By Gordon Hull
Over the course of a few posts (first, second, third), I’ve been exploring the question of what Foucault means when he refers disparagingly to “Chardino-Marxism” in a mid-1960s interview, comparing it unfavorably to what Althusser and his circle are doing. Although the “Chardino” part refers to Teilhard de Chardin, it’s fairly clear that the real target is humanist Marxism, of which Roger Garaudy is taken to be a leading example, probably due to his role in the PCF. Here I want to take an initial look at the chapter “Marxism and Religion” in his Marxism in the Twentieth Century and situate it with reference to Engels and Marx.
Garaudy’s chapter is long, and his general concern is to vindicate the idea that a non-institutional version of religion (or of faith, not religion) has its place in Marxist discourse. This is a carefully-defined position: he is at pains to distinguish the sense of faith he is talking about from most of what passes under the name. In the present context, a few features should be noted. First, Teilhard de Chardin is one of his principal reference points for a contemporary person who is going in the direction he wants (the other is Dietrich Bonhoeffer). Second, this is a recuperative project of humanism: it is “man” that is of concern the entire time. Third, Garaudy gets his Marx references almost entirely from the early writings. There are very few references to Capital in the chapter, and relatively few to Engels: most of the work is done in the 1845 and earlier writings. This is significant not least because of Althusser’s well-known denunciation of early Marx as ideological and pre-scientific. In other words, the version of Marx being used to support the humanist reading is the same one Althusser wants to get rid of in the name of anti-humanism (I will complicate this point below). Finally, Garaudy puts a lot of emphasis on the possibility of “love,” which he thinks can be rescued from a Platonic version that goes via God (I love the other insofar as I see God in them) to the direct love of alterity and other people.
Continue reading "On Foucault on “Chardino-Marxism,” part 4" »
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