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| Pix credit here: Unite, Work Hard for China's Prosperity to Speed Up the Struggle to Realize the 4 Modernizations |
Versión en español
Chinese Marxist-Leninism has never strayed far from one of its key core organizing premises--modernization. This is modernization--development of a nation's productive forces-- that understands production in a comprehensive way. It touches not just on economic development, but also social, cultural, religious, political, etc. All of the productive forces of a nation must be modernized to a quite specific purpose--to guide the nation toward an efficient and effective positive progress along a socialist path toward the realization of a communist society, a goal reached in the perfection of all productive forces as an in themselves. It is at this stage of development that the state would wither, the divide between capital and labor would become irrelevant, and permanent stability could be achieved.
It is at this point that Leninism--as a very specific form of vanguardism tied to the trajectories of Marxist progressivism--becomes a critical element in the management and guidance of social progress through the necessary stages of collective evolution toward that communist ideal state. Within the Russian context (then Soviet and in variation Marxist-Leninist governance circles), Leninist vanguardism progressed from a state of vanguardist professional revolutionaries (Lenin's What is to be Done?, 1902), to the managers of social, political. economic, cultural, etc. transformation that, at the hands of this Communist vanguard of leading social forces, could efficiently and deliberately guide the nation through the stages of its historical evolution to more efficiently reach the end of the socialist path initially within the structures of a dictatorship of the proletariat
"The Party is the highest form of organisation of the proletariat. The
Party is the principle guiding force within the class of the
proletarians and among the organisations of that class. But it does not
by any means follow from this that the Party can be regarded as an end
in itself, as a self-sufficient force. The Party is not only the highest
form of class association of the proletarians; it is at the same time
an instrument in the hands of the proletariat for achieving the dictatorship, when that has not yet been achieved and for consolidating and expanding the dictatorship when it has already been achieved. "(Josef Stalin, Foundations of Leninism, 1924 Part VIII).
Marx had suggested something like an inevitable organic progress in that respect; and he might have considered that Germany and the U.K. were, as the most advanced societies of the day, closer to reaching that goal. Lenin and then Mao Zedong are representative types for schools of thought that were built on a presumption that even societies stuck in much earlier stages of development could be scientifically managed forward in ways that substantially compressed the time to realization of the communist goal and thus the overall minimization of the suffering to be endured over a longer time period of development in getting there. Thus Marxist historical progression operates as an inevitable background text in liberal democracies, perhaps enhanced or constraint by its own vanguardist structures. Marxist Leninists rejected this idea in its Soviet phase (Josef Stalin, Foundations of Leninism, 1924, contextualizing Marxism within the stage of the historical development of Europe in the middle 19th century; a discursive approach that finds its way in a differently elaborated form within Chinese Marxist-Leninism); in Marxist States Leninism operates as the driver and guide, operating consciously and actively on the theoretical inevitabilities of Marxist predictive trajectories (in both cases the emerge of a communist society in which labor and capital, as traditional objects and subjects, become irrelevant) (For one version of the structuring of those debates, see, Leszek Kolakowski, Main Currents of Marxism (first published OUP, 1978).
For the Soviets, at least, "Leninism is a school of theory and practice which trains a special type
of Party and state worker, creates a special Leninist style in work. . . It has two specific features :a) Russian revolutionary sweep and b) American efficiency" (Josef Stalin,
Foundations of Leninism, , part IX). But it was more than that, in a sense, Stalin carried over the kernel of the definition of Leninism from the 1924 Foundations into the
On the Problems of Leninism (English version, 1954): "Leninism is the theory and tactics of the proletarian revolution in general, the theory and tactics of the dictatorship of the proletariat in particular (id., p. 149; and the structural framework of the dictatorship of the proletariat was "the political form, so long sought and finally discovered,
within the framework of which the economic emancipation of the
proletariat, the complete victory of socialism, must be accomplished"
Foundations of Leninism, part IV)). That combines the normative goals of what started out as an end point--the dictatorship of the proletariat as the predicate for a global proletarian revolution which would create the conditions in which communism might be realized (until then both dictatorship and socialism with a purpose). It also required an organization through which this would be realized--the professional revolutionaries transformed into the incarnation of the proletariat, the relationship among which would be based, eventually in China, on the mass line and the principle of democratic dictatorship.
