George Orwell 1984
“One of the deepest impulses in man is the impulse to
record, to scratch a drawing on a tusk or keep a diary… The enduring value of
the past is, one might say, the very basis of civilisation.”
John Jay Chapman, American author (1862-1933)
“History is the study of all the world’s crime.”
Voltaire, French writer and philosopher (1694-1778)
“The best moments in reading are when you come across
something – a thought, a feeling, a way of looking at things – which you had
thought special and particular to you. And now, here it is, set down by someone
else, a person you have never met, someone even who is long dead. And it is as
if a hand has come out, and taken yours.”
Alan Bennett, English playwright (1934- )
A People’s History of Portugal is a valuable reconstruction
of the last two hundred years of class struggle in Portugal. Raquel Varela
writes, “In A People’s History of Portugal, written with Roberto della Santa,
we develop the idea that Portuguese capitalism was dependent on British
capitalism, in the sense of Ellen Wood’s notion of capitalism being exported by
the British Empire to the periphery and semi-periphery”.[1]
Raquel Varela and Roberto Della Santa are contemporary
historians whose work on Portugal must be assessed not as an abstract literary
or moral account but as a political and social explanation rooted in concrete
class relations. The central question posed by Santa and Varela and their “people’s history” is: which social forces and
material conditions produced the events described, and how did political forms
(parties, the army, unions) mediate the class struggle in Portugal?
Both Raquel Varela’s and Roberto Della Santa’s work belongs
to a broad current in historiography often called the people’s history genre:
recovering the struggles, experiences and agency of oppressed groups omitted
from elite-centred narratives. This genre has considerable value insofar as it
corrects bourgeois forgetfulness and restores the working class and oppressed
peoples to the centre of historical inquiry.
One of the most important exponents of the genre put this
way: “I am seeking to rescue the poor stockinger, the Luddite cropper, the
'obsolete' hand-loom weaver, the 'utopian' artisan, and even the deluded
follower of Joanna Southcott, from the enormous condescension of posterity.
Their crafts and traditions may have been dying. Their hostility to the new
industrialism may have been backwards looking. Their communitarian ideals may
have been fantasies. Their insurrectionary conspiracies may have been foolhardy.
But they lived through these times of acute social disturbance, and we did not.
Their aspirations were valid in terms of their own experience”.[2]
While this genre is legitimate and entirely worthwhile, the
reader should know that, from the standpoint of orthodox Marxism, the recovery
of forgotten facts is only the first step. Marxist historiography insists that
facts be integrated into a scientific, materialist explanation that locates
political consciousness and social movements in the social relations of
production, class antagonisms and objective economic laws.
The father of Russian Marxism Georgi Plekhanov insisted that
institutions, laws, and human ideas must be explained by deeper material
relations and class interests, writing "The historical development of
mankind is reasonable in the sense that it is law-governed; but the
law-governed nature of historical development does not yet prove at all that
its ultimate cause must be sought in the views of men or in their opinions".[3]
Why is Varela’s and Santa’s A People’s History of Portugal an
important popular intervention? Because it recovers the social struggles,
popular organisations and class conflicts that conventional bourgeois national
histories either marginalise or explain away. From a classical Marxist
standpoint, the value of Varela’s work lies less in doctrinal purity than in
its insistence that classes and masses make history or as Karl Marx put it so
succinctly ““Men make their own history, but they do not make it as they
please; they do not make it under self-selected circumstances, but under
circumstances existing already, given and transmitted from the past. The
tradition of all dead generations weighs like a nightmare on the brains of the
living. And just as they seem to be occupied with revolutionising themselves
and things, creating something that did not exist before, precisely in such
epochs of revolutionary crisis, they anxiously conjure up the spirits of the
past to their service, borrowing from them names, battle slogans, and costumes to
present this new scene in world history in time-honoured disguise and borrowed
language.”[4]
From the standpoint of a materialist conception of history,
the people’s history method has two strengths: it exposes elite crimes and
centres subordinate agency; and, in doing so, it helps break the ideological
monopoly of official history. It also has its limits, as Marxist historian Tom
Mackaman pointed out in his assessment of Howard Zinn. “ While it helps bring
to light facts omitted from standard textbooks, Zinn’s work can only serve as a
beginning in understanding US history. There is an unmistakable anachronistic,
even a-historical, thread in A People’s History. If it has a theme, it is an
endless duel between “resistance” and “control,” two of Zinn’s preferred words.
