Showing posts with label Feminism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Feminism. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 21, 2026

Class Struggle and the Working-Class Family

Introduction

What, exactly, happens in the working-class family? Are there any elements in common across the centuries since capitalism began and the diverse forms taken by the family across countries, religions and cultures? How has capitalism interacted with families inherited from pre-capitalist societies? Marxists and feminists have debated these questions at length, and these debates are examined here, starting with Karl Marx, Frederick Engels, and the Marxists who followed them. Many participants in the domestic labour debate of the 1970s and 1980s argued that it contributes to the production of labour-power, the only commodity that can create surplus-value and thus profit for capital, but also reproduces the workers in whom this capacity is embodied, human beings with agency and the ability to work against capitalism. Social Reproduction Theory added a wealth of empirical information, but at the cost of great confusion about Marx’s method and categories. Black American feminists developed an analysis of interacting systems of oppression, encapsulated in the metaphor of intersectionality. The working-class home, as the predominant site at which both labour-power and human beings are produced, is thus a critical node of the struggle for social transformation.

Marx on labour-power

Marx begins Volume 1 of Capital with the commodity, which is, in the first place, a use-value: ‘the usefulness of a thing makes it a use-value,’ and this is conditioned by its physical properties (Marx, 1976: 126). But it also has exchange-value or value, on the basis of which it can be exchanged with completely different use-values, and this is determined by the socially necessary labour-time it contains: ‘Socially necessary labour-time is the labour-time required to produce any use-value under the conditions of production normal for a given society and with the average degree of skill and intensity of labour prevalent in that society’ (Marx, 1976: 129). This requires abstracting from the concrete character of the use-value being produced and the labour producing it. Simple commodity production and sale – by peasants, artisans and service providers like domestic workers – was widespread in Marx’s time. He expected it to die out, but that did not happen.

Thus far, Marx’s analysis is similar to that of the best classical political economists, as he calls them, Adam Smith and David Ricardo. Where he departs from them and makes his great breakthrough is in his characterisation of the transaction between capitalists and workers: what workers sell to capitalists is not their labour but the commodity labour-power, the capacity to labour, which has the unique use-value of being able to produce more value than it has itself, i.e. surplus-value (Marx, 1976: 300–305). The method by which he arrives at this breakthrough is important. He says that in political economy, it seems to be correct to begin with the concrete, for example the population. But this, he says, would be

a chaotic conception… of the whole, and I would then… move analytically towards ever more simple concepts…, from the imagined concrete towards ever thinner abstractions until I had arrived at the simplest determinations. From there the journey would have to be retraced until I had finally arrived at the population again, but this time not as the chaotic conception of a whole, but as a rich totality of many determinations and relations. (Marx, 1973: 100)

In the Postface to the second German edition of Capital Volume 1, he further clarifies that the first part of this journey corresponds to the method of inquiry, while the second part corresponds to the method of presentation (Marx, 1976: 102–3). This is why Capital starts at the highest level of abstraction to establish that labour-power can produce surplus-value over and above its own value.  

Yet when he comes to analysing the production of this unique commodity, his account is confused and self-contradictory (Hensman 1977). He comes closest to a description in the chapter on ‘The Sale and Purchase of Labour-power’ in Capital Volume 1:

Given the existence of the individual, the production of labour-power consists in his reproduction of himself or his maintenance. For his maintenance he requires a certain quantity of the means of subsistence. Therefore the labour-time necessary for the production of labour-power is the same as that necessary for the production of those means of subsistence… If the owner of labour-power works today, tomorrow he must again be able to repeat the same process in the same conditions as regards health and strength. His means of subsistence must therefore be sufficient to maintain him in his normal state as a working individual… The owner of labour-power is mortal. If then his appearance in the market is to be continuous, … the seller of labour-power must perpetuate himself “in the way that every living individual perpetuates himself, by procreation”… Hence the sum of means of subsistence necessary for the production of labour-power must include the means necessary for the worker’s replacements, i.e. his children… The costs of education vary according to the degree of complexity of the labour-power required. These expenses… form a part of the total value spent in producing it. The value of labour-power can be resolved into the value of a definite quantity of the means of subsistence’ (Marx, 1976: 274–6). 

Unlike his descriptions of the production of other commodities, here there is no description of a labour process or mention of instruments of production (such as a stove, pots and pans, broom, bucket and mop). Just raw materials – means of subsistence – and the finished product: labour-power. Apparently, all that is required to convert those means of subsistence into labour-power is a process of individual consumption. Yet the worker would not be maintained in his or her ‘normal state as a working individual’, nor be replaced when he or she died, unless somebody carried the raw materials and instruments of production home from the market or shops, cooked the food and washed up after the meal, dusted, swept, mopped floors and washed clothes, fed the baby, changed it, etc. 

Marx is not unaware of all this, but there are times when he forgets it, as when he says that ‘the ultimate or minimum limit of the value of labour-power is formed by the value of the commodities which have to be supplied every day to the bearer of labour-power, the man, so that he can renew his life-process’ (Marx, 1976: 276). But should the value of labour-power fall to this level, it will not be reproduced at all beyond a certain point in time, even if ‘the man’ does all his own housework, because once he dies, there will be no one to replace him. Given that a man cannot carry out biological reproduction on his own, and that children cannot survive without being fed and cared for, it is evident that the rock-bottom value of labour-power is the level at which workers’ families can subsist. 

Elsewhere, Marx seems to recognise this. Labour-power is a commodity, he says, and ‘Like all other commodities it has a value’, and its value is determined, ‘as in the case of every other commodity, by the labour-time necessary for the production, and consequently also the reproduction, of this specific article’ (Marx, 1976: 274). Moreover, ‘its value, like that of every other commodity, is already determined before it enters into circulation, for a definite quantity of social labour has been spent on the production of the labour-power’ (Marx, 1976: 277). And again, ‘Its exchange-value, like that of every other commodity, is determined before it goes into circulation, since it is sold as a capacity, a power, and a specific amount of labour-time was required to produce this capacity, this power’ (Marx 1976: 1066). 

Indeed, hundreds of hours of labour-time are required to raise workers from birth until their labour-power can be sold, and this labour contributes to its value. Once we acknowledge that domestic labour contributes to the value of labour-power, the division of the working day in the workplace into necessary labour, which pays for the individual worker’s labour-power, and surplus labour, which is appropriated by the capitalist, collapses. This is obvious if the generational reproduction of labour-power is taken into account, because the labour-power of adult members of the family would have been produced by their own parents, who worked for different employers, while their children, whose labour-power they produce, would be working for yet other employers. In other words, necessary labour and surplus labour can only be calculated in relation to total social capital, making it possible to bring into the picture state contributions to the production of labour-power through public-sector education and healthcare.   

When we examine the production of the commodity labour-power as a labour-process, it is clear that means of production (raw food, fuel, brooms, mops, needle, thread, etc.) are converted into the product (labour-power) through the labour-process which takes place in the working-class home and whose components are cooking, cleaning, washing, mending, childcare and so on. If we examine it as a process of production of value, then the living labour performed in the final process of production is no less part of the total social labour objectified in the commodity labour-power than the labour which has previously been objectified in means of production. It can be seen as simple commodity production, many of whose products enter into capitalist production. 

All this is completely compatible with the theory of value and surplus-value outlined in Capital, so why is domestic labour, which, it is true, does not directly produce surplus-value, treated by Marx as though it does not produce value?

Batya Weinbaum’s (1978: 43) explanation for Marx’s failure to identify the home as the site not only of individual consumption but also of production,[1] both of which are necessary for the production of labour-power, is his ‘patriarchal position’. His characterisation of the worker as a man, at a time when women and children were flooding the labour-market, lends weight to this allegation. This passage on the effect of the introduction of machinery is revealing:

 

The value of labour-power was determined, not only by the labour-time necessary to maintain the individual adult worker, but also by that necessary to maintain his family. Machinery, by throwing every member of that family onto the labour-market, spreads the value of the man’s labour-power over his whole family. It thus depreciates it. To purchase the labour-power of a family of four workers may perhaps cost more than it formerly did to purchase the labour-power of the head of the family, but, in return, four days’ labour takes the place of one day’s… (Marx, 1976: 518, emphasis added.) 

