebaugh and
Rediker, 6) While most historians attribute proletarianization during
this period primarily to "natural" increases in fertility, and
overlook terror and violence, Linebaugh and Rediker agree with Marx that
"conquest, enslavement, robbery, murder, in short, force, played
the greatest part." (Linebaugh and Rediker, 361) Their implicit
core idea is that the emerging capitalism led to a demand for labour for
various activities, such as building and manning ships, chopping down
forests, and farming. Whether such labour was "free" or
"unfree," "white" or "black" mattered
little. The chief concern was to find people who provided their labour
under economic or physical coercion. Linebaugh and Rediker refer to the
entire motley crew of labouring poor as proletarian, regardless of their
specific legal status. They quote approvingly from the work of Orlando
Patterson, who wrote that "the distinction, often made, between
selling their labor as opposed to selling their persons makes no sense
whatsoever in real human terms." (Linebaugh and Rediker, 125)
While the composition of the Atlantic proletariat changed
constantly, it had two consistent faces. To the extent that it tolerated
subordination and exploitation, it was docile and submissive; during
rebellions, however, it became a "many-headed hydra," as
described in the myth of Hercules: a many-headed monster that appeared
undefeatable because for each head that was chopped off, two new ones
would grow in its place. (Linebaugh and Rediker, 2-3, and 328-9) At some
points deference prevailed and at others rebelliousness, like an
undulation of acquiescence and resistance. The authors identify four
general periods in the history of capitalism. The first began in the
early decades of the 17th century, when the foundations of British
capitalism were established with the enclosures and other expropriation practices. The system spread through trade and colonization across the
Atlantic Ocean. This trend coincided with the bloody emergence of the
Atlantic proletariat in its many manifestations as servants, sailors,
and slaves.
The English Revolution in 1640 ushered in a second period, in which
the new proletariat began to agitate, as is clear both from
radical-plebeian movements and from the rise of a buccaneering culture
and colonial rebellions. The third period ranges from the 1680s until
the mid-18th century. Atlantic capitalism consolidated via the
"maritime state," an empire that revolved around the Royal
Navy. This consolidation, however, met with several challenges from
below, that climaxed in a conspiracy in New York in 1741 in which the
participants were Irish and Hispanic, and in which Africans from the
Gold Coast played a crucial role. The fourth and final period roughly
begins from 1760 onward, and protest was once again the central element.
That year a cycle of revolts began in the Caribbean and continued for
nearly two decades. In 1776 the American Revolution began as well.
Linebaugh and Rediker demonstrate that the American Revolution "was
neither an elite nor a national event, since its genesis, process,
outcome, and influence all depended on the circulation of proletarian
experience around the Atlantic." (Linebaugh and Rediker, 212) In
the 1790s a new cycle of revolts started on both sides of the Atlantic,
climaxing in the Haitian slave uprising from 1792 onward, "the
first successful workers' revolt in modern history" and the
rise of the early labour movement in Britain. (Linebaugh and Rediker,
319)
Voluntary and forced migration and the permanent mobility of the
seafarers ensured continuous circulation of revolutionary ideas.
"This multiethnic proletariat was 'cosmopolitan' in the
original meaning of the word." (Linebaugh and Rediker, 246) The
authors illustrate their point with references to authors such as Julius
Scott, who has demonstrated "that sailors black, white, and brown
had contact with slaves in the British, French, Spanish, and Dutch port
cities of the Caribbean, exchanging information with them about slave
revolts, abolition, and revolution and generating rumors that became
material forces in their own right." (8) (Linebaugh and Rediker,
241)
The response of the ruling classes to the threats from below was
highly consistent. Their immediate reaction was brutal repression and
terror. "Hanging was destiny for part of the proletariat because it
was necessary to the organization and functioning of transatlantic labor
markets, maritime and otherwise, and to the suppression of radical
ideas." (Linebaugh and Rediker, 31) Their long-term strategy was
based on the "divide-and-rule" principle. On the one hand, the
social composition of the proletariat was changed after each wave of
protest. When servants and slaves in Barbados, Virginia, and other
places started to run away together, for example, plantation owners
tried "to recompose the class by giving servants and slaves
different material positions within the plantation system."
