Michael Walzer: Reading the Signs in the Streets with Marshall Berman
Marshall Berman, urban theorist and Marxist cultural critic, was known for his lyrical defence of modernism, his love affair with Times Square, his writing on everything from gentrification to 60s counter-culture, and his groundbreaking work on modernity, All That Is Solid Melts into Air.
Completed just before his death in 2013,Ā Modernism in the Streets: A Life and Times in Essays, is Bermanās intellectual autobiography; including early essays on the radical ā60s, New York City, literary figures from Kafka to Pamuk, and lateR essays on rock, hip hop, and gentrification. This book, along with all our books by Marshall Berman, are 40% off until April 29.
This essay was delivered as a talkĀ atĀ āModernism in the Streets: Theory, Practice, and the Marshall Berman Archivesā, on March 28, at Columbia University.Ā
I will began by talking about Marshall as a political theorist, but my real subject is how he became something elseāand, I am inclined to think, something better.
His first book,Ā The Politics of Authenticity, came out of his Harvard dissertation, and it was, at least in appearance, a conventional exercise in political theory. It was published in 1970 in a short-lived series that I edited for Atheneum. My aim in the series was to publish books that looked like conventional political theory but were, first of all, more accessible to the āgeneral readerā than most academic books and, second, more interesting than most academic books.Ā The Politics of AuthenticityĀ fit both aims very nicely; it is the only one of the books in the series that I actually remember. Henry Pachter, from theĀ DissentĀ editorial board, called it a political theory for the new left (Pachter hated the new left but had a soft spot for Marshall). A political theory for the new left: this made the book unconventionally interesting, and Marshallās styleāfrom the beginning, he was a writerāmade it unusually accessible.
The book was, officially, a study of Montesquieu and Rousseau, mostly Rousseau. Thatās what we did in those days: we expressed our own views by reading and interpreting books in the political theory canon. We didnāt say what we thought directly; we didnāt speak in our own voice. Marshallās voice came through pretty clearly, but still, he was reading Rousseau, while what he wanted, though perhaps he didnāt know it yet, was to write books whose readers would be reading Berman.
He did write books like that, and reading Berman became something that smart people did here at home and also abroadāespecially in Brazil, for reasons Marshall was never able to explain to me, even after his triumphal visits there. So how was he able to say what he wanted to say in his own voice, without indirection? I think that he got there through reading Marx, and thatās a curious story. He could have ended up writing interpretations of Marxās early Economic-Philosophical manuscripts, which were discovered with great excitement in the 1950s; a couple of his essays suggest a project of that sort. Certainly, he never lost the sense that Marxās critique of alienation pointed toward Bermanās defense of authenticity. But it really wasnāt the early Marx that inspired him; it was the Marx of theĀ Manifesto. My idea isāit may be wrong; students of the archive will one day tell us about thatāthat the Marx of theĀ ManifestoĀ freed Marshall from reading Marx and also freed him from conventional political theory.
The part of theĀ ManifestoĀ that Marshall wrote about, with a wonderfully lively enthusiasm, was Marxās hymn to the bourgeoisie, the creators of the modern world. Itās a memorable section of theĀ Manifesto; you will all remember it (or remember Marshallās quotations from it). The bourgeoisie were the first internationalists; they broke down all the Chinese walls; they called into question all the religious dogmas; they invented the industrial system; they fostered an unprecedented productivity; they challenged the feudal hierarchy; they built the modern city; they turned everything solid into air. Modernity is their creation. So, without ever forgetting the dark side of bourgeois life, Marshall became a defender of the bourgeoisie. Memorably, inĀ All That Is Solid, he condemned Herzenās pious wish: āGod save Russia from the bourgeoisie!ā And instead, he endorsed the view of the writer he called the āplebian Belinsky,ā who argued that āthe internal process of civil development in Russia will not start untilĀ . . .Ā the Russian gentry has been transformed into a bourgeoisie.ā
That bourgeois-promoted āprocess of civil developmentā is modernity, which is a process forever unfinished, always unsettling. It was from reading Marx on the bourgeoisie that Marshall discovered his own subject, which was not Marx, but rather the world Marx first described, where everything solid melts. Marshall wrote about the world that the bourgeoisie made with love. If Marx was willing to write a hymn, Marshall would write a symphony. But he never forgot that this same bourgeois world required the most severe criticism. The great literature of modernity, he thought, had to be both a celebration and a critique, a yes and a no. Marshallās own no is very powerful, but his yes is more powerful. Above all, he said yes to the modern city, to the city streets, and to the people in the streets.