In contrast, for emerging 19th and 20th century non-Soviet and post-Soviet and non-Marxist Leninism, the revolution IS American efficiency, one that required no ultimate objective other than the fulfillment of its highest forms of expression, guided by the vanguard built to facilitate those ends, like those
around which Marxist realization of the perfection of the human
condition might be realized, but here in whatever form might yet be
revealed. That also placed development/modernization at the center of the project of the vanguard--but the point of value creation and of assessment would be different. And its techniques would reflect that foundational difference--markets versus planning; regulated fields of autonomy versus control, etc. But at the center--modernization and the striving toward whatever was conceived within the cognitive cages of each of these life-worlds, as perfection. See also my discussion (1) The
American Leninist-Brain Trust Republic: Text of President Trump's
Executive Order, "Launching the Genesis Mission," and the Press Release
"President Trump Launches the Genesis Mission to Accelerate AI for
Scientific Discovery"; and (2) Brief Reflections on Rahm Emanuel, "Trump's Research Cuts Play Into China's Hands".
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| Pix credit here (1st Ann. Prolet. Victory) |
Central to all of this was modernization--societal advancement or development in a comprehensive way. But of course, there are many routes that can be understood as Socialist Paths, each produced its own orthodoxy (eg, Josef Stalin,
Problems of Leninism, 1958, Cf.
here); and some of them appeared to require a certain ruthlessness either in managing productive forces (especially human productive forces) or in the fight against what might be identified as reactionary, enemy and threatening forces, foreign and domestic (on the Soviet side, e.g., Arthur Koestler,
Darkness at Noon (1941); Aleksander Solzhenitsyn,
The First Circle (1954); on the Chinese side perhaps among others Mao Zedong,
On the Peoples' Democratic Dictatorship, 1949). It needed its own narrative (Leon Trotsky,
The Russian Revolution, 1932). That also produced a certain level of systemic corruption (on the Soviet side Leon Trotsky,
The Revolution Betrayed (1936); and Deng Xiaoping's
On Opposing Wrong Ideological Tendencies, 1981). It it also resulted in quite violent and ruthless disputes among factions of the Leninist vanguard that often ended in blood. . . lots of blood (on the Soviet side, e.g., Leon Trotsky,
Stalin: An Appraisal of the Man and his Influence, 1941, pp 407 et seq.; but see
here for a 1940s apologia). All of these affected modernization as well--from its receipt in the context of Western penetration in the 18th and 19th centuries, through the efforts of Chinese Leninist to deploy Western know how but to Marxist, Chinese Marxist, effect--de-naturing Western know-how and investing it wit proper Socialist characteristics.
In China, the idea that modernization does not mean “Westernization” long predates the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). “Chinese substance, Western application” (中体西用) was the slogan of reform-minded intellectuals after the defeat in the Opium Wars. Its essence has been carried on by the CCP whose leaders have emphasized that China will not pursue a “Western-style” but a “Chinese-style modernization” (中国式现代化). One that modernizes industry, agriculture, army and science and technology – but does not include political liberalization or democracy. The latter, the CCP believes, has led to social conflict within Western societies – something that China can only avoid through the leadership of the CCP and socialist modernization (社会主义现代化). (China Media Project; Modernization)
Assuming a unified Marxist Leninist Vanguard, and assuming stability and consensus about the Socialist Path, and assuming discussion at a purely theoretical level, then, what does change from one stage of China's historical development to another, as committed Chinese Leninist patriots would say, is the content and focus of modernization. That has been the basis on which the theorization of modernization and its relationship to the Socialist Path, and the constitution of the political economic model under the leadership and guidance of the Communist Party has developed since the Cultural Revolution in a more of less stable way. But what gets lost in all of this, especially the detail of crafting an apparatus through which the comprehensive process of modernization might be achieved to bring the backward forward, is the essential alignment of modernization as the meta-norm within which Marxist scientific and deterministic aspirationalism, the possibility of accelerating Marxist progress, and the role of a Leninist vanguard constituted and directed toward that effort, around which the institutions of State and Party, and its normative core are manifested and shaped.
