Reflections on a Ravaged History
by George Scialabba
Reflections on a Ravaged Century, by Robert Conquest. New
York:
W. W. Norton, 2001.
For anyone who believed that humankind had, morally speaking, emerged
from the primeval slime and now walked upright on terra firma, the
twentieth century was a terrible shock. Thanks to progress in (among
other things) military technology and administrative practice, the
production of violence, coercion, and want assumed heavy-industrial
proportions. Everyone knows the main episodes: two world wars, the
Armenian genocide, the Great Depression, Stalinism, Nazism, Maoism,
the partition of India, the Indochina war, the Soviet-Afghan war,
the Iran-Iraq war, bloodbaths in Manchuria, Indonesia, Biafra, Bangladesh,
Cambodia, Central America, East Timor, Bosnia, Rwanda, Chechnya,
Sierra Leone, Kurdistan. What is there to say about this catastrophic
century, and who is qualified to say it?
Surely Robert Conquest is. His minor credentials include a trans-Atlantic
and pan-European family background, a literary education in several
languages, lengthy government service in war and peace, long friendships
with Kingsley Amis, Philip Larkin, and Anthony Powell (hilariously
recounted in Amis’s Memoirs), and several books of light verse,
than which Amis, editor of The New Oxford Book of Light Verse, claimed to have found “nothing better or more congenial in
the language.”
Conquest’s major work has been more sobering. He is perhaps
the world’s leading historian of Stalinism. Among his weighty
and influential books (much praised and widely reprinted in post-Communist
Russia) are: The Great Terror, The Nation Killers, Kolyma: The
Arctic Death Camps, Inside Stalin’s Secret Police, The Harvest
of Sorrow, and nearly a dozen others. It is a body of writing
that in scope, detail, and literary power ranks with Solzhenitsyn’s.
One might have expected from this supremely civilized and accomplished
man, surveying so much and such intense suffering, such demonically
inventive and energetic evildoing, a tone of subdued melancholy
and abashed curiosity. Surely he must acknowledge some mystery,
some intractable conflict of deepest human propensities, behind
the century’s ravages? It can’t all simply have been
wickedness and delusion, can it? And one party (the author’s
party) can’t have been wise and virtuous throughout—can’t
have emerged with clean hands and a clear conscience from the whole
bloody epoch?
Actually, yes, in Conquest’s view. The villain of his twentieth
century is Ideology. “All the major troubles the world has
had in our era have been caused by people who have let politics
become a mania.” Utopianism is our Black Plague. Conquest
quotes the anti-rationalist political philosopher Michael Oakeshott
to the effect that “the conjunction of dreaming and ruling
generates tyranny.” Those who govern should not exercise too
much imagination. “Totalitarianism,” according to Conquest,
“can be seen as an extreme of ideological subjectivism, in
which the machinery of state is primarily a means of enforcing the
Ideas of the ruler or ruling group on a recalcitrant or refractory
society.”
The virus of ideology is spread by intellectuals, who try to apply
system, method, theory to human affairs, where such notions are
out of place. The ambition to reform or restructure society is,
at bottom, an ambition to push people around. A regime based on
some theory will naturally be managed by professional theory-expounders,
who will tend to regard resistance not as a phenomenon to be accommodated
but as an error to be corrected—i.e., repressed. Marxism was
the most common form of the ideological virus (social democracy
and welfare-state liberalism are weaker strains), and the Soviet
Union and its spawn were the leading examples of the “long,
bitter, and murderous . . . confrontation between ideology and reality.”
Nationalism is a related disease, and the combination of nationalism
and socialism made for a particularly deadly plague, above all in
its German form.
The opposite of an ideological (or “ideocratic”) culture
is a civic culture. In a civic culture, voluntary associations flourish,
localism and individual self-reliance are the norm, markets are
unfettered, goods, labor, and ideas are mobile, laws are enforced
and contracts observed, corruption is rare, government functions
are limited, and centralized power is suspect. Experience, tradition,
and continuity are the primary guides to political action, not ideas.
The English-speaking countries (through historical accident and
not, of course, racial superiority) are the chief repositories of
this “culture of sanity.” Burke, Tocqueville, and Oakeshott
are its great exponents and, in our time, Thatcher and Reagan its
exemplary practitioners.