Marx’s assumption that only the man’s labour-power has value, at a time when his wife and children are also employed, is a denial of their personhood, and although he then goes on to acknowledge their existence as separate persons, they are still subordinate to ‘the head of the family’. However, this is one of the few places where he explicitly mentions domestic labour: ‘Domestic work, such as sewing and mending, must be replaced by the purchase of ready-made articles. Hence the diminished expenditure of labour in the house is accompanied by an increased expenditure of money outside’ (Marx, 1976: 518 n.39). Marx supplies us with the categories and method to analyse the production of labour-power in the working-class family, but fails to use them consistently. 

The domestic labour debate: the production of labour-power 

One trigger of the domestic labour debate that broke out in the 1970s was surely frustration among socialist (including Marxist) feminists at being told by male comrades that the oppression of women would be tackled ‘after the revolution,’ and raising the issue before that ‘divides the working class’ (e.g. Matthaei 2018). Against the background of growing knowledge about the Hitler-Stalin pact and Soviet gulags, the Chinese Communist Party’s support for Pakistan’s genocidal assault on East Bengal in 1971 and relationship with the Pinochet dictatorship, and reports of the continued subordination of women in both countries, the authority of male spokesmen of the left was challenged. 

Most participants in the debate agreed that domestic labour transfers the (exchange)-value of the commodities bought with the wage to the end product, labour-power.  But does it also create value?

For Margaret Benston (1969); Margaret Coulson, Branka Magas and Hilary Wainwright (1975); Jean Gardiner, Susan Himmelweit and Maureen Mackintosh (1982); Susan Himmelweit and Simon Mohun (1977); and Lise Vogel (2013: 23), domestic labour in capitalist societies produces use-values but not exchange-value. Vogel (2013: 149, 158–9) argues convincingly that unwaged domestic labour is necessary for the production of labour-power, yet cites Paul Smith (1978: 208), who denies that it is socially necessary labour and equates cooking with eating, housework with sleeping, to conclude that ‘as concrete, useful labour, [it] simply transfers the value of the commodities purchased with the wage to the labour-power borne by the worker’ (2013: 164).

The assumption, contradicting Marx, is that unlike every other commodity, the value of labour-power is determined not by the labour-time socially necessary for its production but by the value of the commodities that enter into its production. If this were true, the labour-power of the worker who gets her washing done at a laundry would have a higher value than that of another worker doing the same job at the same workplace for the same wage who does her own washing at home; and the labour-power of a worker who hires domestic workers to wash, clean and cook would have a higher value than the labour-power of a worker doing the same job at the same workplace for the same wage, whose wife performs all these tasks. But to the extent that domestic labour is a necessary part of the production process of labour-power, a commodity sold on the (labour) market, it must produce part of the value of labour-power. Wally Seccombe (1973: 10) argues that domestic labour does contribute to the value of labour-power, and the labour-power of the worker who pays a housekeeper to perform domestic tasks has the same value as that of the worker whose wife performs those tasks.

Founding members of the Wages for Housework campaign Mariarosa Dalla Costa and Selma James (1975), Silvia Federici (1975) and Leopoldina Fortunati (1995) contend that domestic labour produces both value and surplus-value. Fortunati draws on Marx’s writings but criticises them for failing to acknowledge that housework is a process of commodity production, and therefore must also be a process of value creation (1995: 78). She argues that houseworkers, as she calls them, also produce surplus-value: the capitalist buys the worker’s labour-power below cost because he doesn’t pay for the socially necessary housework labour-time required to produce it. The male worker uses the wage to buy the female houseworker’s labour-power, and she then produces greater value than the value of her own labour-power; in reality, this is a relation of production between the houseworker and capital, mediated by the male worker, and surplus-value is extracted from him in the workplace and the houseworker in the home (Fortunati, 1995: 84–5).

The Bolivian women’s leader and miner’s wife Domitila Barrios de Chungara aptly compared the work performed in the home with the cost of the same services bought on the market.

 

One day I got the idea of making a chart. We put as an example the price of washing clothes per dozen pieces and we figured out how many dozens of items we washed per month. Then the cook’s wage, the babysitter’s, the servant’s… Adding it all up, the wage needed to pay us for what we do in the home… was much higher than what the men earned in the mine for a month. (Barrios de Chungara with Viezzer, 1978: 35) 

Therefore, if a miner’s wife died or stopped working, and the man was compelled to buy the services that she formerly performed, his wage would not have been sufficient, showing that it was less than the value of labour-power; indeed, the shortfall would have been even greater, because Domitila, with help from her children, also made and sold small pies to supplement the family income. Thus, the women’s surplus labour allowed the mine owner to appropriate more surplus-value than he would otherwise have been able to. This example calls attention to the fact that the working-class home is often also a site of homeworking, either as a self-employed worker or for a capitalist; in the latter case, the houseworker directly produces surplus-value for her employer.

Whether unwaged domestic labour contributes to the extraction of extra surplus-value seems to depend on two possibilities. One is grinding poverty: a very low wage for the employed spouse and dreadful living conditions, leading to long hours of work simply to sustain life. In India, for example, millions of working-class households in rural areas and urban slums have no electricity. Women spend hours each day collecting water, rations, and fuel for cooking on primitive stoves, while lack of sanitation causes widespread illness and death from water-borne and mosquito-borne diseases.[2] The other possibility is where there are very small children, when round-the-clock care work done by their mother could certainly be seen as subsidising the cost of labour-power for capital. However, if a spouse’s wage is decent and there are no children at home, a houseworker may spend part of her time studying for a degree or writing a novel, in which case she would not be contributing to the appropriation of extra surplus-value.

Two points should be clarified about what goes on in the working-class household. The first is that there is considerable but not complete overlap between the production of labour-power and the production of people: not all the work performed by the houseworker is for capital, because she is also a homemaker with agency to struggle against capital. The extra labour embodied in singing to her baby, telling stories to an older child, or cooking a dish that the family loves but requires hours of work, would not count as reproduction of labour-power; much less would hosting a meeting of friends to discuss participation in a protest against rising food prices!    

The second clarification is about the category ‘productive labour’. Under capitalism, according to Marx (1976: 1039, 1044), labour is productive ‘if it directly creates surplus-value’, and he explains that this has nothing to do with the merit of the work performed. But this definition is relevant only from the standpoint of individual capital: labour is or is not productive according to whether it does or does not produce surplus-value for the individual capitalist. However, as Marx realised when he considered the capitalist production of articles of luxury consumption, ‘This sort of productive labour produces use-values and objectifies itself in products that are destined only for unproductive consumption. In their reality, as articles, they have no use-value for the process of reproduction,’ and hence, if there is ‘disproportionate diversion of productive labour into unreproductive articles, it follows that the means of subsistence or production will not be reproduced in the necessary quantities’, and the process of capital accumulation will suffer (Marx, 1976: 1045–6).

We are therefore looking at two distinctions – productive versus unproductive labour, and reproductive versus unreproductive labour – and four possible combinations of them. Productive labour is reproductive if it contributes to social reproduction by producing means of production or labour-power, or unreproductive if it produces articles (like armaments) that do not re-enter the cycle of accumulation. Likewise, unproductive labour is reproductive if it contributes to social reproduction by producing means of production or labour-power, as domestic labour does, or unreproductive if it produces articles or services that do not re-enter the cycle of accumulation.