Populating his historical stage are, on the one side, a
virtually unbroken line of “Establishment” villains who exercise this control
and, on the other, benighted groups who often struck out against their plight.
The names and dates change; the story does not. Complexity and contradiction do
not rest comfortably in such a schema. The limitations of this approach are
most evident in Zinn’s treatment of the American Revolution and the US Civil
War, which he presents as instances of the elite beguiling the population to
strengthen its control”.[5]
Raquel Varela’s erudition is plain to see in this scholarly
book. Her work is noted for its attention to labour, popular movements and
transnational dimensions of working-class struggle. She makes an important
empirical contribution by documenting struggles and networks often neglected by
mainstream historiography. Her work helps restore the subjectivity and agency
of the working class to historical study, an indispensable corrective to bourgeois
historiography.
But from the standpoint of Marxist science, any
historiography must move beyond documentation to explanation, and that requires
a mapping of the class composition and material interests of actors. It also
needs an analysis of how material constraints shaped state and party forms. If
left at the level of primarily descriptive, it can be hijacked by reformism or
identity politics. Unfortunately, most books of this genre fall into this
ideological trap.
In this book, Varela writes of the experiences of peasants,
workers, and popular movements — showing how changes in production, imperialism
and property relations shape politics and ideas. Varela’s narrative
demonstrates how Portugal’s late and dependent capitalist development, colonial
plunder and landlordism produced a fragmented bourgeoisie, a precarious working
class and mass emigration — objective conditions that repeatedly gave rise to
political radicalisation.
Varela and Santa reconstruct crucial episodes — the liberal
revolutions, the rise of the republic, the consolidation of Salazar’s Estado
Novo, the colonial wars, and the Carnation Revolution of 1974 — as outcomes of
deeper economic and social contradictions. [6]
Varela’s people-centred focus complements previous historiography showing how
popular assemblies, strikes and local organisations expressed and attempted to
resolve those objective contradictions. The book makes clear that Portugal’s
political oscillations — reactionary regimes, fragile reformisms, anti-colonial
wars — were not merely the result of individual leaders but rooted in
capitalist development and imperial relations. The book is valuable because, by
narrating the lives and struggles of ordinary people, Varela helps break
bourgeois historiographical isolation of politics from production and class
interest.
While invaluable as social history, Varela is not an
orthodox Marxist, and her account can only understate the decisive political
question of leadership. The Carnation
Revolution contained both an immense revolutionary potential and a political
defeat: social democracy, Stalinism and pseudo-left currents helped channel
working-class power back into capitalist institutions.[7]
Raquel Varela’s A People’s History of Portugal is well worth
reading, and I would recommend this book. It is a crucial corrective to elite-centred
history: it returns the reader to popular agency, material forces and class
struggle. Despite its limitations, it offers a rich source of historiography
and allows for rigorous analysis by general readers and Marxists alike. Only by
combining social-historical recovery with Leninist-Trotskyist political
organisation can the working class carry out the socialist transformation of
society. Given the rise of Trump and his fascist oligarchy, this is an urgent
historical necessity.
Notes
Social Conflicts in the Portuguese Revolution, 1974–1975:
Raquel Varela and Joana Alcântara Le Travail, FALL 2014 AUTOMNE, Vol. 74
Raquel Varela. A People’s History of the Portuguese
Revolution. Ed. By Peter Robinson. Transl. [from Portuguese] by Sean Purdy.
Pluto Press
Fifty years since Portugal’s Carnation Revolution-Paul
Mitchell- https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2024/04/24/fgtz-a24.html
[1]
https://raquelcardeiravarela.wordpress.com/2024/05/01
[2]
The Making of the English Working Class-E P Thompson
[3]
Georgi Plekhanov’s The Development of the Monist View of History
[4]
Karl Marx, The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte
[5]
Howard Zinn, 1922-2010-https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2010/02/zinn-f15.html
[6]
See https://keith-perspective.blogspot.com/2020/05/a-review-of-raquel-varela-peoples.html
[7]
See https://keith-perspective.blogspot.com/2024/12/the-portuguese-workers-revolution-1974.html

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