Asiatic Mode of Production

views updated Jun 08 2018

Asiatic Mode of Production

BIBLIOGRAPHY

In twentieth-century Marxist politics and social sciences, the concept of the Asiatic mode of production was at the center of debates and controversies over how to apply the idea of mode of production to non-Western societies. Marxist theorists also turned to the Asiatic mode of production to argue for different revolutionary strategies in societies subject to colonial and imperialist domination.

The concepts status within Marxs own work is uncertain. The young Marxs references to Asian societies are influenced by a political tradition that, from Aristotle (384-322 bce) to Charles Montesquieu (1689-1755) and Georg W. F. Hegel (1770-1831), saw the Asian continent as characterized by political despotism and socioeconomic stagnation. The initial theorization of modes of production in Marxs German Ideology (1845) makes no mention of an Asian mode. His Misery of Philosophy (1847), however, discusses India as a society where village-based production coexists with common land property. After 1850 Marxs view of Asia became more systematic, and he outlined a specific mode of production for the region. A series of articles he wrote in 1853 for the New York Daily Tribune dealt in detail with the Indian case, and to a lesser degree with China. The chapter on precapitalist economic formations in the Grundrisse (1857-1858) inserted the Asiatic mode of production into a theory of stages of social development, where it followed primitive communism. Marx tended to chronologically overlap the Asiatic mode of production with slavery and feudalism as two other, successive precapitalist societies where laborers are not separated from the means of production.

Marxs definition of the Asiatic mode of production included the absence of private ownership of land, autonomous village communities, and a despotic centralized state in charge of public works, especially irrigation. To finance public infrastructure, the state extracts, mainly through coercion and the control of the armed forces, an economic surplus produced by local communities in the form of tributes and collective work. Once surplus is extracted, village communities remain relatively independent within their self-sustaining economies.

After the first volume of Capital (1867), the Asiatic mode of production almost disappears from Marxs writings. Friedrich Engelss (1820-1895) analysis of precapitalist societies in The Origins of Family, Private Property, and the State (1884) did not mention it. In the early twentieth century, socialist reformists of the Second International took the concept as a metaphor for Asias backwardness; they saw in colonialism a force of development and modernization. Fervent disputes on the Asiatic mode of production reemerged in the aftermath of the Russian Revolution (1917). Vladimir I. Lenin (1870-1924) had, in fact, stigmatized the Asiatism of czarist Russia. The Stalinist Third International (Comintern), however, rejected the Asiatic mode of production in 1921 when in colonial societies it chose to support alliances between the proletariat and nationalist bourgeoisies against imperialism and indigenous ruling classes. The Comintern defined the latter as feudal, avoiding in this way the concept of the Asiatic mode of production, which was seen as too closely associated with political despotism and therefore liable to be used against the Stalinist regime itself.

The critical positions of Leon Trotsky (1879-1940) and Evgenij Varga (1879-1964) nonetheless alluded to the Asiatic mode of production in proposing anticolonial alliances of workers and peasants against both foreign imperialism and local bourgeoisies. The concept was finally expunged from orthodox Marxism after 1930, as Stalin codified a rigid, mechanical succession of modes of production. Conversely, in Oriental Despotism (1957) the former Marxist sinologist Karl Wittfogel (1896-1988) employed Marxs original formulation as a polemical indictment of the Soviet state, which he characterized as a manifestation of totalitarianism akin to Asias hydraulic civilizations.

