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Introduction
Since
the revolutions of the eighteenth and nineteenth
centuries a steadily increasing number of social phenomena have been
justified as being democratic. Forms of democratic legitimation
range from "people's democracies" to "liberal democracies," even though
the former term is patently redundant and the latter exposes what has
been, at least historically, a contradiction. Democratic claims
cover a wide range of institutional practices: market economies are
justified in terms of consumer sovereignty, the culture industry in
terms of the democratization of culture, and corporatist forms in terms
of democratic pluralism. Yet it is not at all clear that such
legitimations, claims, and practices have very much to do with
normative democratic principles as they have been formulated in
classical and modern political theory. In the present issue of Social Research we hope to bring
some enlightenment to this rather confusing state of affairs.
In our
own supposedly democratic century, democratic theory
and the theory of democracy have not been on the level of the earlier
contributions of philosophers and social theorists which were made in
periods in which "democracy" was often a derogatory term and at best a
distant hope. We are still living off Rousseau's depiction of
direct democracy, Mill's arguments for representative democracy,
Tocqueville's defense of a plurality of democracies, and Marx's
critique of formal democracy. More recent innovations in this
respect tend to be normatively problematic. In a very real sense
the Weberian, Schumpeterian, and Luhmannian analyses of leadership and
elite democracy are rather transparent legitimations of states of
affairs in the political West that are obviously not democratic in the
light of the classics mentioned. That this is also the case of
the "new" forms of "people's democracy" in Eastern European societies
has been repeatedly documented not only by scholars and critics but
also by collective political resistance, most recently and
fundamentally by the Solidarity movement in Poland. And whereas
the early philosophical pluralists (Laski, Cole, Lindsay, et al.) were
consistent followers of the Tocquevillian inspiration, the pluralism of
academic social science from Bentley to the present derives its
conception of political bargaining from the capitalist market rather
than the parliament, and suppresses the exclusion rules that screen out
most potential constituencies in our supposedly democratic political
and intellectual marketplaces. These latter theorists never even
see the need to pretend that the internal structure of pressure groups
is, or should be, democratic.
To be
sure, critical social science from the various
tendencies of the Frankfurt School to the several approaches
represented in this issue has continued from the 1930s to the present
to analyze and criticize authoritarian political and social practices
hiding behind "democracy," from the culture industry to
corporatism. Remarkably enough, however, for the older tradition
of critical social theory, utopia was a society without legal and
political institutions. Democracy of any kind played little role
in the early Lukacs's, Gramsci's, Horkheimer's, Adorno's or even
Marcuse's conceptions of emancipation. In an almost complementary
fashion, later versions of critical theory, while generally making up
for this ethical deficit in the works of their elders, seemed to share
their aversion to articulating the meaning of democratic possibilities
beyond the present. In Habermas's work these are articulated only
at the highest levels of abstraction; in the works of Claus Offe, until
very recently, the incognito of democratic theory has been ever more
pronounced. And while the philosophies of Arendt, Castoriadis,
Lefort, and Wollin each in its own way restores the normative meaning
of democracy, these contributions have hardly taken into account the
complexities of contemporary institutionalization as revealed by social
science. Democratic theory in the normative sense and empirical
analytical theory of democracy proceed without any awareness of each
other today, with a consequent opening of an immense gap between these
approaches which mistakenly consider one another as fluffy dreaming and
as technocratic backsliding, respectively.
The
situation is especially serious because contemporary
social movements in East and West have once again put democracy or
democratization on their banners. There can be no doubt about the
sincerity of the Polish democratic movement to gradually democratize
all spheres of life, or that of the Western feminist, peace, and
ecology movements and various citizen initiatives to democratize
spheres that have been assigned variously to the preserves of
traditional, military, or technocratic legitimacy. In East and
West the project of taking democracy beyond the place where Marx has
indicated it cannot go without total revolution--that is, the factory
door--has been repeatedly revived. And yet, in spite of the
efforts of theorists such as Kuron, Michnik, Gorz, and Touraine, to
mention only a few in the East and West, these movements have adopted
neither adequate strategies required for democratization nor coherent
views of what would constitute a truly significant normative gain in
democracy. Their utilization of expert opinion represents the
present maturity of modern movements, capable of thematizing their own
self-limitation, but as long as the experts themselves oscillate
between strategic minimalism supposedly imposed by the requirements of
a truly scientific procedure and romantic visions of total
democratization and total rupture, their advice cannot be adequate to
the theoretical needs of activists in social movements.