The conception of the working-class home as a site of production of labour-power as a simple commodity is compatible with both these points: petty commodity producers in capitalist society produce value but not surplus-value, and they also have a degree of autonomy from capital. The conception advanced by the Wages for Housework feminists correctly argues that domestic labour produces value, but insists that it is productive labour and that all the work done in the home is for capital, denying it any autonomy. The conception that domestic labour produces no value and the wage constitutes the value of only the wage-worker’s labour-power is least satisfactory. It fails to understand that the sale of labour-power on the labour-market renders all the labour producing it abstract, value-producing labour, and either justifies a wage insufficient for the generational reproduction of labour-power, or assumes that the value of the male worker’s labour-power includes that of his wife and children, denying their autonomy as persons.

The domestic labour debate: the oppression of women

There was almost unanimous agreement among participants in the debate that being burdened with the bulk of domestic labour constitutes oppression of working-class women, but disagreement over whether capital alone is responsible for it (a ‘unitary’ system of oppression) or a separate system of male dominance over women, which they called ‘patriarchy’, is also responsible (‘dual’ systems of oppression). Many thought that a working-class family in which women were mostly confined to domestic labour served the needs of capital, for example, acting as part of the reserve army of labour, which could be recruited into wage-labour when needed by capital or the state and expelled back into the family with minimal costs when no longer needed (Benston 1969; Beechey 1978). Members of the Wages for Housework group believed that it allows capital to extract more surplus-value from the working class. 

However, this view doesn’t explain capital’s onslaught on the working-class family during the early period of industrialization, touched upon by Marx but described in much greater detail by Engels (1969: 110–16): families destroyed by both parents working 12–13 hours a day while children, left to themselves, suffer numerous fatal accidents; or children, too, forced to work long hours under brutal conditions, leading to stunting, deformities and premature death. This situation is still prevalent today, especially in the form of migrant labour within and between countries. Many migrant women workers do domestic work in richer families, but they also work in industry, agriculture, the service sector and sex work, and may suffer long hours and physical, psychological and sexual abuse, including fatalities. If we include human trafficking, especially of women and children, the total would add up to several hundreds of millions (United Nations Women, 2016; Vital Signs 2022; UNODC n.d.).

Evidently capital has no qualms about destroying working-class families so long as the supply of labour-power is adequate for its needs. It was workers, through their struggles for higher wages, abolition of child labour, and restriction of working hours, who won back time and space for the family. But this was accompanied by promotion of the ‘family wage’ norm of a male breadwinner earning enough to support a dependent spouse and children, with women losing jobs or being left with very poorly-paid employment options. Jane Humphries (1980: 144) argues that within ‘traditional family structures… the working class was better equipped to exercise some jurisdiction and control over the supply of labour. The withdrawal of certain members of the working class from the labour market, in conjunction with a campaign for “a family wage,” … could, by raising the real wages of the remaining workers, improve the working-class standard of living.’ But this model meant that wage differentials between men and women remained, women-headed households had no alternative to poverty, and dependence on a man’s wage ensured the subordination of women. It also fostered a gender division of labour in which women were expected to do the bulk of caring work. How did this happen?

According to Engels (2000: 30–1), ‘The overthrow of mother-right was the world historical defeat of the female sex. The man took command in the home also; the woman was degraded and reduced to servitude, she became the slave of his lust and a mere instrument for the production of children… With the patriarchal family, we enter the field of written history…’ While his account has been questioned, feminist historian Joan Kelly-Gadol (1976:  814, 816) agrees that ‘[f]rom the advent… of history proper as distinct from prehistorical societies, the social order has been patriarchal’, and continues, ‘We have made of sex a category as fundamental to our analysis of the social order as other classifications, such as class and race.’ 

It follows that women around the world entered the capitalist labour-market already subordinated, which is why they could be used as cheap labour. According to Hartmann (1981: 20–4), the large-scale induction of women and children into the labour-force simultaneously undermined patriarchal authority relations in the family and kept wages low for all workers. This was resisted by male workers, and capital adjusted to their resistance when it introduced the family wage, buying off male workers by allowing them to retain their wives’ services at home. In other words, capitalism adjusted to pre-existing patriarchal forces, but patriarchy also adjusted to capitalism; both were changed in the encounter.

Engels (2000: 38–40) deduced, therefore, ‘now that large-scale industry has taken the wife out of the home onto the labor market and into the factory, and made her often the bread-winner of the family, no basis for any kind of male supremacy is left in the proletarian household’, concluding that ‘the first condition for the liberation of the wife is to bring the whole female sex back into public industry’; with the socialist revolution, ‘[p]rivate housekeeping is transformed into a social industry,’ in theory doing away with the need for domestic labour.

This is what many Marxists believed, and exactly what was done after the Russian revolution. Russian feminists Alexandra Kollontai and Inessa Armand created a Department of Women’s Affairs within the Bolshevik Party to bring about equality between the sexes. Significant advances were made, with legal equality for men and women and new family laws. Statistician S.G. Strumilin denounced the ‘bourgeois prejudice’ that had in the 1920 census left out the time spent in housework, saying that forming an idea of ‘the social value of the reproduction of the workforce was unthinkable without taking domestic labor into account’. He made detailed time-use surveys between 1922 and 1924 and found that women spent 14.5 hours a day working and had 9.6 hours of free time per week while men had 30.1. This inequality in the division of household tasks meant that men could participate more in social life and educational activities and advance more in their careers. Another survey found that women’s domestic workload remained more than 2.5 times that of men’s in the late 1960s (Mespoulet and Rundell, 2015). Large-scale induction of women into the wage-labour force, the abolition of private capitalism, and partial socialisation of domestic labour had not led to equality in the home.    

Social anarchist feminist Carol Ehrlich (1981: 113, 118) agrees with Hartmann that radical feminism doesn’t account for the fact that women are divided by class, race, age, nationality, and sexual orientation, while Marxism cannot account for patriarchy. However, she disagrees with Hartmann’s contention that the material base of patriarchy is only men’s control over women’s labour-power. For Ehrlich (1981: 123), the material and ideological are blended in patriarchy: the belief that men are superior to women and have a right to control their bodies and lives has material consequences that militate against fighting male dominance, for which it is important to gain the consciousness that women are oppressed as women. Radical feminists have highlighted the cruelty and threats of violence that underpin patriarchy in a way that makes it possible to struggle against it. Marxism cannot account for female infanticide, abandoning or underfeeding girls so that they die prematurely, female genital mutilation (FGM), burning of widows and witches, involuntary sterilisation of women, sexual assault and rape, forcing women and girls to bear unwanted children, persecuting and killing LGBT+ people, domestic violence, femicide. For that, a feminist theory of patriarchy is needed.[3]

Intersectionality

The focus of Women, Race and Class by Angela Davis (1983) is the history of horrific racist oppression from the 19th century onwards in America, and the heroic role played by Black women in fighting against it. She acknowledges the large-scale involvement of white women in the abolitionist movement, and pays tribute to white women who participated fully in the struggle, but also criticises white suffragettes who subordinated the struggle against racism to their demand for the vote, and radical feminists who perpetuated the racist stereotype of Black men as rapists (Davis, 1983: 42–7, 114–15). She describes a striking episode when Black sharecropper Capitola Tasker addresses the 1934 International Women’s Conference in Paris, comparing European fascism with the racist terror suffered by Black people in the United States, and quotes Claudia Jones chiding some Communist Party members for exploiting Black women domestic workers (Davis, 1983: 92, 98). However, Davis (1983: 116) follows the Party line that ‘the overall oppression of women remains an essential crutch for capitalism,’ and most of the book sees racism as firmly embedded in post-civil-war US capitalism. 

