The Early Days of a Better Nation |
Ken MacLeod's comments. “If these are the early days of a better nation, there must be hope, and a hope of peace is as good as any, and far better than a hollow hoarding greed or the dry lies of an aweless god.”—Graydon Saunders Contact: kenneth dot m dot macleod at gmail dot com Blog-related emails may be quoted unless you ask otherwise.
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Friday, July 26, 2013
When Iain Banks and I were students back in the early 1970s, I was one of the first readers of Use of Weapons. I seem to recall reading the first draft in weekly instalments as the pages flew from the typewriter, and discussing the unfolding content almost as often. Iain explained that the Culture was his idea of utopia, in which advanced technology, inexhaustible resources and friendly artificial intelligence made possible a society in which nobody had to work and there was no need for money or a separate state apparatus. At the time I was reading with some excitement a slim paperback edited by David McLellan and titled Marx's Grundrisse, a collection of extracts from Marx's notebooks, in which he allowed himself some bolder speculations than he ever saw into print. I explained to Iain that the Culture was very similar to Marx's conception of communism: a stateless and classless society based on automation and abundance. Iain was interested and I think persuaded. But, I went on, the Culture on his telling didn't seem to have come about through class struggle, revolution, and the rest. How, then, could it have come about, given that Iain was as sceptical as I was about the likelihood of such a society being handed down by benevolent rulers from above? By way of answer, Iain pointed to his pocket calculator. He said that on his last vacation job, on a construction site, one of the full-time workers had borrowed it and worked his way through a stack of wage slips, to discover that he and his mates weren't getting all the pay they were due. The site workers had taken the result to the management, who duly if perhaps reluctantly shelled out the back pay that was owed. That, Iain said, was how he'd envisaged the Culture coming about. Conflicts of interest between classes and other groups there would be, but the sheer availability of information and computing power would arm the majority with facts and arguments that would enable them to prove, as well as enforce, their claims. The consequent advance in consciousness would allow the opportunities offered by automation and abundance to be grasped, first in imagination then in reality, and make opposition to their realisation irrational, futile, and weak. This projection of a democratic, deliberative, and peaceful transition to a co-operative commonwealth wasn't as far removed from Marx's own later views as I thought at the time. I saw Marx through Lenin, Lenin through Trotsky, and -- for that matter --Trotsky through the Trotskyists, and each successive prism lost something of the one before, let alone the original image. Iain respected them all as thinkers, but remained sceptical of any attempt to emulate their practice. He was quite willing to stick his neck out when necessary: he came down to London in 1977 to join the mobilization against the fascist National Front's attempt to march through Lewisham, took his place in a small squad of comrades none of whom he knew but me, and thoroughly enjoyed the fight that ensued. On a later visit he joined me when it was my turn to guard our group's bookshop and offices, which had recently been targeted in an amateurish arson attempt by the fascists. As Iain and I checked the locks on the building's back door, two policemen loomed behind us and tapped our shoulders. It took us some minutes to convince the coppers that we really were there to protect rather than attack the shop. Iain ribbed me about it afterwards: 'I bet that's the first time you've ever had to say, "Honestly, officer, I really am a left-wing extremist ..."' However friendly he was to the radical left, Iain had little interest in relating the long-range possibility of utopia to radical politics in the here and now. As he saw it, what mattered was to keep the utopian possibility open by continuing technological progress, especially space development, and in the meantime to support whatever policies and politics in the real world were rational and humane. For Iain that meant voting Labour. After the party mutated into New Labour he switched his practical vote to the Scottish National Party and his protest vote to the Scottish Socialists and (I think) the Greens. Even before then, in the early to mid 1990s, he'd come around to the view that Scotland would never be safe from the ravages of Tory governments it hadn't voted for unless it separated from England. This support for independence didn't come from nationalism but from reformism, and from a life-long, heart-felt hatred for the Conservative and Unionist Party. In Iain's view, popular access to information was decisive to any hope of progress, and control of information was central to the power of the ruling class. One of his few intellectual heroes was Noam Chomsky, who has for decades argued and documented this over and over. Iain made a point of being well-informed himself, and seemed to have read the Guardian from cover to cover every day. The most radical writings -- Chomsky's apart -- that he ever enthused about to me were those of John Kenneth Galbraith, George Monbiot and Will Hutton. Iain valued the far left mainly as a source of information that even the Guardian was likely to gloss over. He followed my own adventures and misadventures in Marxism with a sort of sympathetic scepticism, always keen to read whatever rag I was flogging at any given time, and to listen to my explanations of why which paper I was selling sometimes changed over the years. It was my later explorations of libertarian thought that most sorely tried his patience. I could never persuade him that libertarianism was anything but a shill for corporate interests: a common misconception, and one that many libertarians have worked hard to confirm. In his view, the left's most stupid and repeated mistake was to accept that 'my enemy's enemy is my friend,' which he saw as at the bottom of most of the left's disasters. He had no illusions in existing socialism, and no hopes for the better in its collapse. He opposed every war the British state waged in his lifetime, with the one exception of NATO's war over Kosovo, which he argued for before it happened and never repudiated. Fortunately, this wasn't the first step on a slippery slope. He was even more vehemently opposed than I was to the attack on Iraq -- I tried to at least see a certain logic to it from the imperialist point of view, whereas he saw it as utter folly and madness from the moment it was mooted, an adventure that would sow destruction, multiply terrorism, and do incalculable harm to the interests and security of the UK and US. He blamed Blair absolutely for the Iraq war, and never forgave or forgot the crime. Anger over what was going on in the Middle East impelled him to his two best-known political gestures: cutting up his passport and sending it to 10 Downing Street, and refusing to have his own books published in Israel. The former action was mocked, the latter attacked. Iain took not a blind bit of notice. In summary, Iain's political views were, by and large, what you'd expect from an Old Labour supporter and Guardian reader with an informed interest in the analyses of the radical left. What was perhaps more unusual than his views was the consistency and tenacity with which he held them, and his confidence that they must in the long run prevail if civilization was to survive. He saw quite clearly that events weren't going the way he would have liked them to, but never saw any reason to revise his reckoning that neoliberalism just didn't add up. 40 Comments:Nice piece Ken. Iain Banks was almost always worth reading and his passing is very sad. Dead Air was the one book of his that did absolutely nothing for me and also the most obviously a direct political response to circumstances. The equally political Complicity was a much greater book. Didn't he flirt with libertarianism in The Business. Thank you for your thoughtful piece about a thoughtful man. I hadn't heard the passport story before.