(Linebaugh and Rediker, 127) On the other hand--and largely parallel to
these efforts--racist ideologies were propagated to complicate
collaboration between the different components of the proletariat. In
the early 17th century the difference between waged and unwaged proletarians was "not yet racialized." (Linebaugh and Rediker,
49) Over time this changed. "After each major uprising, the racist
doctrine of white supremacy took another step in its insidious
evolution." (Linebaugh and Rediker, 284, and 139)
With the onset of "the Atlantic's age of revolution"
toward the end of the 18th century, an unprecedented rift formed within
the multi-ethnic proletariat, dividing the different segments, such as
the "respectable" artisans and skilled workers, the unskilled
casual workers, and coloured unfree workers. To illustrate this process,
Linebaugh and Rediker write that upon its establishment in early 1792,
the London Corresponding Society (LCS), widely known from E.P.
Thompson's The Making of the English Working Class, professed
universal equality, whether "black or white, high or low, rich or
poor." By August of that same year, however, the LCS proclaimed:
"Fellow Citizens, Of every rank and every situation in life, Rich,
Poor, High or Low, we address you all as our Brethren." (9) The
phrase "black or white" had been omitted. Linebaugh and
Rediker regard the recent uprising in Haiti as the only conceivable
reason for this sudden reversal. "Race had thus become a tricky
and, for many, in England, a threatening subject, one that the
leadership of the LCS now preferred to avoid." (Linebaugh and
Rediker, 274) The proletariat thus grew more segmented. "What was
left behind was national and partial: the English working class, the
black Haitian, the Irish diaspora." (Linebaugh and Rediker, 286)
"What began as repression thus evolved into mutually exclusive
narratives that have hidden our history." (Linebaugh and Rediker,
352) In the 19th century the single story of the Atlantic proletariat
was divided into several, especially "the story of the Working
Class" and "the narrative of Black Power." (Linebaugh and
Rediker, 333-34)
The highlights of Linebaugh and Rediker's argument are
conveyed above. Like all good books, however, The Many-Headed Hydra has
considerably more to offer than this summary suggests. As I mentioned, I
am primarily interested in its more general methodological and
theoretical implications for labour historiography. The book provides
convincing evidence that the labouring poor across the Atlantic
exchanged radical ideas, and that slaves and free workers joined forces
on many occasions. This revelation is of lasting merit. But Linebaugh
and Rediker appear to be far more presumptive. They call for a
comprehensive revision of current theory on working-class formation. The
working class comprises everybody who performs dependent labour under
capitalism, which includes slaves, wage-earners, indentured labourers,
and other workers. Our "modern" interpretation, which holds
that the working class consists exclusively of "free"
wage-earners, is a product of historical repression. Labour historians,
therefore, need to perceive their task in far broader terms than they
have generally done thus far and should study all dependent workers from
the 16th century to the present.
Linebaugh and Rediker do not truly substantiate their position. The
Many-Headed Hydra is strong on narratives but considerably weaker in its
theoretical analysis. In fact, the only reasons the authors mention for
regarding waged and non-waged workers as members of the same class is
their close collaboration in various struggles. Such coalitions are
obviously not the only ground, though, since a great deal depends on
whether the shared interests that underlie them are temporary or
permanent) (10) The lack of analysis based on class theory is the main
shortcoming of The Many-Headed Hydra. What unites that vast and
multiform proletariat that many contemporaries referred to as
"multitude(s)" (sec Linebaugh and Rediker, 20, 39, 62, 84,
238, 283, 331, and 342)? (11) When Linebaugh presented a few basic ideas
for the project in the early 1980s, Robert Sweeny rejected them in this
journal as an "abandonment of class analysis." (12) In my
view, this accusation is unfounded. Linebaugh and Rediker do not argue
that class analysis is superfluous; rather, they do not perform it
adequately). (13)
The crucial element in the perspective of The Many-Headed Hydra is
that it forces us to abandon a "classical" topos of Western
thought: the idea that "free" market capitalism corresponds
best with "free" wage labour. This idea appears not only in
liberal theory but also in the work of authors such as Marx. In Capital
we read that free wage labour is the only "true" capitalist
way to commodify labour power. Marx states emphatically that
"labour-power can appear on the market as a commodity only if, and
so far as, its possessor, the individual whose labour-power it is,
offers it for sale or sells it as a commodity." (14) Traditional
interpretations of the working class are based on this idea. After all,
if only the labour power of free wage labourers is commodified, the
"real" working class in capitalism can only consist of such
workers.