By contrast, the Combahee River Collective (CRC) evolved out of the disillusionment of Black feminists with their experience of racism in the predominantly white women’s movement but also sexism and heterosexism in the Black liberation movements and white-male-dominated left. They said that they ‘see as our particular task the development of integrated analysis and practice based upon the fact that the major systems of oppression are interlocking. The synthesis of these oppressions creates the conditions of our lives’ (CRC 1977).[4] They reiterate this conception of separate but mutually interacting systems of oppression when they say, ‘The major source of difficulty in our political work is that we are not just trying to fight oppression on one front or even two, but instead to address a whole range of oppressions’ (CRC 1977). Some ‘dual systems’ white feminists like Hartmann and Ehrlich mention the possibility of extending their analysis to other systems of oppression, especially racism, but without the direct experience and depth of feeling characterising the CRC feminists.

The women who authored the CRC statement described themselves as subscribing to ‘identity politics’ stemming from their subjection to racist, sexist, heterosexist and class oppression, but this term has come to have a very different meaning, namely that all those who share one form of oppression have the same interests. Their politics is better described by the term coined by Kimberlé Crenshaw: intersectionality. In her paper on domestic violence and rape, Crenshaw (1991: 1251–2) explains that:

 

The concept of political intersectionality highlights the fact that women of color are situated within at least two subordinated groups that frequently pursue conflicting political agendas…

 

Among the most troubling political consequences of the failure of antiracist and feminist discourses to address the intersections of race and gender is the fact that, to the extent they can forward the interest of “people of color” and “women,” respectively, one analysis often implicitly denies the validity of the other. The failure of feminism to interrogate race means that the resistance strategies of feminism will often replicate and reinforce the subordination of people of color, and the failure of antiracism to interrogate patriarchy means that antiracism will frequently reproduce the subordination of women. 

Himani Bannerji (2005: 149) sets out to challenge intersectionality, arguing that:

 

“Race” … is a collection of discourses of colonialism and slavery, but firmly rooted in capitalism in its different aspects through time. As it stands, “race” cannot be disarticulated from “class” any more than coffee can be separated from milk once they are mixed…

 

This integrity of “race” and class cannot be independent of the fundamental social organization of gender, that is, sex-specific social division of labor, with mediating norms and cultural forms… There is no capital that is a universal abstraction. Capital is always a practice, a determinate set of social relations… Thus “race,” gender, and patriarchy are inseparable from class. 

Yet Marx’s method proceeds from the concrete as a ‘chaotic conception of a whole’, to ever higher abstractions before returning to the concrete as ‘a rich totality of many determinations and relations’ (Marx 1973: 100), and ‘capital’ is an abstraction. The accumulation of capital can account for the large-scale induction of women and children into the labour-force because their cheap labour-power allows for a higher rate of surplus-value, but it cannot account for domestic violence in working-class families, nor for the denial of abortion rights to women when labour-power is plentiful, nor for FGM. These are expressions of patriarchal oppression, embodied in powerful religious and community institutions and embedded at every level of society from the family to the transnational (e.g. Hensman, 2020; Equality Now, 2020). Capital cannot account for the involvement of working-class Germans in the Holocaust, or the recruitment of working-class Dalits in the anti-Muslim pogroms of 2002 in Gujarat (Teltumbde, 2002). These are expressions of racist oppression, embodied in fascist organisations active in families, communities, and the state. The accumulation of capital doesn’t depend on lynch-mobs or the Ku Klux Klan. 

As Patricia Hill Collins (2019: 29–34) explains, the metaphor of intersectionality isn’t perfect, especially in its sense as a literal crossroads, yet it has analytic and heuristic value, has helped to generate new knowledge, and has helped people to imagine social transformation, guiding their intellectual work and political practice. If intersectionality is seen as recognition of different systems of oppression, it can explain how these systems interact and change. Unlike the metaphor of coffee and milk, it can show how people who are oppressed in one system can be potential or actual oppressors in another. This has contributed to the emergence of solidarity politics, which ‘has the potential to bring people together across all inequalities with the shared purpose of deconstructing all forms of inequality’ (Matthaei 2018). ‘For diverse social groups, coming together on the basis of their common experiences of inequality and/or agency without losing sight of their differences, intersectionality can be a powerful tool for social change’ (Banerjee and Ghosh, 2018: 8).

Social Reproduction Theory (SRT)

Tithi Bhattacharya (2018: 2) explains that ‘social reproduction theorists perceive the relation between labor dispensed to produce commodities and labor dispensed to produce people as part of the systemic totality of capitalism’. SRT provides a wealth of empirical description, especially of Western capitalist societies and the provision of education, healthcare, and other waged labour contributing to the reproduction of labour-power. Yet it is based on multiple confusions regarding Marx’s categories and method. It sees labour-power as a ‘unique’ commodity because it is not produced capitalistically (Bhattacharya, 2018: 3, 8), yet there are countless other commodities that are not produced capitalistically and billions of people engaged in such production. They are swept out of sight because SRT’s persistent confusion between value-producing socially necessary labour and surplus-value-producing productive labour renders the former invisible. For example, Bhattacharya (2018: 13) says Marx shows how surplus-value is produced in the cycle of production of commodities, unaware that not all commodity production involves surplus-value production. 

The confusion is more explicit in another SRT text, the introduction by Susan Ferguson and David McNally (2013) to Lise Vogel’s Marxism and the Oppression of Women. They ask, ‘does domestic labour produce (surplus-)value?’; state that ‘labour in the household… produces use-values, not commodities whose sale realises surplus-value for the capitalist’; and criticise Vogel for falling ‘into the trap of arguing that domestic labour is a component of necessary labour in the sense in which Marx used the term in Capital’ (Ferguson and McNally, 2013: xx, xxv, xxxiii). They assume that only surplus-value-producing labour produces value, oblivious that Chapter 1 of Capital Volume 1 deals with socially necessary labour that produces value but not surplus-value. SRT thus rejects an extremely important achievement of some participants in the domestic labour debate – establishing that domestic labour produces value – in favour of the weakest formulations by others.

SRT departs from Marxist theory in other significant ways. Paddy Quick (2023) points out:

1)      For Marx, ‘social reproduction’ refers to the reproduction of capitalist society, which must include reproduction of the capitalist class. For SRT, it means only the reproduction of the working class.

2)      The labour categorised as ‘social reproduction’ in SRT cannot even reproduce labour-power, because this requires in addition the labour embodied in wage goods.

3)      SRT refers to household labour as ‘unpaid work’, but in Marx’s analysis ‘unpaid labour’ refers to surplus labour performed for capital.

Thus, ‘SRT fails to situate this work within the social relations of the capitalist mode of production. Despite its use of Marxist terminology, it is inconsistent with the most basic Marxist understanding of capitalism’ (Quick, 2023: 448–9).

According to Bhattacharya (2018: 14), ‘SRT is primarily concerned with understanding how categories of oppression (such as gender, race, and ableism) are coproduced in simultaneity with the production of surplus value’, implying that gender, race, etc. are present at the highest level of abstraction of Marx’s analysis of capital, and denying the existence of other systems of oppression. This denial is made more explicit in David McNally’s (2018: 96) rejection of ‘the ontological atomism inherent in the founding formulations of intersectionality theory: the idea that there are independently constituted relations of oppression that, in some circumstances, crisscross each other.’ Yet patriarchy, the subjugation of conquered peoples, and the caste system – which remains so all-pervasive that Svati Shah (2023) characterises production relations in modern India as ‘caste capitalism’ – predate capitalism; subsuming such systems of oppression under capitalism precludes an understanding of the complex ways in which they interact with capitalism, and undermines struggles against them. 

