Development,
Part 2
The Housing Question
Thanks to
his book, “The
Condition of the Working Class in England”, Frederick Engels is
among many other things considered to be the father of modern urban studies and
town planning.
Therefore
one might approach another of his books, “The Housing Question”
(part of it is attached) expecting answers to that same housing question. One
might hope for instructions about what to build. One might expect sermons about
“delivery”, or even model house-plans. Instead, one finds severe polemic
about very fundamental issues of class struggle. Why is this?
It may help
to first examine what polemic
is. Engels begins the attached text with references to his opponent Mulberger,
who had complained that Engels had been blunt to the point of rudeness. Engels
concedes little more than sarcasm:
“I am not going to quarrel with friend
Mulberger about the ‘tone’ of my criticism. When one has been so long in the
movement as I have, one develops a fairly thick skin against attacks, and
therefore one easily presumes also the existence of the same in others. In
order to compensate Mulberger I shall try this time to bring my ‘tone’ into the
right relation to the sensitiveness of his epidermis.”
But later,
admitting that he had misrepresented Mulberger on a particular (quite small)
point, Engels lambastes himself as “irresponsible”.
“This time Mulberger is really right. I
overlooked the passage in question. It was irresponsible of me to overlook it…”
The rules
of polemic are roughly these: It is done in writing. It is always against
another named individual’s writing. It is direct and frank and pays little
regard for bourgeois squeamishness; on the other hand, it pays the utmost
respect to the meaning of the opponent’s words. Opponents in polemic never
misrepresent each other. Everything is permissible, except misrepresention.
Development is class struggle
After his
remarks about “Mulberger”, Engels goes straight into a long paragraph (the second
half of page 1, going over to page 2) that contains a summary of theory and
practice, vanguard and mass, from the 1840s up until his point of writing, just
one year after the fall of the Paris Commune. The paragraph mentions “the
necessity of the political action of the proletariat and of the dictatorship of the proletariat as the
transitional stage to the abolition of classes and with them of the state.”
This is the
Communist Manifesto all over again. So, we can ask, why does Engels “go to
town” to this extent? Is this not merely “housing” we are talking about? Is not
housing something that everybody needs? Classless, surely? A win-win situation?
Motherhood and apple-pie?
Engels
says: NO! Engels says: the class struggle is here.
What we can
read in Mulberger, through Engels’ eyes, is the petty-bourgeois (and full
bourgeois) greed for this Housing Question as a means, or a tool, for
reproducing petty-bourgeois consciousness, and this is just exactly how the
post-1994 South African Government started dealing with the housing question.
Yes, there should be lots of houses, it said in effect, but they must be
petty-bourgeois-style houses, both in physical type, and in form of ownership.
The
argument about housing is an argument about the reproduction of capitalism. It
is an argument about the continuation of the ascendancy of bourgeois values
over those of the working-class. For the bourgeoisie, the creation of a
dwelling is an opportunity to invest that house with peasant-like values of
individuality, and with petty-bourgeois ideas of “entrepreneurship”, and to
regulate and control the people, according to these values.
Everything
that happened in “housing” in South Africa post-1994 is pre-figured in the
banal prescriptions of Mulberger that Engels lambastes. Any critique of housing
in South Africa will inevitably have to follow the example of Engels if it
is to be of any use. Please, comrades, read the first pages and the last
paragraphs of this document, if you cannot read all of it.
As the Communist Manifesto says, the history
of all hitherto-existing societies has been a history of class struggle. The
coming “development” period of South African history will also be a period of
class struggle. We may not necessarily win every specific struggle. But what
this text of Engels says is: let us never fool ourselves. Win or lose, we are
in a class struggle, and there is no neutral ground, least of all on the
question of housing and land development. There is much more to be studied
here, but the key is political.
Please read
the attached text.
[Pictures: Shack, Abahlali BaseMjondolo; RDP House, David Goldblatt
(“Miriam Mazibuko watering the garden of her new RDP house, Extension 8, Far
East Bank, Alexandra Township, Johannesburg, 12 September 2006. It has one
room. For lack of space, her four children live with her parents-in-law.”)]
- The above serves
to introduce the original reading-text: The Housing Question, 1872,
Part Three, Frederick Engels.
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