As historical research on labour relationships in colonial
countries became more sophisticated Marx's thesis was questioned in
increasing measure. Several authors have argued that unfree labour is
fundamentally compatible with capitalist relations) (5) This conclusion
is in fact rather obvious. Marx's thesis is based on two dubious
assumptions, namely that labour needs to be offered for sale by the
person who is the actual bearer and owner of such labour, and that the
person who sells the labour sells nothing else). (16) Why does this have
to be the case? Why can labour not be sold by a party other than the
bearer? What prevents the person who provides labour (his or her own or
that of somebody else) from offering packages combining the labour with
labour means? And why can a slave not perform wage labour for his master
at the estate of some third party? Asking these questions brings us very
close to the idea that slaves, wage-labourers, share-croppers, and
others are in fact an internally differentiated proletariat. The target
approach is therefore one that "eliminates as a defining
characteristic of the proletarian the payment of wages to the
producer." (17) The main point appears to be that labour is
commodified, although this commodification may take on many different
forms.
It is definitely not a coincidence that the acknowledgements of The
Many-Headed Hydra list Yann Moulier Boutang and his book De
l'esclavage au salariat published in 1998. (18) After all, in his
extensive study (elaborating on the work of Robert Miles and others),
Moulier Boutang supplies arguments supporting the position that bonded
labour is essential for capitalism to function, both in the past and
nowadays. Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri, who have also been inspired
by Moulier Boutang, summarize a substantial portion of his theory as
follows:
Slavery and servitude can be perfectly compatible with capitalist
production, as mechanisms that limit the mobility of the labor force and
block its movements. Slavery, servitude, and all the other guises of the
coercive organization of labor--from coolieism in the Pacific and
peonage in Latin America to apartheid in South Africa--are all essential
elements internal to the process of capitalist development. (19)
Marx called slavery "an anomaly opposite the bourgeois system
itself," which is "possible at individual points within the
bourgeois system of production," but "only because it does not
exist at other points." (20) If Moulier Boutang and others are
right, then Marx is mistaken here. In this case, "free" wage
labour would not be the favoured labour relationship under capitalism,
but only one of several options. Capitalists would always have a certain
choice how they wished to mobilize labour-power. And bonded labour would
under many circumstances remain an alternative.
If this conclusion is justified, then labour historians will indeed
be expected to expand their field of research considerably. Linebaugh
and Rediker write: "The emphasis in modern labor history on the
white, male, skilled, waged, nationalist, propertied artisan/citizen or
industrial worker has hidden the history of the Atlantic proletariat of
the seventeenth, eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries."
(Linebaugh and Rediker, 332) While this conclusion is easily
justifiable, it is not broad enough in my view. First, the
transcontinental proletariat is neither limited to the North Atlantic
nor to regions where English is spoken. The multi-ethnic world of the
sailors included Spanish, French, and Dutch fleets as well. (21) Second,
the concealed history obviously did not cease around 1835. Although the
relative importance of "free" wage labour gradually increased,
capitalism continued to accommodate various modes of labour control,
ranging from share-cropping and self-employment to forced labour and
outright slavery. (22) Finally, redefining the proletariat might lead to
a revision of the "traditional" labour history of the 19th and
20th centuries. The discourse of exclusion that the metropolitan labour
movements often invoked (rejection of lumpenproletarians, petty
bourgeoisie, "inferior races," among others) merits
reinterpretation and review.
Modest and ambitious in scope, The Many-Headed Hydra is a
fascinating contribution to a new way of thought.
(1) Karl Marx, Capital, Volume One, Ben Fowkes, trans.,
(Harmondsworth 1976), 272. Similar definitions were applied by
non-Marxists as well.