By rejecting the most important gains made by the domestic labour and intersectionality debates, SRT returns to a time when left-wing white male academics could say that the struggle against capitalism is the only one that counts, albeit with an ‘add-and-stir’ policy to sexism, racism, etc. Alessandra Mezzadri (2022) also criticises its narrow focus on waged labour, arguing that ‘If capital is defined based on the dominance of labour-surplus extraction, wage-labour stops being the only form in which exploitation may manifest’, and therefore the vast number of ‘wageless’ workers exploited by capital around the world need to be included. Indeed, the focus on racism is also West-centric, leaving out the Russian ethnic supremacism V.I. Lenin hated so much and dubbed ‘great Russian chauvinism,’ Gulf Arab racism against South Asians and Africans, Japanese racism against Chinese and Koreans that peaked during World War II, Han Chinese racism against Uighurs and Tibetans, and so on. All these determinations would have to be added to arrive at the totality of contemporary global social relations.

Conclusion

If the definition of ‘revolutionary socialism’ is expanded to mean a society free not just of capitalism but of all forms of oppression, and ‘class struggle’ is the struggle to establish it, then the working-class family, a unit normally but not necessarily bound together by biological kinship and heterosexual marriage, is at the centre of it. Struggles against capitalism and the state are certainly indispensable: for wages sufficient to maintain a decent standard of living, drastically shorter working hours to increase free time as well as employment, decent affordable housing supplied with electricity, potable water and sanitation, free healthcare, education and social care for all who need it, and state contributions to community kitchens, laundries, etc. performing some of the labour now performed in the home; and against International Financial Institutions like the IMF, which in collusion with corrupt governments channel money from working-class families into the pockets of the rich; militarism and wars of aggression, which destroy lives, homes and essential infrastructure; and corporations and governments promoting climate change, which devastates lives, homes and livelihoods by causing droughts, wildfires, floods, and landslides. 

However, struggles against patriarchy are equally critical: to outlaw violent abuse (domestic violence, sexual harassment, rape, FGM, femicide, etc.) and replace authoritarian relations between men and women, adults and children, with relations of mutual respect and love; against a gender division of labour that assigns a disproportionate amount of emotional and caring work to women and girls, limiting their development of other abilities while hindering boys and men from developing the skills and intelligence required for caring work; and for women’s control over their own bodies, including what Black feminists have called ‘reproductive justice,’ which would not only allow women to decide if and when to have babies but also support them when they have them (Hensman, 2020: 167, 182n.3). Some of these goals entail battling the state and even regime change in cases like Taliban-controlled Afghanistan, but they cannot be achieved without struggles at the point of production of human beings – the home – to change relations within the family.

Challenging the gender division of labour requires special attention. While only people assigned female at birth are capable of pregnancy, childbirth and breast-feeding, all other activities can be performed by people of any gender. The quality of childcare is critical. Countless studies document the dreadful effect on children of violence and neglect, but milder forms of disadvantage can also damage them. Some studies of institutionalised children have been contaminated by physical and social deprivation, but studies in which the only deprivation suffered by children below the age of two years was the lack of physical affection and a constant caregiver showed that years later, many still suffered from competitiveness and hostility to peers and difficulty forming close friendships with them (Hodges 1996). It is through early attachment to and non-verbal communication with stable caregivers that children learn they are recognised and loved as unique individuals and learn to love themselves; develop the capacity to love others without feeling the need to compete with, dominate or annihilate anyone; and develop their imagination and sense of justice. This requires a substantial commitment of time and attention on the part of caregivers, which brings us back to the crucial importance of reproductive justice. Bringing up children to resist all forms of oppression is a critical component of class struggle.



Notes 

[1] One way of demonstrating this would be to ask: is it possible for someone else to substitute for a person in this activity or not? If someone else eats all my meals for me, I would die of starvation, whereas if someone else cooks all my meals for me, I would not.

[2] I haven’t come across a reference to Domitila’s testimony in Western contributions to the domestic labour debate, but it resonated among socialist feminists halfway across the world in India.

[3] In India in the 1970s, socialist feminist activists formed several autonomous groups to read and discuss writings by radical feminists, finding that although they might have racial and class biases, they also offered insights which Marxist analyses lacked. I provide a fictional rendering of the complex situations confronting these activists in my novel To Do Something Beautiful (Hensman 2018).

[4] Members of the group included Cheryl Clarke, Demita Frazier, Gloria Akasha Hull, Audre Lorde, Chirlane McCray, Margo Okazawa-Rey, Barbara Smith and Beverly Smith.

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Monday, June 2, 2025

The People First: Democracy, Resistance and the Global Left

Rohini Hensman interviewed by Siyavash Shahab

What prompted you to write Indefensible, and what do you hope leftists take away from it, especially those who continue to support authoritarian regimes in the name of anti-imperialism?

I welcomed the uprising in Syria along with all the other Arab uprisings, and was alarmed at the degree of repression that it met from the Assad regime. What disturbed me most of all was that by contrast to protests against, say, Israeli assaults on Palestine, protests against the brutality of the Assad regime and its allies – Hezbollah, Iran, Iraqi militias and Russia – were hardly seen anywhere. 

Watching Al Jazeera coverage of the slaughter in Aleppo combined with the lack of outrage from the left literally made me ill, so I started writing as a way of expressing my solidarity with the struggle of Syrians for dignity and democracy. But as I wrote, I discovered that the failure of large sections of the left on Syria was part of a much larger problem, and so it turned into a book analysing what I called ‘pseudo-anti-imperialism,’ taking up cases of it in Russia and Ukraine, Bosnia and Kosovo, Iran and Iraq as well as Syria.

Basically, their vision of the world was West-centric and Orientalist; they failed to see that ordinary people in other parts of the world like Libya and Syria had agency and the desire for democracy, so they clubbed the democratic uprisings in these countries with the US-led invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq. I contrasted this with genuine anti-imperialism, which opposes all imperialisms and supports all democratic revolutions. 

My hope was and is that socialists who read it will understand that opposing only Western imperialism and failing to express any solidarity with people struggling against other imperialisms or authoritarian regimes is a betrayal of socialist values. 

You challenge a significant strand of the left that sees any enemy of the U.S. as inherently progressive. What historical or theoretical missteps do you think led to this distortion? 

I trace this tendency back to the degeneration of the Russian revolution and the failure of much of the left to come to terms with it. Of course, the Russian revolution took place in dire circumstances and would inevitably have faced huge problems, but a principled commitment to democracy on the part of Russian leaders would have saved it from becoming the authoritarian and imperialist monster it became.

Lenin played an ambiguous role. On the one hand, he encouraged an enormous centralization of power in the hands of the Bolshevik Party, which allowed the most totalitarian elements to take control of it, while his failure to allow the Constituent Assembly to do its work resulted in the state becoming an amalgam of bourgeois and Tsarist elements, as he himself acknowledged shortly before his death. On the other hand, Lenin hated what he called ‘Great-Russian chauvinism,’ by which he meant ethnic Russian supremacism and imperialist domination of former Tsarist colonies. 

For him, Russian imperialism had to be opposed in exactly the same way as Western imperialism. He clashed with Stalin on this point and tried to ensure that the constitution of the USSR would allow for equality between Russia and its former colonies.

After Lenin’s death, Stalin reversed his policies but didn’t change the constitution, because he wanted to present himself as Lenin’s true heir. Yet hardly any Communists and fellow-travelers, nor even Trotskyists and other anti-Stalinists, highlighted his oppression of former colonies. A few anti-Stalinists denounced his 1939 pact with Hitler, which also had an imperialist dimension, but most continued to call the Soviet Union a workers’ state, and for mainstream Communists it was a socialist country. 

So Western and especially US imperialism was the main enemy. Anyone who posed as an opponent of US imperialism, even if too brutal and authoritarian to be characterized as progressive, could hope to evade scrutiny and condemnation of their crimes.       

You group together figures like Putin, Khamenei, Assad, Netanyahu, Trump, and even al-Baghdadi—not despite their ideological differences, but because of their shared contempt for human rights and democracy. What do you think explains the growing affinity between far-right movements and authoritarian states across such seemingly different ideological and cultural contexts? 