Modernization, then, is not merely the object and the forms of the Socialist Path (toward the establishment of a communist society, the context of which changes during the stages of historical development and the character of each stage's general contradiction); it is both the object (manifestation) and the signification (the context in which meaning becomes meaningful) of both the initial institutional context f the post-revolutionary context of the dictatorship of the proletariat (now the people's democratic dictatorship) and of the vanguard party as the essence/incarnation and leader/guide of this objectives based mandate toward its (unavoidable per Marx) goal. Modernization (as development) assumes a critical role in non-Marxist and non-Marxist-Leninist systems overseen or guided through some form of vanguardist architecture; but the goals as articulated are different and the means for its realization much more fundamentally incompatible with Marxist-Leninist modernization--in theory at east, though there will be substantial points of functional convergence as to effect (for a comparative analysis on functional/historical frameworks from a Chinese perspective, see Guiguo Wang, The Right to Development: Contributions of the New Haven School of Jurisprudence and Chinese Traditional Culture, Yale J. Int'l L. (2024); for an internationalist Global South position, see here; the U.N. perspective here; and here. And all of this, of course, understanding modernization in its post-global sense: development of a nation's productive forces, one that touches not just on economic
development, but also social, cultural, religious, political, virtual and every other form of object/process producing consequences for the collective undertaking modernization.
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| Pix credit here (2024) |
Versión en españolIt is with this background firmly in mind that one might approach The Communist Party's current teaching on socialist modernization, 从世界历史纵深把握中国式现代化的时代价值 [Grasping the Contemporary Value of Chinese Modernization from the Depth of World History] It appeared in “人民要论” [People's Key Essays], a core column of the People's Daily Theoretical Edition, which focuses on contemporary and important major theoretical and practical issues, expressing the Communist Party's position in a way that is relevant to study by the people. Its author, Zhang Guanzi [张冠梓], is the current Director of the Institute of Chinese Modernization at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. Its essence remains fundamentally aligned with the pronouncement of the 1978 poster reproduced above: 团结一致奋发图强为加速实现四个现代化而奋斗 [Unite, work hard for the prosperity of the country, to speed up the struggle to realize the Four Modernizations].
The entirety of the argument is laid out in the first paragraph of the essay:
实现现代化是世界发展的历史潮流,是各国人民的共同向往。习近平总书记指出:“实现现代化是世界各国不可剥夺的权利”“一个国家走向现代化,既要遵循现代化的一般规律,更要符合本国实际、具有本国特色”。当今世界百年未有之大变局加速演进,国际力量对比深刻调整。西方现代化模式的局限与弊端日益凸显,世界迫切呼唤新的现代化路径。作为一种全新的现代化模式,中国式现代化打破了“现代化=西方化”的迷思,为世界现代化提供了新方案。深刻认识世界现代化的历史进程和中国式现代化的世界意义,有助于我们从世界历史纵深把握中国式现代化的时代价值,更加自觉、更加自信地推进和拓展中国式现代化。[Achieving modernization is a historical trend in global development and a shared aspiration of peoples worldwide. General Secretary Xi Jinping has pointed out: "Achieving modernization is an inalienable right of all countries in the world." He further noted: "As a country pursues modernization, it must follow the general laws of modernization while, more importantly, conforming to its own national realities and possessing its own distinctive characteristics." In today's world, the "profound changes unseen in a century" are accelerating in their evolution, and the global balance of power is undergoing deep adjustments. The limitations and drawbacks of the Western model of modernization are becoming increasingly evident, and the world is urgently calling for a new path to modernization. As a brand-new model of modernization, Chinese modernization shatters the myth that "modernization equals Westernization," offering a new solution for global modernization. A profound understanding of the historical trajectory of global modernization—as well as the global significance of Chinese modernization—enables us to grasp the contemporary value of Chinese modernization from the deep perspective of world history, thereby allowing us to advance and expand Chinese modernization with greater consciousness and confidence.] (从世界历史纵深把握中国式现代化的时代价值)
Recast within the structures developed above, tis argument might be understood as this; (1) modernization is inevitable and embedded in the collective human condition; (2) modernization has assumed the character of a right, in the language of modernity and that of the collective of States; (3) modernization is not merely a movement; there is a science to modernization, a rule system to which conformity is required if progress, measured against the premises and values of modernization so conceived, is to be achieved; (4) the "general laws" of modernization may be realized differently as a function of the characteristics of the collective to which it is applied (many paths toward the same place); (5) the modernization trend has intensified as the (in the Marxist Leninist conception of progress from Soviet times, but also see Rosa Luxembourg) for of imperialism (generally amalgamated as "the West") continue their decline and drown in their own corrupting contradictions; (6) the Chinese modernization path is better aligned with the times, especially if it is toward the realization of a communist society that a collective aspires; and (7) the inevitable trajectories of the forward movement of stages in historical development (another though meta-form of modernization) reveal that the Chinese path is the better one.