(2) V.L. Allen, "The Meaning of the Working Class in
Africa," Journal of Modern African Studies, 10 (June 1972), 188.
(3) Two fairly arbitrary cases from the literature are O. Nigel
Bolland, "Proto-Proletarians? Slave Wages in the Americas," in
Mary Turner, ed., From Chattel Slaves to Wage Slaves: The Dynamics of
Labour Bargaining in the Americas (Kingston 1995), 123-147; and Nandini
Gooptu, The Politics of the Urban Poor in Early Twentieth-Century India
(Cambridge 2001).
(4) David Brion Davis, "Slavery--White, Black, Muslim,
Christian," New York Review of Books, 48 (July 2001), 51-5; and the
subsequent exchange with Peter Linebaugh and Marcus Rediker in New York
Review of Books, 48 (September 2001), 95-6. In addition to "high
praise" and some interesting ideas, Davis' review contains
anti-socialist rhetoric and extensive criticism, due in part to several
factual inaccuracies. The review incorrectly suggests that The
Many-Headed Hydra is primarily about slavery.
(5) See also the review by Robin Blackburn in Boston Review,
February-March 2001. Available online as
<http://bostonreview.mit.edu/BR26.1/blackbum.html>.
(6) The Many-Headed Hydra had a very long gestation period. Readers
of this journal have been familiar with some of the themes for a long
time. See the following essays by Peter Linebaugh, "All the
Atlantic Mountains Shook," Labour/Le Travailleur, 10 (Autumn 1982),
87-121; and Marcus Rediker "'Good Hands, Stout Hearts, and
Fast Feet': The History and Culture of Working People in Early
America," Labour/Le Travailleur, 10 (Autumn 1982), 123-44. See also
Peter Linebaugh and Marcus Rediker, "The Many-Headed Hydra,"
Journal of Historical Sociology, 3 (1990), 225-52.
(7) The feasibility of a historiography from below without a
concurrent historiography from above is questionable. Perry Anderson
once rightly observed that "it is the construction and destruction
of States which seal the basic shifts in the relations of production, so
long as classes subsist. A 'history from above'--of the
intricate machinery of class domination--is thus no less essential than
a 'history from below': indeed, without it the latter in the
end becomes one-sided (if the better side)." Lineages of the
Absolutist State (London 1974), 11. Bryan D. Palmer shares the same
observation in "Hydra's Materialist History," Historical
Materialism. Research in Critical Marxist Theory (forthcoming).
(8) The reference is Julius Sherrard Scott III, "The Common
Wind: Currents of Afro-American Communication in the Era of the Haitian
Revolution," PhD dissertation, Duke University, 1986.
(9) Mary Thale, ed., Selections from the Papers of the LCS
1792-1799 (Cambridge 1983), 18.
(10) In this context consider the theory of "relative class
solidarity" in Nikolai Bukharin, Historical Materialism. A System
of Sociology (1921; London 1926), 294.
(11) For reflections on the early-modern discourse on
"multitude" and its complex connections with notions of
"the working class," and present-day conceptions of the
"multitude," see the French journal multitudes, since 2000
edited by Yann Moulier Boutang, especially Volume (9) (May-June 2002).
(12) Robert Sweeny, "Other Songs of Liberty: A Critique of
'All the Atlantic Mountains Shook'," Labour/Le Travail,
14 (Fall 1984), 164. Sec also Linebaugh's "Reply,"
Labour/Le Travail, 14 (Fall 1984) 173-81.
(13) Linebaugh and Rediker demonstrate, however, that even the
distinction between "respectable" wage-labourers and
"criminal" lumpenproletarians results in part from the course
of history. Thousands "in Britain who found themselves living on
the wrong side of laws that were changing rapidly to protect new
definitions of property" became "criminals" and rebels
when they defended their interests. (Linebaugh and Rediker, 187). Of
course, Linebaugh dealt with this theme previously in The London Hanged.
Crime and Civil Society in the Eighteenth Century (New York 1992).
(14) Marx, Capital, 271.
