Part II. All That Is Solid Melts Into Air: Marx, Modernism and Modernization
In Part II,
Marshall Berman tells us that he will reveal to us the way in which "the modern spiritual quest reaches its fulfillment". He will do this by showing us how
Karl Marx's work echoed and reflected the sense of wholeness which Goethe's Faust depicted of Modernity. The reason he believes it is necessary to show us the inherent wholeness of
Modernity through Marx's work is because Berman believes a dualistic view of Modernity has prevailed in which "Current thinking has broken into two different compartments, hermetically sealed off from one another: "modernization" in economics and politics, "modernism" in art, culture and sensibility. Berman believes it is Karl Marx's work which most comprehensively captures the whole rather than the duality, claiming, "Specifically, he can clarify the relationship between modernist culture and the bourgeois economy and society - the world of "modernization"-from which it [modernism] has sprung. We will see that they have far more in common than either modernists or bourgeoisie would like to think".
1. The Melting Vision and Its Dialectic In this section Marshall Berman assesses that the
Communist Manifesto while at once prophesizing the end of the bourgeois rule is at the same time rejoicing the developments of the bourgeois revolution and the age of Modernity. Berman in fact claims that "he [Karl Marx] hopes to heal the wounds of modernity through a fuller and deeper modernity". The main point of this section is to demonstrate that the
bourgeois rule, and the capitalist
relations of production have pushed society into "a process of continual, restless, open-ended, unbounded growth". The Communist Manifesto apparently claims this to be the case due to the two great bourgeois achievements: (i) "They have proved it possible, through organized and concerted action, to really change the world" (ii) "the second great bourgeois achievement has been to liberate the human capacity and drive for development: for permanent change, for perpetual upheaval and renewal in every mode of personal and social life." This continuous drive to cause change, upheaval and impermanence by the Bourgeois elites is a part of the mechanics of Modernity.
2. Innovative Self-Destruction In this section, Marshall Berman brings into question the possibility of there ever existing a permanent Communist Party. Berman makes the analysis that Marx is proposing that, "The worker's communal bonds, generated inadvertently by capitalist production, will generate militant political institutions, unions that will oppose and finally overthrow the private, atomistic framework of capitalist social relations." Berman then questions this, stating the obvious paradox of Marx's assumptions, saying, "Thus, simply by reading the Manifesto closely and taking its vision of modernity seriously, we arrive at serious questions about Marx's answers." The problem is that if Modernity and the ruling Bourgeois have created an environment of constant change where things become obsolete before they can ossify, then how will a permanent
Communist Society ever exist?
3. Nakedness: The Unaccommodated Man In the Communist Manifesto, Berman states that Marx believed that Modernity itself and the Bourgeois revolution will reveal the cold truth of reality and leave men naked. While Marx has somewhat rosy visions of the great emancipation that will occur when the proletariat understand what it means to be cold and naked in the storm of the world, Berman questions this affirming that there are many other pathways Modernity might take, citing the pessimism of British Conservativism via
Burke, and also the positivity of the "
philosophes" via
Rousseau and
Montesquieu. But what Berman believes more deeply is invoked by Marx is
Shakespeare's King Lear, specifically when he is thrown out into the tempest and strips himself naked embracing his true, cold and carnal animal self. It is in this state of primitive weakness that "they [the proletariat] will come together to overcome the cold that cuts through them all." Berman finishes this section in a sort of deflated way, stating that it's most likely that humanity within Modernity will not have a clear view of its nature, similar to prior epochs.
4. The Metamorphosis of Values In this section, Berman makes the point that in Modernity via Capitalism all values in the world, all social structures, and ways of being get subsumed into the global market. "Old modes of honor and dignity do not die; instead, they get incorporated into the market, take on price tags, gain a new life as commodities. Thus, any imaginable mode of human conduct becomes morally permissible the moment it becomes economically possible, becomes valuable; anything goes if it pays." There is an opportunity here and a pitfall. On the one hand, with a world that has been made flat and equal by the reduction of values to capital, ideas critical and antithetical to Capitalism may be proliferated with no question. This is due to the fact that in order to maintain an open and global economy society must maintain a liberal attitude to all ideas, foreign and benign. On the other hand, as a pitfall, in order for intellectuals, ideologues and communists to get by peddling their "wares" of intellectual labor, their wares must generate capital for themselves and those who pay them. This as it were, keeps us in a loop that cannot quite be escaped by "selling the revolution of communism".
5. The Loss of a Halo When all of the traditional world's values were forced into the Capitalist system, all halos were removed. Berman interprets Halo here as a primary symbol of
religious experience, the experience of something holy. "The halo splits life into sacred and profane: it creates an aura of holy dread and radiance around the figure who wears it; the sanctified figure is torn from the matrix of the
human condition, split off inexorably from the needs and pressures that animate the men and women who surround it." Berman analyzes this quote from Marx, "The bourgeoisie has stripped of its halo every activity hitherto honored and looked up to with reverent awe. It has transformed the doctor, the lawyer, the priest, the poet, the man of science, into its paid wage-laborers." Berman believes that Marx makes this statement critiquing practically all professionals and intellectuals making them know that they are simple wage-earners, "anyone who wants to create must work in the orbit of its power. [...] They must scheme and hustle to present themselves in a maximally profitable light; they must compete (often brutally and unscrupulously) for the privilege of being bought, simply in order to go on with their work." Berman reiterates here that modern intellectuals who are ideologues for "the revolution" will continue to imagine radical ways to stimulate paying bidders. In a certain sense in fact, Berman finds that radicalization and revolution will in fact further stimulate capitalism and more deeply indebt us to Modernity.
Conclusion: Culture and the Contradictions of Capitalism Berman here brings up a series of points to summarize this section on Marx and Modernity. The first is that he believes Modernism must become more Marxist and that Marxism must become more Modernist. That is to say on the first account that to miss Marx's poetic quality is not to understand Marxism in its entirety. On the second account, this is to say that Modernist art, or art that considers itself pure art separate from the Capitalist world must begin to integrate the Marxist worldview and the way in which Modernism is produced by its Capitalist underpinning. His concluding remarks are as follows: "He [Karl Marx] knew we must start where we are: psychically naked, stripped of all religious, aesthetic, moral haloes and sentimental veils, thrown back on our individual will and energy, forced to expoit each other and ourselves in order to survive; and yet, in spite of all, thrown together by the same forces that pull us apart, dimly aware of all we might be together, ready to stretch ourselves to grasp new human possibilities, to develop identities and mutual bonds that can help us hold together as the fierce modern air blows hot and cold through us all." == Part III. Baudelaire: Modernism in the Streets ==