The rest is intensely interesting detail.
The Essay starts with the principle of leapfrogging, the realization of which is made more efficient by an attuned Leninist vanguard. The Essay notes that though much of the contemporary character of modernization is marbled with and reflects the normative and cultural context of Western developed states, "it is imperative to recognize profoundly that numerous civilizations across the globe have all made significant contributions to the genesis and advancement of the global modernization process" [然而必须深刻认识到,全球各地众多文明对孕育和推动世界现代化进程都作出了重要贡献。] (从世界历史纵深把握中国式现代化的时代价值) That is an important stage setting for the premise that there are multiple pathways toward modernization. But the argument runs deeper. First it suggests that there is no such thing as a sui generis development of Western modernization. "西方的现代化不是在真空中孤立完成的内生演进,而是深深植根于全球文明的交流网络。[Western modernization was not an endogenous evolution accomplished in isolation within a vacuum; rather, it was deeply rooted in a global network of civilizational exchange.].(从世界历史纵深把握中国式现代化的时代价值). Second, it suggests that "the global modernization process was not a unidirectional diffusion driven by a "Eurocentric" perspective." []世界现代化进程也不是单向的“欧洲中心论”式的扩散。(Id.). Here Chinese Chinese Marxist-Leninists modernize and contextualize Marx in a way that parallels a similar effort by Stalinist-Marxist Leninists in Europe but to different effect.
Marx and Engels did not hesitate to lavish praise upon the elevation of productive forces under capitalism and the role it played in forging a global market. At the same time, it must be recognized that within this process, the non-Western world—encompassing Asia, Africa, and Latin America—was not merely a passive recipient; rather, by virtue of their vast markets and abundant resources, these regions became integral links in the global division of labor, irreversibly swept up into and integrated within the magnificent tide of global modernization. [马克思、恩格斯毫不吝啬地盛赞资本主义生产力水平的提升及其推动世界市场形成的作用。同时要看到,在这一进程中,亚非拉等非西方世界并非单纯的被动接受者,而是以庞大的市场、丰富的资源成为全球分工体系的重要一环,不可逆转地被卷入并融入了波澜壮阔的世界现代化大潮之中。] (从世界历史纵深把握中国式现代化的时代价值).
This premise then serves as a foundation for the leapfrogging argument extracted by the author from Marx: "马克思对人类社会发展普遍规律进行深刻洞察,指出东方社会“有可能不通过资本主义制度的卡夫丁峡谷,而占有资本主义制度所创造的一切积极的成果”,从而加速历史进程。" [Through profound insights into the universal laws governing the development of human society, Karl Marx noted that Eastern societies possessed the "possibility of appropriating all the positive results created by the capitalist system without passing through the Caudine Forks of the capitalist system itself," thereby accelerating the historical process. ] (Id.) The notion ties modernization to the essential value of a Marxist Leninist vanguard who is capable of guiding this leapfrogging, and as a consequence, of shortening the time and increasing the intensity of appropriate modernization without the pain of the traditional movement toward stages of historical development.