Autocrats may call upon a variety of ideological or religious beliefs to back their claims to absolute power, but their agenda remains the same: to negate human rights and crush democracy. If they come from a Muslim background, like Khamenei and his predecessor Khomeini, or al-Baghdadi and his successors, they use their own somewhat different visions of Islamic supremacism; Netanyahu appeals to a Zionist vision of a Jewish-supremacist state; Putin goes back to the greatness of the Tsarist empire and Russian supremacism; Assad pretended to be secular but favoured his own Alawite community and persecuted Sunnis; Trump’s ideology is White-supremacism in tandem with unhindered capitalist exploitation and corruption.

But they all seek to wipe out dissidence or resistance to their executive actions, moulding state institutions to conform to their dictatorial inclinations. Once in power, they make it almost impossible to remove them. In rare instances, the strength of pre-existing democratic institutions and popular beliefs may stand in their way, as in the case of Trump, or the patent incompetence and corruption of their regime may lead to its collapse in the face of a minor push, as in the case of Assad. 

How should we understand the alliances of convenience among authoritarian regimes—whether secular, theocratic, or populist—when they all oppose popular uprisings and democratic revolutions?

In a way, you have answered your own question: they form opportunistic alliances with groups and regimes that appear to be completely hostile because they have a common interest in crushing democracy. The United States and Islamists in Iran appear to be on opposite sides, and you would think there’s been no room for wheeling and dealing. Yet they have collaborated on numerous occasions. 

The 1953 coup against secular, democratic Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh was orchestrated by the CIA and MI6, but approved by Khomeini and carried out on the ground by Islamist mullahs and knife-wielding gangs. When over 50 US citizens were taken hostage in their embassy in Tehran in 1979, it was a huge embarrassment to then-president Carter, who had been critical of human rights abuses by the Islamic regime. His failure to get the hostages released ensured he lost the next election to Reagan, who had no such qualms about human rights. In a highly significant move, Khomeini released the hostages on the day of Reagan’s inauguration.

Documents unearthed by Robert Parry and reported in an article entitled ‘When Israel/Neocons Favoured Iran’ show that Israel’s Likud government of Menachem Begin became an important source of covert arms supplies to Iran after Iraq invaded Iran in 1980, with the profits being invested in Jewish settlements in the West Bank. The Israeli Labour Party’s desire to get in on this act paved the way to the Iran-Contra scandal in 1985–86, when Reagan authorized the secret sale of anti-tank and anti-aircraft weapons to Iran via Israel and used the proceeds to fund the Contra terrorists in Nicaragua. By this point, Saddam Hussein had long been calling for a ceasefire and negotiations in the Iran-Iraq war, but Israel regarded him as their greatest enemy and wanted him defeated, and American neocons agreed. 

So you had Iranian Islamists, Israeli Zionists and American neoconservatives all on the same side, despite huge ideological differences. More recently, in response to the Syrian uprising in 2011, Assad not only released around 1500 well-connected Islamists from Syrian prisons but actually gave them arms and facilitated the influx of foreign Islamists.

Finally, it has just been reported that Israel-backed militias linked to ISIS are being allowed by the IDF to loot the miserable amounts of aid sent to Gaza. 

Your chapter on Iran details the tragic alliance between some Marxist groups and the emerging theocracy. Do you see parallels in current leftist support for Iran’s regime? What lessons are still being ignored?

I would like to answer your question by referring to an interview with Chahla Chafiq in Jacobin, since her political positions are so close to mine but she was a participant in the Iranian revolution whereas I was not. She explains that the Tudeh party was the classic pro-Soviet party and the Fedayeen guerilla movement was also aligned with the Soviet Union although less so, whereas she belonged to ‘Line Three,’ the independent left, which believed that the Soviets were an imperialist force. 

The Soviet-aligned parties supported Khomeini believing he was anti-imperialist because he referred to the United States as ‘Big Satan’ and Western Europe as ‘Small Satan’. But all the left groups agreed on the anti-Western-imperialist line, so even the independent left was confused. Feminism was seen as Western and rejected by the left, which thought that any problems of women’s rights, civil rights or human rights in general could be fixed by socialism: a position that Chafiq in retrospect thought was the biggest error.

When American feminist Kate Millet, who had worked with a group of Iranian dissenters campaigning against the Shah, visited Iran soon after the 1979 revolution in response to an invitation by Iranian feminists and joined a women’s March 8th demonstration protesting against compulsory veiling, she was vilified by pseudo-anti-imperialists in Iran as well as the US, saying, ‘What right do you have, from what position are you speaking? We’re anti-imperialists.’ 

To me, this borders on insanity. Millet worked in solidarity with the people of Iran against the Shah, who was installed in a CIA-sponsored coup: doesn’t that make her anti-imperialist? But no, she’s not anti-imperialist according to these pseudo-anti-imperialists because she also demonstrated in solidarity with Iranian women! Similarly, any expressions of solidarity with Iranian workers, ethnic minorities or LGBT+ people makes you pro-imperialist according to their definition!

Independent socialists like Chafiq have learned from the dire consequences of the mistake they made, but much of the international left has not moved on. They were more outraged at the killing of Qasem Soleimani, a mass murderer, than the killing of thousands of peaceful protesters: more in solidarity with the oppressive regime than the people oppressed by it. They are still stuck in Stalinist Cold-War narratives, where Western imperialism is the only enemy and anyone claiming to oppose it deserves solidarity, no matter how despotic they are. 

They constantly question or deny the agency of the amazingly courageous people who risk everything to struggle for freedom from such despotism, suggesting, for example, that Iranians fighting for democracy are either monarchists or are being manipulated by the West.

You mention that the Islamic Republic has exported its right-wing jihadi project while being framed as part of the ‘Axis of Resistance’. How do you interpret this contradiction within leftist internationalism? 

I think the expansionism of the Islamic Republic has been most damaging in Iraq and Syria. Saddam Hussein invaded Iran only after the Khomeini regime made it clear they wanted to overthrow him, and was ready to negotiate a compromise two years after the start of the war. But Khomeini kept it going for six nightmare years longer at the cost of over a million lives because he wanted to annex Iraq.

There is a good chance that without those extra years of war, the US never would have gone to war against Iraq twice, and the Iraqi people themselves would have had a chance to deal with the despotic Saddam regime. Instead, George W. Bush fulfilled Khomeini’s dream by overthrowing Saddam, and the Islamic Republic became entrenched in Iraq thanks to the ignorance and incompetence of US proconsul Paul Bremer. 

Teheran’s tight control of Iraq through its pro-Iran militias has led to economic crisis despite high oil revenues, and also massive corruption, bloody assaults on peaceful protesters, and a catastrophic attack on the rights of women and girls. The IRI’s intervention in Syria was equally destructive, starving and butchering civilians struggling for democracy and freedom from torture and mass graves in order to keep Assad as the figurehead of a regime they wanted to control.

But the pretence of being the head of an Axis of Resistance against Israel and the US shields the IRI from condemnation for all this from most of the left, who also show a complete lack of solidarity with the victims struggling for self-determination in Iraq and Syria. They don’t realise that by undermining international law in Iraq and Syria, they help Israel to demolish international law in Palestine. 

Figures like Shapour Bakhtiar warned of fascism in clerical garments. Do you think it’s useful or even necessary to use the term ‘fascism’ when describing today’s Iranian regime?

Bakhtiar was prescient, his warning should have been taken seriously by the Iranian left. The Islamic Republic displays the essential features of a fascist regime, with its ethno-religious ultranationalism, extreme social conservatism and complete negation of democratic rights and freedoms. 

Chahla Chafiq, who agrees it is a fascist state, described how it is much worse than the Shah’s regime, where despite censorship some freedom of expression was allowed, whereas there are ‘zero liberties and complete censorship’ in the IRI. The Shah’s secret police were identifiable, whereas Islamist surveillance is everywhere, in every workplace, university and social space. And any departure from the ruling ideology is punished with arrest and incarceration as political prisoners, who are sought to be broken through rape and torture, including threats to family members, and executed in large numbers without anything resembling due process. The complete integration of the military in the form of the IRGC into both the state and the economy adds to the totalitarianism of the system.