We
cannot claim that the contributors to this issue of Social Research, individually or
together, have already satisfied the stringent demands articulated
here. Yet each in his own way begins to do a part of the job
ahead. In his study, Claus Offe raises the all-important question
of majority rule, which in light of contemporary social movements can
no longer automatically legitimate processes of decision-making in the
field between modern states and modern societies. Offe examines
in particular the alternative democratic claims of central legislatures
and localities; and the paradoxes of the dogmatic stress on majority
rule in relation to the multiplicity of forms of conflict in
contemporary societies. Peter Murphy takes up the question of the
normative foundations of democratic theory, and reconstructs on the
basis of a thorough examination of both contemporary debates in ethics
and historical problems of moral development the contribution of Jurgen
Habermas to a communicative ethics. Arthur Jacobson confronts the
old issue of the philosophical pluralists from Gierke and Maitland to
Laski concerning the devolution of state sovereignty to social groups,
and argues with admirable precision that the Anglo-American law of
associations implies a type of assumption of public powers by private
entities that perforce displaces the issue of democratization from the
state to society. Manfred Stanley shows how democratic
deliberation can pose normative alternatives to the institutional
principles of therapy, technology, and consumerism. Civic
rhetoric and the public, in the classical sense, he maintains, can
provide a grounded alternative to the instrumental rationality of
existing institutional practices. Philippe Schmitter investigates
the consequence for democratic theory and practice of the new
corporatism and traces not only the most likely evolution of
"democratic" theory as a form of justification of existing structures
of power but also seeks to identify the agents and processes that might
contribute to the democratization
of both corporatist arrangements and of parts of social reality outside
these. Finally, Jose Casanova, strongly influenced both by
contemporary versions of communicative ethics and by a social-science
literature on the problems of the transition from authoritarian to
democratic forms of rule, traces one such transition in a case study of
recent Spanish development. In the process he throws a good deal
of light on the relationship between technocratic and administrative
rationalization and political modernization in the sense of
democratization. While Schmitter's and Offe's studies are of
great relevance to the study of the social and intellectual dynamics of
contemporary formal democracies, Casanova's points to some rather
general problems faced by those seeking to introduce even formal
democracy under authoritarian regimes.
Many
topics planned for this issue regrettably are not
explored because of problems of time and space. We requested
contributions on "planning, market and workers' control," for example,
as well as on "democracy, mass society and mass culture." Though
the contributions of Schmitter and Stanley respectively shed light on
these problems, clearly the renewed interest in democracy requires more
critical inquiry than is presented here.
In
the early days of the University in Exile of the New School
for Social Research (presently the Graduate Faculty of Political and
Social Science) democracy was the central problem area, both scholarly
and political. In the shadow of Nazi Germany, the exiles met at
their General Seminar in 1935-36 to explore relevant themes.
Their primary concerns were indicated by the title of the publication
of their results, Political
and
Economic Democracy (edited by Max
Ascoli and Fritz Lehman; New
York, W. W. Norton, 1937). Almost fifty years later our volume
presents a shift of concern toward the relationship between the
democratic state and democratic society. This shift is embedded
in a set of problems which have emerged from the struggles for
democracy and democratization in present-day Western and Eastern
Europe, the United States, and Latin America. There is a genuine
change in contemporary emphasis from the 1930s but also from the
1960s. We do not pretend that we safely turn to new areas because
the earlier problems have been solved. On the contrary, all
the previous questions remain open and unanswered, to be addressed by
informed theorists and citizens.
Andrew Arato
Jeffrey Goldfarb
Guest Editors
Emil
Oestereicher 1936-1983
Emil Oestereicher died in his sleep in the early
morning
hours of October 15, 1983, at the age of
47. He was one of those people whose lives have the character of
legend--not only because of his living experience but because he was
a man of deceptive surfaces and profound paradoxes. Emil
attracted people because each saw in him some aspect of his own
humanity and because of his universal sympathies and his empathy.
If he wasn't quite capable of saying that Bela Kun was an essentially
good human being (in that Hungarian-American accent of his and with
that twinkling eye) who had had a bad mother, he was capable of
forgiving his enemies with a shrug and a smile. In the end, he
had no enemies. Hundreds of people appeared at his funeral,
somber, some in tears, all remembering what so many had taken for
granted--his resilience, his profane attitude toward all forms of
domination, legitimate or otherwise.
To
give a coherent, not merely a chronological, account of
Emil's life is perhaps impossible. Like the primitive image of
the Trickster, he had enormous energy and many selves. He was a
Good Soldier Schweik of an academic--discharging his duties with
unassailable regularity while dismantling in the classroom the
structures of oppression.