(15) For example, Philip Corrigan, "Feudal Relics or
Capitalist Monuments? Notes on the Sociology of Unfree Labour,"
Sociology, 11 (1977), 435-63; Robert Miles, Capitalism and Unfree
Labour: Anomaly or Necessity? (London and New York 1987); Gotz Rohwer,
"Kapitalismus und 'freie Lohnarbeit': Uberlegungen zur
Kritik eines Vorurteils," in Hamburger Stiftung zur Forderung von
Wissenschaft und Kultur, ed., "Deutsche Wirtschaft":
Zwangsarbeit von KZ-Haftlinger fur Industrie und Behorden (Hamburg
1992), 171-85; and several contributions in Tom Brass and Marcel van der
Linden, eds., Free and Unfree Labour: The Debate Continues (Berne 1997).
(16) The term "selling" is not entirely appropriate for
wage labour, as it consistently denotes a temporary transaction, which
we would ordinarily describe as "leasing" rather than
"selling." While this distinction may seem trivial, it can
have major theoretical implications. See Franz Oppenheimer, Die soziale
Frage und der Sozialismus. Eine kritische Auseinandersetzung mit der
marxistischen Theorie (Jena 1912), 119-22; Michael Eldred and Marnie
Hanlon, "Reconstructing Value-Form Analysis," Capital and
Class, 13 (Spring 1981), 44; Anders Lundkvist, "Kritik af
Marx' lonteori," Kurasje, 37 (December 1985), 16-8; Michael
Burkhardt, "Kritik der Marxschen Mehrwerttheorie," Jahrbuch
fur Wirtschaftswissenschaften, 46 (1995), 125-27; and Peter Ruben,
"Ist die Arbeitskraft eine Ware? Ein Beitrag zu einer marxistischen
Marxkritik," in Heinz Eidam and Wolfdietrich Schmied-Kowarzik,
eds., Kritische Philosophie gesellschaftlicher Praxis (Wurzburg 1995),
167-83.
(17) Immanuel Wallerstein, "Class Conflict in the Capitalist
World-Economy", in Immanuel Wallerstein, Capitalist World-Economy
(Cambridge 1979), 289.
(18) Yann Moulier Boutang, De l'esclavage au salariat.
Economie hitorique du salariat bride (Paris 1998).
(19) Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri, Empire (Cambridge, MA, and
London 2000), 122.
(20) Karl Marx, Grundrisse. Foundations of the Critique of
Political Economy. Martin Nicolaus, trans. (Harmondsworth 1973), 464.
(21) See Paul C. Van Royen, Jaap R. Bruijn, and Jan Lucassen, eds.
"Those Emblems of Hell"? European Sailors and the Maritime
Labour Market, 1570-1870 (St. John's 1997); Roelof van Gelder, Het
Oost-Indisch avontuur. Duitsers in dienst van de VOC (Nijmegen 1997);
Pablo E. Perez-Mallaina, Spain's Men of the Sea. Daily Life on the
Indies Fleets in the Sixteenth Century, Carla Rahn Phillips, trans.
(Baltimore and London 1998); and Herman Ketting Jr., Leven, werk en
rebellie aan boord van Oost-Indievaarders (1595-1650) (Amsterdam 2002).
(22) See for example Fred Krissman, "California's
Agricultural Labor Market: Historical Variations in the Use of Unfree
Labor, c. 1769-1994," in Brass and Van der Linden, Free and Unfree
Labour, 201-38; Jose de Souza Martins, "The Reappearance of Slavery
and the Reproduction of Capital on the Brazilian Frontier, "in
Brass and Van der Linden, Free and Unfree Labour, 281-302 and Miriam J.
Wells, "The Resurgence of Sharecropping: Historical Anomaly or
Political Strategy?" American Journal of Sociology, 90 (1984-85),
1-29.
Marcel van der Linden, "Labour History as the History of
Multitudes," Labour/Le Travail, 52 (Fall 2003), 235-43.
Marcel van der Linden is Research Director of the International
Institute of Social History in Amsterdam, Professor of Social Movement
History at the University of Amsterdam, and Editor of the International
Review of Social History. His most recent book is Transnational Labour
History: Explorations.