Chafiq said that outsiders think that because there are elections, it is not a completely totalitarian system, and they also point to the presence of women in civil society, but she compares that to crediting the bacteria or virus for the body’s immune response, instead of seeing that it is women’s resistance to being shut up in the home that has allowed them to be present in civil society. 

I recently watched a very good Iranian film called ‘The Seed of the Sacred Fig,’ which is set during the Woman, Life, Freedom movement and illustrates how the system works, making even friends and family members informants. It was smuggled out of Iran, and presents a sensitive and nuanced view of a middle-class family in which the man works for the state. I would say that it portrays a state that is fascist through and through, if we abandon the overly narrow definitions of fascism that some Marxists have.

You speak strongly as a feminist against regimes like Assad’s or Khamenei’s. Why do you think parts of the left have remained silent or complicit in the face of gendered violence committed by these governments? 

The left as a whole pays more lip-service to feminism now than it did when I was young, when we got criticized for dividing the working class by raising issues like women’s equality, which they said would be handled after the revolution. I think parts of the left have genuinely moved on since then, but in a rather patchy way.

Even today, the left remains male-dominated, with male theoreticians given more importance than women who are far more impressive and innovative. For example, on the issue of domestic labour, I would say that women have made the most significant theoretical contributions, and Black women have contributed massively by introducing the notion of intersectionality, yet they are often treated as less worthy of respect than mainly white male theorists. 

Another problem is the failure to distinguish between state and people, the fear that if you criticize the state in Syria or Iran, it will be taken as a green light for your own government to bomb the people or impose sanctions that hurt them. The Assad regime systematically used rape as a weapon of war, not only against women and girls but also to a lesser degree against men and boys, but somehow talking about this was seen as asking Western governments to bomb Syria.

When Iranian women and girls burn their hijabs and chant ‘Death to the dictator,’ their willingness to risk their lives is seen as a possible sign of manipulation by ‘outsiders’. There is a failure to listen to what the oppressed people – in this case the women and girls – are actually demanding by way of solidarity: at least honest reporting on the horrors taking place, their own demands, and possibly help with self-defence. 

Finally, there is the problem of Orientalism, that affects even well-intentioned feminists in the West, who stand up for the right of Muslim women to wear the hijab in their own countries without seeing the millions of Muslim women fighting for the right not to wear the hijab, to have a choice about what they wear or don’t wear. ‘They’ are seen as not having the same desire for democratic rights  and freedom from oppression that ‘we’ take for granted. 

You point to a failure of empathy among some leftists—especially in India—to identify with democratic uprisings abroad. How much of this do you attribute to residual colonial mentalities or racialized thinking? 

The majority of socialists in India share the same dismissive – one might even say contemptuous – attitude towards democracy, and that is the main reason why they fail to identify with democratic uprisings abroad. One exception is the Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist) Liberation, which also takes the issue of democracy in India itself more seriously. It saluted the women leading the ‘Woman, Life, Freedom’ movement as torch-bearers in the struggle against theocratic tyranny, while also making it clear that they opposed Western intervention. This was the position taken by socialist feminists in India, who did their best to send messages of solidarity to the uprising.

In the West, however, I do think what I called Orientalism and what you call residual colonial mentalities or racialized thinking plays a role in the failure of socialists to empathize with democracy uprisings in other countries, especially those that were formerly colonies. They see the revolution as centered in the ‘heartlands of capitalism,’ namely the West, and what happens in our countries as being less important. Therefore the enemies of their own state, even if they are criticized as being oppressive, are not seen as their own enemies. 

This is a failure of internationalism based on a lack of understanding of capitalism as a global system. Socialism in one country or even one continent while capitalism thrives in the rest of the world is impossible – it will either be overthrown or subverted, as occurred in the Soviet Union. You won’t have a socialist revolution in the West until workers in the former colonies are ready to participate in running the global economy and government, and that won’t happen without democratic revolutions in these countries.

In your experience, how has the Indian left historically framed the concept of international solidarity? Has that framing changed with developments in Syria, Iran, or Ukraine? 

In a very general sense, the Indian left has displayed solidarity with anti-imperialist struggles by Third World countries. Where the lines are not so clear-cut – as in the case of Syria, Iran and Ukraine – many of them get confused. In Syria and Iran, for example, the claim that these states are part of an ‘Axis of Resistance’ against Israel and the US has deterred this section from offering any solidarity whatsoever to their victims in Syria, Iran and other countries, including Iraq and Lebanon.

In the case of Ukraine too, we had quite a heated debate, because this section of the left blamed the US, NATO and the Ukrainian opposition to the Russian-supported regime for the war that broke out, without seeing it as a war of re-colonisation by Russia. In such cases, there is more likely to be victim-blaming rather than solidarity with the victims. As Kavita Krishnan argues, their notion of anti-imperialism entails support for a ‘multipolar’ world, where big powers like Russia and China are free to demolish human rights and democracy in their own spheres of interest instead of being bound by these values, which are falsely claimed to be foisted on their own countries and the rest of the world by the Western powers. 

As Kavita argues, this denial of universal values – which of course have not been gifted to us by capital or Western imperialism but are being and have been fought for by the working people of the world – is a gift to authoritarian and fascist regimes. It is a form of pseudo-anti-imperialism and selective solidarity, opposing some imperialisms but not others, expressing solidarity with some victims of imperialism but not others.

There’s been a rise in right-wing authoritarianism globally, including in India. Do you think this has shifted the Indian left’s priorities inward, and if so, at what cost to international solidarity? 

You’re absolutely right about the rise in right-wing authoritarianism in India and globally, but it hasn’t necessarily shifted the priorities of the Indian left inwards. In the case of Palestine, the U-turn from newly-Independent India, which voted against the partition of Palestine, to the increasingly close relationship between the Israeli state and the current Indian regime has actually dovetailed with an increase in solidarity, because Israel supplying India with surveillance and other military and repressive technologies like Pegasus while government-linked Indian companies invest in Israel in a big way has made it easier to link the struggle against repression in India with the struggle against Israeli settler-colonialism and genocide in Palestine.

But in the case of Ukraine, whole-hearted solidarity with the beleaguered Ukrainian people has been obstructed by the belief of most of the Indian left – including even the CPI(ML)-Liberation – that a multipolar (i.e. multi-imperialist) world would make it easier to fight against fascism in India than a unipolar one, and therefore it would be better not to condemn the Russian aggression and genocide in Ukraine too vehemently. The crimes of Western imperialism have been so many and so heinous that it’s easy to sweep all other crimes under the carpet, but the correct response should be to demand accountability for those crimes as well as similar crimes by non-Western regimes.       

You’ve criticized those who defend Assad as ‘pro-Palestinian’ while ignoring his repression of Palestinians in Syria. How do you respond to people who still frame the Assad regime as part of the struggle against Zionism and U.S. imperialism?

Palestinian blogger Budour Hassan describes the bombing, starvation siege, ISIS occupation while still under siege, and total destruction of Yarmouk refugee camp – ‘the capital of the Palestinian diaspora’ – by Assad and his allies, and the emptying of other Palestinian refugee camps too. There were also thousands of Palestinians incarcerated, tortured and in most cases killed by the regime. This makes a mockery of claims that Assad was pro-Palestinian. 

It was very notable that so long as Assad was in power, on the one hand he made no moves to reclaim the Golan Heights from Israeli occupation, while on the other hand Israel targeted only Iranian and Hezbollah assets in Syria, leaving Assad’s own forces untouched. The moment the Assad regime fell, Israel expanded its occupation of Syria in the south of the country, expelling hundreds of Syrians from their homes and shooting anyone who protested. It launched a devastating campaign of aerial bombardment, wiping out the Syrian air force and military capabilities and killing many people too. These airstrikes have continued, using various pretexts.