For
Emil, born on March 4, 1936, to a middle-class Jewish
family in Budapest, had grown up in a kind of agony. His father
was executed by the Nazis, and his own life--along with those of a
great many other helpless people--had been saved when he was three
years old by a group of nuns in a conventual hospital. When the
Nazis came, machine-gunning the refugees at random, he was the lone
survivor, having, ironically enough, been thrust into a safe place by a
German officer. Emil's irony, in maturity, ran deep.
During
the war, he lost grandparents, aunts, uncles, and
cousins. There is, of course, much more to be said about how he
managed to survive with his mother during those years--how after the
defeat of the Nazis and under the shadow of Soviet imperialism he
joined a group of socialists trying to break out of the country and go
to Israel, and how in 1956, in the face of yet another massacre,
he finally managed to get a ticket from Austria to the United States.
His
beloved son, Carl, tells a story about the formation of
his father's views while still a child, which those of us who knew Emil
to one degree or another can fully understand: "... in a theater of
dwarfs in Budapest that his mother used to take him to, on one occasion
all the midgets came out on stage waving red flags and singing
communist songs and throwing propaganda pamphlets into the crowd--my
father was only a child then but he found it extremely funny."
And, one might add, Emil always had the courage never to stop laughing
at the morbid absurdities of the modern world.
He
experienced immigrant hard times in the United
States. He worked in a lamp factory and attended the University
of Illinois from 1957 to 1968, building on a bachelor's degree in
history and politics to the master's and doctorate in sociology.
Because of his obstreperous and obvious brilliance, about which many
stories are told, he was awarded fellowships and scholarships, along
with predoctoral instructorships, making it feasible for him to finish
his studies. By the time he received his Ph.D. in 1968, he had
become a mordant and astonishingly well-informed critic of
Western civilization, and a skeptic concerning human motives and
possibilities in the mass.
But
when it came to personal behavior, he was gentle and
loving. Women appreciated his smiling unforced manner--and in
this respect, he reminded one of Blake's angel. One could trust
Emil with the most devastating confidences and never receive a harsh
word in return. Yet this paradoxical Trickster of a man, whose
heart had been broken, was also capable of a certain cynicism.
This was one of the prices he paid for accommodation to a world he
despised and for which he had little hope.
Yet he
also put his nimble and sophisticated mind to creative
and intellectual use. He wrote a number of essays--one of which
was published in this journal--reflecting as much about his capacity to
fit into the academic picture as it did about his understanding of the
subject involved. That is to say, Emil knew how to compromise
but, unlike so many academics, he never deceived himself about what he
was doing. His forte was continental critical sociology with a
strong Marxist-humanist flavor. Thus, as he interpreted it, the
New School, that house of exiles, was precisely to his taste.
Unfortunately,
his brilliant career as a teacher in the
Graduate Faculty from 1969 to 1974 did not result (through no fault of
his) in a tenured position. Although he went on to tenure and a
chairmanship at Richmond College of the City University of New York,
the New School remained his intellectual home. From 1974 to the
present, he taught as an adjunct in the sociology department of the New
School, attracting large numbers of students.
His
Buddha-like smile and his explosive energy remained almost
as familiar after he became an adjunct (while retaining his
professorship
at CUNY) as it had been during his years as a regular faculty
member. His lecturing remained as powerful as ever. He was
a masterful rhetorician finding his way skillfully through a rich
texture of free associations. He electrified students. If
he was tired, his voice would rise to a high and constant pitch that
could be heard through the walls of adjoining classrooms. Yet he
never took himself seriously--and remained humble in the company of
those he respected. He respected very few intellectuals, and most
of those were among his prized ancestors--Marx, Lukacs, Piaget.
After
a broken marriage which grieved him more than he ever
admitted, and despite his involvement with Harrington's socialist
party, his great passion was reserved for his son, Carl. If one
were to make the effort to sum up Emil's short life, one would have to
focus on his relationship to Carl and his concern for his son's
well-being both now and in the future. This in itself was a
startling contradiction to his apparent skepticism.
The
devotion of this presumably secular man was complete--in
this mobile society, not a sufficient trait but a necessary one and
very rare. When I think of Emil with his great knowledge and
indomitable honor, I think of him as a child in Budapest--to which he
periodically returned in later life to visit a brother, his one
surviving relative.
And
I remember his courage in demystifying those refugees who
made a living out of bitterness while overlooking the catastrophic
faults in this society to which they had been able to flee.
Stanley Diamond
This
issue of Social Research is
dedicated to Emil Oestereicher.
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