
thumb
'James Burnham' (
1905–
1987) was an
American popular political theorist, former
Communist activist and
intellectual, known for his work ''The Managerial Revolution'', published in 1941, which heavily influenced
George Orwell's "
Nineteen Eighty-Four".
Life and work
Born in
Chicago,
Illinois, Burnham was of English
Catholic stock, although he was an atheist for much of his life before converting just before his death. He graduated at the top of his class at
Princeton University before attending
Balliol College, Oxford.
As a member of the
U.S. Workers Party Burnham was a leading
Trotskyist in the 1930s, forming what became the
Socialist Workers Party, which was a
communist and anti-
Stalinist party. He allied with
Max Shachtman in a
faction fight with the majority in the party led by
James P. Cannon over the question of the nature of the
Soviet Union. Cannon, backed by
Leon Trotsky held that the USSR was a
degenerated workers state while Shachtman and Burnham contended that the Soviet Union was
bureaucratic collectivist and thus not worthy of being supported even critically. The specific event which led to the dispute was the
Soviet invasion of Finland in November
1939.
The party dispute led to Shachtman, Burnham and their supporters leaving the SWP in 1940 but soon after Burnham broke with Shachtman and left the
communist movement altogether and worked for the
Office of Strategic Services during the war. After the war he called for an aggressive strategy to undermine the
Soviet Union's power. During the
Cold War, he was a regular writer for
National Review. In 1983 he received the
Presidential Medal of Freedom from
President Ronald Reagan. His ideas were an important influence on both the
neoconservative and
paleoconservative factions of the American Right.
The theory of the managerial revolution
Burnham theorised that the world would form into three super-states, the
United States,
Germany and
Japan, which would compete for world power. Clearly at this time he did not foresee the
Soviet Union's emerging as a super-power after the war, although he did predict that the United States would be the "receiver" for the disintegrating
British Empire.
More importantly, he argued that
capitalism was disappearing, but that it would not be replaced by
socialism; neither, for that matter, would
democracy ever gain the ascendancy. A new managerial class, rather than the
working class, was replacing the old capitalist class as the dominant power in society. The managerial class included business executives, technicians, bureaucrats and soldiers. He gave
Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union as clear examples. Burnham's theory is sometimes thought to have been influenced by
Bruno Rizzi's 1939 book ''La Bureaucratisation du Monde''; but despite similarities, there is no evidence that Burnham knew of the obscure book outside of some brief references to it by Trotsky.
It is important to note that what Burnham meant by
capitalism was the individual ownership and control of production, which is distinct from the modern
corporation, an association established by law where individual
shareholders have no direct control over production.
A later book, ''The Machiavellians'', saw Burnham develop his theory by arguing that the emerging new elite would better serve its own interests if it were to keep at least some of the trappings of democracy, such as political opposition and a free press, and a controlled 'circulation of the elites'.
His 1964 book ''Suicide of the West'' became a classic among movement conservatives, defining liberalism as a "syndrome" ridden with guilt and internal contradictions. His works greatly influenced
paleoconservative author
Samuel Francis. Francis wrote two books on Burnham and based his political theories on the "managerial revolution" and the resulting
managerial state.
Books
★ ''The Managerial Revolution: What is Happening in the World'' (orig pub, 1941, 1972 ed.) ISBN 0-8371-5678-5
★ ''Suicide of the West: An Essay on the Meaning and Destiny of Liberalism'' (1985) ISBN 0-89526-822-1
★ ''The Machiavellians: Defenders of Freedom'' (1987) ISBN 0-895267853
Books and essays about James Burnham
★ Kelly, Daniel ''James Burnham and the Struggle for the World: A Life'' (2002) ISBN 1-882926-76-5
★ Francis, Samuel ''Power and History, The Political Thought of James Burnham'' (1984) ISBN 0-8191-3753-7
★ Francis, Samuel ''James Burnham: Thinkers of Our Time'' (1999) ISBN 1-870626-32-X
★ Orwell, George ''James Burnham and The managerial revolution'' (long essay).
See also
★
Elite theory
External links
★
Obituary, ''National Review'',
September 11,
1987
★
Second Thoughts on James Burnham, by George Orwell
★
James Burnham Internet Archive at Marxists.org
★
James Burnham, The New Class, And The Nation-State, by
Samuel Francis,''VDARE.com'',
August 23,
2001.