a common misconception, and one that many libertarians have worked hard to confirm
I mean, ...and of how much can be built in that perhaps surprisngly narrow space. But I guess you knew that. This is now up on the IS Network website http://internationalsocialistnetwork.org/index.php/ideas-and-arguments/analysis/193-ken-macleod-on-iain-banks-use-of-calculators Thanks again for letting us repost.
I could never persuade him that libertarianism was anything but a shill for corporate interests
BerserkRL - we probably discussed it, and Iain was certainly aware that there were left libertarians. My impression is he thought they were well-meaning but impractical.
Re: the passport story.
Ken, I made a similar journey to your own; from a family that knew Robert Smillie and Kier Hardie to someone who would rather read the output of the CATO Institute than the Grauniad. I believe that Banksie wanted the best for everyone and was convinced that his political views were the way that could be achieved. Fair enuff. Ken, you make me sad I never met this most interesting-and so funny!-man.Strangely, Use of Weapons, like the movie, “Sixth Sense” has inspired a number of lies. Many people have told me of both: “Oh, I guessed the ending!” when I know damn well they didn’t. For the record, I guessed the end of neither. Since Iain blamed you for re-inspiring the novel, did you give him the ending, or was the ending of his original draft the same? Ken - I want to contact you, but the email contact on the left of your home page does not work... even when I put in an @ sign! Can you contact me at info@fiveleaves.co.uk. Thanks, Ross Bradshaw (Five Leaves Publications)
Ken, how do you use the word libertarian. The classical definition of anarchist, afaik, is libertarian socialist (i.e., anti-statist). But it also could mean neo-liberal-ish, anti-anti-market or perhaps "market socialist-ish". Lee - I didn't give Iain the ending of Use of Weapons. All I did was poinht out to him that in his first draft he had the ending in the middle, leaving everything else as anticlimax; and I suggested the structure of chapters counting down interleaved with chapters counting up, so that both strands, forward and backward, met at the end of the book.
Thanks very much for the article. I'm one of many who never met Iain, but who miss him very much already. And I'm one of many who found your own work through his, so he gave me a double boon. You have my sincerest condolences.
Wallfly,
Beautiful text, engaging but sober. Anon - Iain's support for independence was left-wing and tactical. This is pretty much the position of a lot of Scottish writers. The odd thing about Scottish nationalism is that it has very few nationalists. Most support for independence seems to be pragmatic, whether it's from neoliberals like George Kerevan, left-wingers like Alan Bisset, or republicans like Tom Nairn.
Interesting point about nationalism. I've always had a similar impression of Welsh nationalism - that the number of people who think Wales and the Welsh are somehow superior to the English is tiny compared to the number who just don't see the point of running Wales from London. They're anti-colonial nationalisms, really, even if neither Scotland nor Wales is an English colony in any obvious sense (Wales was settled, but by Normans). Benedict Anderson's idea of the 'pilgrimage' fits here, I think - the idea being that any ambitious young person in (New Zealand/Nigeria/Scotland) will end up spending an inordinate amoount of time travelling to and from a distant foreign capital, and will start to wonder why they can't just go and talk to the boss in (Wellington/Lagos/Edinburgh).
I hadn't perceived the identification article before. The identically political Complicity was a much larger book.Its a nice post. Thanks for sharing this.
He was indeed an inspiring author for political thinking.
The latest (October 2013) issue of Reason magazine has an article "The Endless Lives of Iain M. Banks" by Peter Suderman. Not yet online (though a couple of earlier Suderman pieces on Banks are). If he did hate libertarians, perhaps this was not motivated by how closely and consistently they adhered to those "libertarian ideas and morality". And the Suderman piece is now online: http://reason.com/archives/2013/09/15/the-endless-lives-of-iain-m-banks/print
Phil,
Lee,
@BerserkRL
Hi Ken. Lovely piece.
Leigh - sorry to have take so long to reply - I've been rather neglecting the blog recently.
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What a wonderful piece about a favorite writer of mine.
I self-identify as (more or less) a libertarian, but I see anyone who opposes censorship as a fellow traveler. So I see Iain Banks as an ally, although he might not have felt the same way about me.
By Cleveland Okie (Tom Jackson), at Friday, July 26, 2013 2:45:00 pm