The reference to the Caudine Forks is probably the most semiotically pregnant phrases of the essay, and one the meaning of which permeates the entirety of the essay and of the larger engagement of and with modernization. " For some traditionally educated Westerners, at least, Caudine Forks" (
Furculae Caudinae) is understood as a reference to a particularly humiliating defeat of Roman Republican forces at the hands of the Samnites. Taken from the account in
Livy, it has come to refer to a defeat requiring the loser to accept shameful, unavoidable terms, one associated with the performance of surrender before the victorious enemy. It signifies both entrapment (no way out of the Valley) and humiliating terms of surrender (in this case walking under the the "yoke" of a superior enemy. At first blush that suggests both the avoidance of the 19th century disasters of the late Qing but also the avoidance of national humiliation and acceptance of foreign terms. But
Livy (history of Rome Book 9), also had a deeper moral in mind. The Samnites paid an enormous price for the humiliation--eventually being defeated by and incorporated into the Roman Republic. That is the positive lesson for the losers and the value of accepting a defeat that preserves one's capacity. But the other lesson was for the Samnites--they had been advised either to allow the Roman army to proceed unmolested, or to slaughter them all. The former would have gained the friendship of the Roman Republic; the latter would have weakened them enough that they would not pose a threat. Having taken neither approach, the Samites eventually were eventually destroyed--a subtle message to the West.
From here the necessary conclusions and insights may be drawn. Western modernization is merely one path toward development. But it is path dependent. "
Institutionally speaking, Western modernization is a form of modernization realized under a capitalist system, driven at its core by the ceaseless accumulation and expansion of capital." [从制度上看,西方现代化是资本主义制度下的现代化,核心驱动力是资本的无限增殖与扩张] (
从世界历史纵深把握中国式现代化的时代价值). Though wildly successful its adaptation poses problems for other cultures/civilizations that do not share the ordering premises of that context--and it is especially irrelevant--and corrupting--for Marxist Leninist systems of modernization, or at least to systems still committed as much to their Marxism as they are to the forms of Leninism that are adapt toward the realization of Marxist goals. That point is then elaborated by Zhang Guanzi in a summary of the traditional Marxist critique of capitalist modernization with substantial though transformed echoes of the old Soviet-Classical Maoist class struggle. But those echoes must now be bent to the current general contradiction: "the tension between unbalanced and inadequate development and the people's ever-growing needs for a better life," with respect to which one might note Slavoj Zizek's Introduction to the English Translation of
Mao Zedong's On Practice and COntradiction (Verso, 2007). The general contradiction of a stage of historical development can as has been evident during the leadership of General Secretary Xi, have profound effects on the approach to and implementation of modernization strategies in a Marxist-Leninist system. (see, e.g.,
The
3rd Plenum Official Gloss--习近平:关于《中共中央关于进一步全面深化改革、推进中国式现代化的决定》的说明 [Xi
Jinping: Explanation on the "Decision of the CPC Central Committee on
Further Comprehensively Deepening Reforms and Promoting Chinese-style
Modernization"]).
In the section of the essay that follows, 中国式现代化实现了对西方现代化理论和实践的重大超越 [Chinese Modernization Represents a Major Transcendence of Western Modernization Theory and Practice], Zhang Guanzi then moves from comparison in context to transcendence in a post-global context--the current stage of historical development of what passes for a world ordering.