Perhaps the best way to grasp the character of Marshallās yes is to read his list of the people he was writing against. This is fromĀ All That Is Solid: āFor the visionaries of cultural despair, from T.E. Hulme and Ezra Pound and Eliot and Ortega, onward to Ellul and Foucault, Arendt and Marcuse, all of modern life seems uniformly hollow, sterile, flat,Ā āone-dimensional,ā empty of human possibilities; anything that looks or feels like freedom or beauty is really only a screen for more profound enslavement and horror.ā Of course, all these writers were moderns, and they came from the left as well as from the right. But Marshall thought that their description of modern life was terribly wrongāone-sided, obviously, the no without the yes, but not only one-sided. It represented a radical failure of engagement.
One of the best essays Marshall ever wrote illustrates this failure; itāsĀ his replyĀ to Perry Andersonās savage review ofĀ All That Is Solid; its title: āSigns in the Street.ā The piece, originally fromĀ New Left Review, is reprinted inĀ Adventures in MarxismĀ and again in the new collection,Ā Modernism in the Streets. Reading it, I almost felt sorry for Perry Anderson. Toward the end of the essay, Marshall explains that he has āwritten so much about ordinary people and everyday life in the streetsā because āAndersonās vision is so remote from them.ā So it is, still is, and the vision of many academic Marxists is similarly remote. The last line in Marshallās essay summarizes his new position: āReadingĀ CapitalĀ wonāt help us if we donāt also know how to read the signs in the streets.ā Reading the signs: thatās Marshallās description of the intellectual engagement he came to exemplify.
So this was his subject: the New York streets, of course, but also the streets of Paris and St. Petersburg, where he read the signs by reading the chroniclers of urban life, Balzac, Baudelaire, and Benjamin; Pushkin, Gogol, Biely, and Mandelstam. This wasnāt political theory anymore; Marshall was still in the academy, loyal to his students, but so far as academic discipline was concerned, he was a free spiritāas if to prove thatĀ stadtluft macht frei; the air of the city made Marshall free. He was beyond any of the disciplines.
Here is Marshallās own description of what became his life project, from the reply to Anderson.Ā All that is Solid, he writes, has
a much thicker density and a richer atmosphere than my earlier work. This is because Iāve tried increasingly to situate my exploration of the modern self within the social contexts in which all modern selves come to be. Iām writing more about the environments and public spaces that are available to modern people, and the ones they create, and the ways they act and interact in those spaces in the attempt to make themselves at home. Iām emphasizing the modes of modernism that seek to take over or remake public space, to appropriate and transform it in the name of the people who are its public.
Those people include members of every social class, though Marshall was always insistent on recognizing the workers who werenāt immediately visible on the boulevards, on Nevsky Prospect, for example, though they would one day arrive there. The workers, the poor, even the desperately poor appear often in Marshallās pages but never in either of their stereotypical left versions: they are not the victims of capitalist exploitation (though Marshall certainly thought they were exploited) and they are not the āpositive heroesā of socialist realism, the militant members of a revolutionary class on the road to state power (though he did believe that they could ātake over and remake public spaceā). They are the ordinary people that you see, but maybe donāt notice, in the streets or on the subway every day.
The last piece (I think) that Marshall wrote aboutĀ CapitalĀ is called āThe People inĀ Capital.ā Itās not about the declining rate of profit. The main part of the reply to Anderson is similarly a list of people that Marshall had encountered in New Yorkāthe kind of men and women with whom, he thought, too many modern intellectuals refuse to engage, the invisible ones who make no appearance in conventional academic theories. The aim of the list is to show that āthe people arenāt giving up; modernity is alive and well.ā I hope thatās right; reading Berman, I believe it.
What the Marshall Berman archive will do is to keep its visitors aware of what it means to be alive in modernity.
Michael WalzerĀ is an emeritus editor ofĀ Dissent.
Modernism in the StreetsĀ and all available books by Marshall Berman are 40% off until Saturday April 29th at midnight UTC. ClickĀ hereĀ to activate your 40% discount.