The message is clear: Assad was no threat to the Israeli state, only after he was overthrown was a threat perceived. You have to shut your eyes to all this if you defend Assad as ‘pro-Palestinian’. 

Looking ahead, what would a consistent, democratic, and emancipatory internationalist position look like in relation to struggles in Syria, Iran, and Palestine?

To begin with, it would have to be based on knowledge of what is actually happening currently as well as the history of the struggles, countering the misleading narratives propagated by white supremacists, neo-Stalinists, Zionists, and ethno-religious nationalists of all stripes, which almost universally portray the aggressors as victims and vice versa. 

Ways would have to be found to spread this knowledge, encouraging everyone from little children to elderly people to think for themselves rather than accepting uncritically what they are told by leaders. Poetry, art, songs and other creative forms of expression can be used. I was happy to see that Iranian director Jafar Panahi’s film “It Was Just an Accident’ won the Palme d’Or at the Cannes film festival where another Iranian director, Sepideh Farsi, also screened her film ‘Put Your Soul on Your Hand and Walk’ about the life of Palestinian photojournalist Fatma Hassouna, who couldn’t attend because an Israeli airstrike killed her and nine members of her family after Farsi’s film was accepted at Cannes.

That Sepideh Farsi could combine opposition to the Islamic Republic with a tribute to a Palestinian photojournalist, and that Juliette Binoche, one of the judges, could honour both Panahi and Hassouna, was a moving example of international solidarity.  

Action may differ from one situation to another, but in every case there should be insistence on respect for human rights and democracy. In my country, Sri Lanka, Tamils had been oppressed from Independence onwards. My own family had to flee our home when I was a child because my father was Tamil.

But when the Tamil Tigers, the LTTE, started killing Sinhalese and Muslim civilians including children, as well as jailing, torturing and killing Tamil dissidents, when they tore Tamil children away from their mothers to use them as child soldiers, we Tamil socialists protested against them. I also disagreed with their basic goal of an ethnic Tamil state, because it would have been an apartheid state in which non-Tamil minorities had fewer rights or none at all. 

In a paradoxical fashion, it would have reinforced the legitimacy of the ethnic Sinhala-Buddhist state we were fighting against by accepting the legitimacy of ethnic and religious states. At the same time, we insist on due process for all those accused of terrorist crimes, with perhaps some allowance being made for those who turn to violence as a consequence of traumas inflicted on them. Non-violent action doesn’t have these ethical problems, although it is always risky in an authoritarian/fascist state.

Of course, the viewpoints of individuals participating in a resistance movement may differ from each other and often do, so it is important for those offering solidarity to listen carefully to all of them. It was extremely disturbing to hear that Syrian refugees were denied the right to speak at left meetings, for example a meeting organized by Stop the War Coalition in the UK, because their view of the Assad regime as intolerably cruel and brutal clashed with the predominant left view that there should be no action against Assad, that perhaps he was even part of the solution in the global war on terror, in this case the Islamic State. 

The actual experiences of terror raining down on civilians from Assad’s and Russia’s bombs, dissidents being tortured to death, massive displacement and so on were sought to be silenced because they were inconvenient to the preferred narrative. The same thing has happened to Iranian, Ukrainian and Russian refugees. This is not international solidarity, which should start with listening to the victims and survivors. The result has been the horrific mass graves now being uncovered in Syria, which neither world leaders nor this section of the left took any action to prevent.

Basically, we should uphold values of humanity and the rule of law in every context, without double standards or hypocrisy. International law is not perfect, but it is better than the trashing of international law by the most powerful states that is going on right now. Some socialists see it as not worth defending, but the alternative is the rule of ‘might is right,’ with the powerful, as we have seen, making deals with one another to enable them to crush weaker parties. 

You propose pursuing truth as the first step in countering authoritarianism. In an age of disinformation and “alternative facts,” what does that look like in practice, especially for activists and writers in the Global South?

Disinformation and “alternative facts” being circulated at high speed on social media has certainly made it harder to pursue the truth. In India, fact-checkers simply can’t cope with the volume of lies and obfuscations that are pouring out every minute, and even when they have proved something is fake, it has already been shared umpteen times and people continue to believe it. Of course the stories are still full of holes, and if people take the trouble to check them for internal logical consistency as well as consistency with their own lived experience, they will be able to detect their untruthfulness. But that takes work which many people are unwilling to do. 

I think we have to concentrate on challenging the dominant narratives, which are often shared between left, right and centre. For example, I can’t count the number of times I’ve heard that there was an ‘Islamic revolution’ in Iran in 1979, when there was nothing of the kind. There was a democratic revolution in 1979, and then a struggle between democratic forces and Islamist fascism. As Mansoor Hekmat puts it, 11 February 1979 was a people’s revolution which was only completely crushed by ‘an Islamic, counter-revolutionary coup d’état’ on 20 June 1981. When you look at it like that, it becomes much harder to legitimize the Islamic Republic even from a liberal point of view much less a socialist one.

Then there is the question of the origin of the Israeli state, which is popularly thought to be a result of the Holocaust, when in fact it originated in the settler-colonial, white-supremacist and Jewish-supremacist project of the Zionists back in the 19th century and entailed the destruction of the Palestinians as a people. For Western leaders and most of the media, who have colluded with the genocide in Gaza since 7 October 2023, this perspective is completely lacking. 

They have no conception of intersectionality and therefore can’t understand that members of the Jewish community can be oppressed in one relationship while being oppressors in another, so they shut their eyes to the genocide even when Israeli leaders proclaim it loud and clear and soldiers themselves circulate evidence of it. Anti-Zionist Jews have done a wonderful job making this perspective visible.

In these two cases – and many more, including Stalin’s counter-revolution in Russia – once we have succeeded in flipping the script, changing the narrative, disinformation and ‘alternative facts’ lose much of their power. 

(This interview was first published in The Fire Next Time on 2 June 2025, and is available at https://firenexttime.net/the-people-first-rohini-hensman-on-democracy-resistance-and-the-global-left/ )

References 

Chafiq, Chahla, 2022. ‘How Iran’s Theocrats Allied With – and Then Crushed – the Left,’ Jacobin. https://jacobin.com/2022/10/chahla-chafiq-iranian-left-khomeini-protests-feminism

DeCamp, David, 2025. ‘Israel is arming an ISIS-affiliated gang in Southern Gaza,’ Anti-war.com. https://news.antiwar.com/2025/06/05/israel-is-arming-an-isis-affiliated-gang-in-southern-gaza/ 

Hekmat, Mansoor, Interviewed by Radio International, 1981. ‘June 20, 1981: One of the Greatest Crimes of the 20th Century,’ Worker-Communist Party of Iran. https://wpiran.org/english/june-20-1981-one-of-the-greatest-crimes-of-the-20th-century/

Hensman, Rohini, 2018. Indefensible: Democracy, Counter-Revolution, and the Rhetoric of Anti-Imperialism, Chicago: Haymarket Books. 

Human Rights Watch, 2025. ‘Iraq: Personal Status Law Amendment Sets Back Women’s Rights.’ https://www.hrw.org/news/2025/03/10/iraq-personal-status-law-amendment-sets-back-womens-rights

Karadjis, Michael, 2025. ‘The Syrian revolution, Iran and Israel: Squaring the circle, refuting myths,’ Their Anti-imperialism and Ours. https://theirantiimperialismandours.com/2025/01/14/the-syrian-revolution-iran-and-israel-squaring-the-circle-refuting-myths/ 

Parry, Robert, 2016. ‘When Israel/Neocons Favored Iran,’ Consortium News. https://consortiumnews.com/2015/07/28/when-israelneocons-favored-iran/


 

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