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| Pix credit here (Celebrate the 34th Anniversary of the PRC--The Motherland's 4 Modernizations Compose a New Hymn |
Zhang Guanzi starts by recapping the fundamental insight of the essay:
History has amply demonstrated that there is no single, ready-made template that can be mechanically applied to achieve modernization. As a nation embarks on the path toward modernization, it must not only adhere to the universal laws governing this process but, more importantly, remain firmly grounded in its own specific national conditions and cultivate its own unique characteristics. [历史充分表明,实现现代化没有模板可以套用。一个国家走向现代化,既要遵循现代化的一般规律,更要立足本国国情、具有本国特色。] (从世界历史纵深把握中国式现代化的时代价值)
And then he suggests the reasons, as a function of China's modernization success, that China provides the better version of the general template for modernization, which can then be adjusted to suit local conditions. It is here that the essay, in line with contemporary Chinese International initiatives, seeks to sell China as the appropriate baseline for Global South development:
Chinese-style modernization embodies a unique worldview, set of values, historical perspective, civilizational outlook, democratic philosophy, and ecological ethos. Having already achieved remarkable success, it is now regarded as a paradigmatic example of a late-developing nation striving to catch up and successfully forging a novel path toward modernization—one that represents a significant transcendence of Western theories and practices of modernization. [中国式现代化蕴含独特世界观、价值观、历史观、文明观、民主观、生态观等,已经取得显著成就,被视为一个后发国家奋力追赶并成功开辟现代化新道路的典范,实现了对西方现代化理论和实践的重大超越,] (Id.).
These selling points are divided into three broad categories of alignment. First, Chinese modernization prioritizes people
over capital [以人民至上超越资本至上]. Second they provide a structure for for transcending self-interest through harmonious co-existence [以和合共生超越损人利己]. Third, they avoid what must be understood as private monopolies in favor of openness and inclusion [以开放包容超越系统垄断]. This last point echoes arguments made, at the level of the state system, by Fidel Castro in the context of his critique of globalization (see, Ideologies of Globalization and Sovereign Debt: Cuba and the IMF, Penn State Int'l LRev 2006). The
essay ends with a consideration of Chinese style modernization, in which
its own ideological stances and imperatives are deeply embedded, can
change the fundamental laws of modernization and in that way displace or de-nature Western global structural elements of modernization. The template here is the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation--to displace the New American Golden Age.
"The new form of human civilization pioneered by Chinese modernization has not only achieved the continuity, iteration, and innovation of its own civilizational form, but has also, across multiple dimensions, explored the universal laws governing the resurgence of human civilization—particularly for developing nations and late-modernizing countries. This endeavor holds broad and profound global significance." [中国式现代化开创的人类文明新形态,不仅实现了自身文明形态的延续、迭代与创新,也在多个维度上探寻人类文明尤其是发展中国家和后发现代化国家文明复兴的普遍规律,具有广泛而深远的世界意义] (从世界历史纵深把握中国式现代化的时代价值).
That displacement is not merely pragmatic but also profoundly theoretical--grounded in the way in which some Chinese theorists choose to sketch the US-China oppositional cognitive binary; a subject on which there is substantially more to say. Zhang Guanzi asserts, for example, that "The successful practice of Chinese modernization has heralded the bankruptcy of the linear, teleological view of history—the notion that all nations of the world are ultimately destined to converge upon the Western institutional model. [中国式现代化的成功实践,宣告了那种认为世界各国终将归于西方制度模式的单线式历史观的破产] (Id.). And yet that cannot be entirely true. It is not so much that linear teleology is overcome, it is that non-Marxist linear teleology must overlay and serve as the converging framework for the historically driven none-linear pathways toward inevitable communism. It is the objective, not the process that appears to matter--at least theoretically--and that serves as a basis for asserting a necessary displacement. But again, every system comes with its own baggage, a point that Zhang Guanzi also makes though to different ends. And so one ends where one might have begun--in the market for orienting theories, each infused with the premises and perspectives from out of which they arose, each claiming for themselves a better version of the discovery and applicaiton of core principles--which remain quite broad--and each offering way to global ordering that is created in their respective images.
The only thing that remains constant is modernization itself. And it is in this sense that one might understand the larger point--that at least from the time of the Enlightenment, the conceptual cages of political collectives have understood themselves, have constituted themselves and see in their reflection nothing is not development and modernization. It is that concept, however elaborated, that then serves as the critical core element around which social collectives organize, asses and compete among themselves even they they frame their contests in virtually any language but that of modernization (as object), as signification (modernization to what ends) and as the understanding of collective human activity (how a modernizing collective is organized; how it operates from principle to pragmatics).