If one is determined to draw a short and simple lesson from the
twentieth century, this one is plausible enough. Revolution is indeed
always and everywhere a bad idea. Stability and continuity are as
vital to every social organism as to every physical one. Markets
work— most of the time. Bureaucracies tend to grow and perpetuate
themselves. The politicization of everything is regrettable: much
better— when possible—to persuade or shame others than
to sue them. Intellectuals (left-wing ones, that is) are feckless,
unworldly, resentful, and power-hungry. People who shout (or write)
slogans should be politely ignored. This much of neoconservatism
cannot be gainsaid.
But this is not enough for most neoconservatives, and it is nowhere
near enough for Conquest. What ought to have been a somber meditation
turns out to be an angry fulmination. Rather than gentle counsels
of restraint we get urgent warnings against attempting much of anything.
Instead of nuanced musings about the limitations of human wisdom
we get scoffing rejection of the very possibility of understanding
social structure and dynamics. Reflections on a Ravaged Century is less a philosophical reflection on the human prospect and retrospect
than a Tory/Republican harangue.
Nowhere is this indiscriminate partisanship more misleading than
on the subject of Marxism. Conquest has no use for it whatever—it
has been falsified in theory, and in practice it leads straight
to the Gulag. But the latter claim is simply untrue. As another
historian puts it, there was “no inherent connection between
the philosophy Marx developed in Berlin, Paris, Cologne, and London
and the economic-political apparatus imposed upon Russia and China
by revolutionary leaders primarily motivated by a resolve to seize
and entrench themselves in power.” Leaders, one should add
(and as Conquest acknowledges), themselves steeped in the despotic
traditions of those unhappy countries.
The former claim is more complexly untrue. Conquest writes that
“by the end of the nineteenth century, the Marxist predictions
of a capitalist failure to expand production, of a fall in the rate
of profit, a decrease in wages, of increasing proletarian impoverishment,
and the resulting approach of revolutionary crisis in the industrial
countries had all proved false.” Case closed. But Marx did
not predict that all or any of these things would occur to some
precise degree by some precise date. They all certainly did occur,
in one form or another and to one degree or another, throughout
the nineteenth century and again throughout the twentieth. Whether
Marx’s explanation for them is at all plausible is a question
for a more dispassionate judge than Conquest. What is not in doubt,
though, is that Marx’s identification of the main historical
tendencies of our era—the concentration of capital within
and then across industries; the dwindling importance of the entrepreneur,
the artisan, the small farmer, the shopkeeper, and all other instances
of economic self-sufficiency; the encroachment of market relations
and market logic on family life, social life, culture, and the professions;
the erosion of local identities, traditions, and allegiances through
the irresistible penetration of the world economy—places him
among the greatest modern thinkers.
But never mind Marx. He was a genius, but even so Marxism may well
prove a gigantic dead end. What is hardest to forgive Conquest,
and what undermines his book’s moral seriousness, is his unwillingness
to play fair with the revolutionary and utopian impulses—to
admit that they might have any sources except a lust for domination.
That lust, it is true, eventually corrupts the most generous impulses.
But what gives rise to such impulses is the fact that in (nearly)
all times and places, the rich grind the faces of the poor. It may
be a delusion, as Conquest repeats endlessly, to imagine that state
power can ever create a just society. But one reason some people
are perennially tempted to try is that private power is generally
so comfortable with unjust ones.
Even the “civic,” English-speaking cultures have been
usefully leavened by ideology-driven agitators and unruly masses,
without whose pressure the progressive income tax, universal suffrage,
labor unions, the New Deal, and other moderate and pragmatic reforms
might still be opposed as “premature” and “imprudent”
by propertied conservative gentlemen. Conquest has scarcely a good
word to say for these or any other liberal measures. His silence
on this score is loud enough to make one wonder whether any democratic
collective action (except self-defense against totalitarian enemies)
would qualify for him as benign. If not, then he should not be surprised
if the young and the disadvantaged mumble approvingly when rash
intellectuals preach revolution at them.
In effect, Conquest is denying that the twentieth century was tragic.
A tragedy cannot be merely sordid or merely contingent. Someone
or something noble must come to grief, and his (its) essential qualities
must contribute to this downfall. Conquest’s century resembles
instead a tale told by an idiot—a vast misfortune or a vast
crime, but not the ruin of an honorable impulse and an inspiring
vision. As the preeminent chronicler of twentieth-century barbarism,
Conquest will (let us hope) be read forever. But we are still awaiting
its interpreter.
George Scialabba, a book critic, lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and writes about books for The Boston Globe, Dissent, Boston Review, and other publications. (2001)