The Asiatic mode of production resurfaced in Marxist historiography and anthropology during the 1960s in a context of intensified anticolonial and anti-imperialist resistance. Maurice Godelier and other contributors to the French journal La pensée (Thought) asserted that this mode of production remained central throughout the work of Marx and Engels. Jean Chesneaux did not limit the concepts validity to Asia, but extended it to a variety of traditional societies. At the same time, these authors argued for a dynamic perspective to depart from the Eurocentric bias of orthodox Marxism, which saw precapitalist non-Western societies as stagnant and undeveloped. The Asiatic mode of production has also been severely criticized in Marxist debates. Barry Hindess and Paul Hirst refused to define it as a mode of production because it presupposes the state rather than explaining it through the analysis of social relations. Maxime Rodinson considered the concept a blunt and simplified way to encase highly complex societies. Claude Meillassoux noted the concepts excessive generalization as it conflates diverse social formations that share a tributary extraction of surplus. The dis-tinctiveness of African realities led Catherine Coquery-Vidrovitch to propose an African, kinship-based, mode of production-reproduction. Finally, postcolonial studies have rejected the Asiatic mode of production concept, following Edward Saids Orientalism (1978), seeing it as a reflex of the cultural stereotypes that underpinned European imperial expansion.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Dunn, Stephen P. 1982. The Fall and Rise of the Asiatic Mode of Production. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.

Godelier, Maurice. 1978. The Concept of the Asiatic Mode of Production and Marxist Models of Social Evolution. In Relations of Production: Marxist Approaches to Economic Anthropology, ed. David Seddon, 209-257. London: Frank Cass.

Hindess, Barry, and Paul Hirst. 1975. Pre-capitalist Modes of Production. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.

Sofri, Gianni. 1969. Il modo di produzione asiatico: Storia di una controversia marxista. Turin, Italy: Einaudi.

Franco Barchiesi

Asiatic mode of production

views updated May 29 2018

Asiatic mode of production Of all Karl Marx's conceptions of the modes of production which he considered to have provided the base for the various forms of society known to human history, this was perhaps the least developed, and is certainly the one that has given rise to the most controversy.

Marx seems to have introduced the concept mainly in deference to the early nineteenth-century view that Asia was the source of all ‘Aryan’ peoples, whose history is what his materialist conception of history was originally concerned with. He later outlined a wider conception of primitive communism, mainly under the influence of Lewis Henry Morgan's theory of the development of the human race as a whole. Sometimes the term ‘Asiatic society’ was used to refer to all non-Western social forms that were neither primitive-communist nor slave-based, whilst at others it (or its more common synonym oriental despotism) was said to be applicable only to the cases of Japan and China. Underlying this referential variation was a conceptual variation. Sometimes, especially in their earlier work (and, aberrantly, in Capital, 1867), Marx and Engels stressed the dominant role that the state played in such societies because of either its monopoly of land ownership, its control over irrigation systems, or its sheer political and military power. At other times—and this is what allowed them to broaden the range of societies to which the term was applied in most of their later work—they suggested that it was the communal nature of landholding that isolated the inhabitants of different villages from one another and so made them prey to state domination.

The subsequent status of the concept among Marxists and non-Marxists alike has varied with changes in the political climate. Between the two world wars, the idea was disavowed by Soviet-influenced Marxists, who probably saw it as an obstacle to the Soviet Union's political ambitions in and for the Far East. In the Cold War climate of the 1950s, Karl Wittfogel disinterred the concept in his Oriental Despotism (1957), suggesting that the real reason for its unpopularity in the Soviet Union was the uncomfortable similarity between it and the reality of Stalin's Russia.

During the 1960s the concept excited some interest on the part of Western Marxists, who hoped that it might provide them with a means of avoiding a Eurocentric conception of social development. In the 1970s, however, such hopes were exposed to a barrage of criticisms, which largely explain the concept's current eclipse, and which in one way or another appear to have owed something to the rise of structuralist Marxism. For example, Perry Anderson subjected the concept to a widely accepted empirical critique in his Lineages of the Absolutist State (1974), while Barry Hindess and Paul Hirst made it the object of a (rather more controversial) theoretical critique in their Precapitalist Modes of Production (1975). Finally, Edward Said delivered what appears to have been the coup de grâce, by arguing that, in formulating the concept, Marx and Engels were the unwitting bearers of a noxious discourse that he termed ‘orientalism’ (see his 1979 book of the same name).

More From encyclopedia.com