Joel Kovel
died in New York City on 30 April 2018 at the age of 81. A radical
psychiatrist, academic, writer and political activist, he will be best
remembered as one of the most influential ecosocialist thinkers of modern
times. In 2001 he co-wrote, with Michel Lowy, the first ecosocialist manifesto, a call for an end to the destructive
capitalist system and demand it is replaced with ecosocialism, before
capitalism completely destroys the planet.
His book The Enemy of Nature first published in 2002, and updated
in a second edition in 2007, is a must read for socialists, greens and anyone
concerned with environmental degradation. It was this book in particular that
brought Joel to my attention in 2004. It is simply brilliant in its line of
reasoning, placing the blame for our ecological ills firmly at the door of the
dominant world system of endless growth, capitalism.
I had always
considered myself to be a socialist, but by the early 2000's I was also
becoming increasingly alarmed by environmental problems, especially climate
change. Kovel blends a critique of capitalism with both a red and green angle,
in the most compelling way I have yet come across. This, despite much fine
thinking and writing on the matter, before and since.
Kovel edited
the pioneering ecosocialist magazine, Capitalism
Nature Socialism,
where he worked with another leading ecosocialist from 1980's, James O'Connor.
He wrote other books including White Racism, Red Hunting in the Promised Land
and Overcoming Zionism.
One stand out
thing from The Enemy of Nature is Kovel's use of the term 'usufruct' which Karl
Marx had theorised about in the third volume of Capital. The word is from the
Latin, and goes back as least as far as the Roman Empire, and is part of many
countries law. It refers to the legal right to use and derive benefit from
property that belongs to another person, as long as the property is not
damaged.
Kovel
highlights Marx when he quotes that "human beings are no more than the
planet’s usufructaries, and, like boni patres familias, they must hand it down
to succeeding generations in an improved condition.” Kovel says in an
eco-socialist society, “everyone will have... rights of use and ownership over
those means of production necessary to express the creativity of human nature.”
He was an
unsuccessful candidate for the US Senate in 1998 from New York and ran again
unsuccessfully for the US Green Party presidential nomination in 2000, when he lost
out to Ralph Nader. He commented that if he had a dollar for every Green Party
member who told him they liked his ideas, but he should drop the socialist tag,
he would have been a very rich man. He thought Nader was a populist with no
real understanding of ecological matters.
He fell out
with Murray Bookchin, the anarchist founder of Social Ecology, though I don't know
why, since their ideas were very similar, which was a pity. But they were
certainly equals in terms of developing the thinking that links ecological and
social exploitation with the capitalist world system. To my mind ecoanarchism
and ecosocialism are pretty much the same ideology.
I had the
pleasure of meeting Joel when he came to London in 2007 to speak at the London
School of Economics, to promote the release of the second edition of The Enemy
of Nature and to talk about ecosocialism generally. I was in small group that
went to the pub with him afterwards, and he was charming and interesting in
equal measure.
Despite the
looming ecological crisis and 'force-field' to use his expression, of global
capitalism he remained hopeful, cheerful even, about the prospect of ending
capital's rule over humanity. In the afterword to The Enemy of Nature, Kovel
writes that when he was asked why he didn't despair about the ecological crisis
and all powerful capital, "I do not despair; for whatever reason, I
actually find myself in good spirits as I studied the crisis further and
devised the ideas that have gone into this work."
Kovel
believed that if his logic was wrong, and capitalism managed to reform itself into
a truly eco-friendly system, then fine, all will be well. But if he was right,
at least his line of reasoning offered hope of overcoming the system and
crisis. This perception, Kovel suggested was liberating in itself, and can help
us "to meet it actively instead of passively submitting to the terms of
understanding dealt out by the dominant system."
I think that
kind of sums up Joel’s legacy, as a giant of ecosocialist thinking who will be
sorely missed.
The principle of usufruto is actually part of the Portuguese language
ReplyDeleteThe problem is that those that currently enjoy the fruits are destroying the tree (our planet)
In the old days they only destroyed its inhabitants
https://www.linguee.pt/portugues-ingles/traducao/direito+de+usufruto.html
Joel Kovel was gracious enough to appear on Gorilla Radio in December of 2007. Here's the audio from that interview.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.gorilla-radio.com/2007/12/04/gorilla-radio-with-chris-cook-joel-kovel-dahr-jamail-dec-3-2007/
"We live in and from nature, but the way we have evolved of doing this is about to destroy us."