'Narodniks' (
Russian: Народничество) was the name for
Russian revolutionaries of the
1860s and
1870s. Their movement was known as ''Narodnichestvo'' or ''Narodism''. The term itself derives from the
Russian expression "Хождение в народ" ("Going to the people").
History
Narodism arose in Russia after the
emancipation of the serfs in
1861 (under
Emperor Alexander II), which signaled the coming end of the
feudalist age in Russia. Arguing that freed serfs were being sold into
wage slavery, in which the
bourgeoisie had replaced
landowners, Narodism aimed to become the political force to counter the phenomenon. Narodniks viewed certain aspects of the past with a dose of
nostalgia: resenting the former land ownership system, they objected against the uprooting of
peasants from the traditional ''
obshchina'' (the Russian
commune).
Narodniks rallied in response to the growing conflicts between the peasantry and the so-called ''
kulaks'' (the more prosperous farmers). Groups created did not establish a concrete organization, but shared the common general aims of overthrowing the
Russian monarchy and the ''kulaks'', and distributing land among the peasantry. The Narodniks generally believed that
capitalism was not a necessary result of
industrial development, and that it was possible to skip capitalism altogether, and enter straight into a kind of
socialism.
The Narodniks believed the peasantry was the
revolutionary class that would overthrow the monarchy, regarding the village commune as the embryo of socialism. However, they believed that the peasantry would not achieve revolution on their own, but instead that history could only be made by heroes, outstanding personalities, who would lead an otherwise passive peasantry to revolution (''see
Great man theory'').
In the spring of
1874, the conflict between the richer and poorer peasants brought turbulence to Russia's urban centers, and the Narodnik ''
intelligentsia'' left the cities for the villages, going "among the people", attempting to teach the peasantry their
moral imperative to revolt. They found almost no support.
Given the Narodniks social background, generally
middle and
upper middle class, they had noted difficulties in addressing Russian peasants and their culture. They spent much time learning peasant custom, dress and dance. In some cases, they even had to learn Russian, as wealthy Russians from
the West generally spoke
French or
German. On arriving into some villages dressed appropriately and singing and dancing what they had studied, Narodniks were viewed with suspicion by many of those Russian peasants who were completely removed from the more
modernized culture of the urban sphere, and believed to be
witches; many Narodniks were hounded by
vigilante groups, and often maimed with farm utensils or put through frenzied trials and
burned at the stake.
The
Imperial secret police responded to the Narodniks' attempt with extreme repression: revolutionaries and their peasant sympathizers were beaten, imprisoned and exiled. In
1877, the Narodniks revolted with the support of thousands of revolutionaries and peasants. However, the movement was again swiftly and brutally crushed.
In response to this repression of open, spontaneous organization, Russia's first organized revolutionary party formed: ''
Narodnaya Volya'' ("People's Will"), with a new revolutionary program suited to the extremely repressive conditions, which favoured
secret society-led
terrorism.
Although ''Narodnaya Volya'' did not last for long, the later
Socialist-Revolutionaries,
Popular Socialists, and
Trudoviks all shared similar tactics, with ideas and practices originally set down by the Narodniks.
[1]
After the struggle to unite the peasantry to overthrow the
Emperor, unsuccessful due to the peasantry's idolisation of the latter as someone "on their side", Narodism developed the practice of terrorism: the peasantry, they believed, must be shown that the Emperor was not
supernatural, and that he could be killed. This theory, called "direct struggle", was meant to show an "uninterrupted demonstration of the possibility of struggling against the government, in this manner lifting the revolutionary spirit of the people and its faith in the success of the cause, and organising those capable of fighting".
[2] This theory also led to short-term failure, as the peasantry as a whole was horrified with what had happened. The events did, however, help sow the roots of the coming
Russian Revolution of 1905.
Influence outside Russia
Narodism had a direct influence on politics and culture in
Romania, through the comments of
Constantin Dobrogeanu-Gherea and advocacy from the
Bessarabian-born
Constantin Stere (who was a member of ''Narodnaya Volya'' in his youth). The various groups the latter helped found included one formed around the
literary magazine ''
Viaţa Românească'' (led by Stere,
Garabet Ibrăileanu, and
Paul Bujor).
A self-defined ''
Poporanist'' (from ''popor'',
Romanian for "people", mirroring the origins of the term ''Narodnik''), Stere eventually rejected revolution altogether. Nevertheless, he shared the Narodnik view that capitalism was not a necessary stage in the development of an agrarian country (and the implicit rejection of
Marxist tenets), a perspective which was to leave a mark on
Ion Mihalache's
Peasants' Party (and its successor, the
National Peasants' Party), as well as on the philosophy of
Virgil Madgearu.
Narodism according to Lenin
Vladimir Lenin defined Narodism as:
"By Narodism we mean a system of views, which comprises the following three features:
1) Belief that capitalism in Russia represents a deterioration, a retrogression. Hence the urge and desire to 'retard', 'halt', 'stop the break-up' of the age-old foundations by capitalism, and similar reactionary cries.
2) Belief in the exceptional character of the Russian economic system in general, and of the peasantry, with its village commune, artel, etc. in particular. It is not considered necessary to apply to Russian economic relationships the concepts elaborated by modern science concerning the different social classes and their conflicts. The village-commune peasantry is regarded as something higher and better than capitalism; there is a disposition to idealize the 'foundations'. The existence among the peasantry of contradictions characteristic of every commodity and capitalist economy is denied or slurred over; it is denied that any connection exists between these contradictions and their more developed form in capitalist industry and capitalist agriculture.
3) Disregard of the connection between the 'intelligentsia' and the country's legal and political institutions, on the one hand, and the material interests of definite social classes, on the other. Denial of this connection, lack of a materialist explanation of these social factors, induces the belief that they represent a force capable of 'dragging history along another line', of 'diversion from the path', and so on.[3]
See also
★
David Riazanov
★
Nihilist movement
Notes
1. ''Glossary of Terms and Organisations''
2. ''Narodnaya Volya'' program of 1879
3. Lenin, ''The Heritage We Renounce''
External links
★
''Glossary of Terms and Organisations'' at
Marxists.org
★
Vladimir Lenin, ''The Heritage We Renounce'', 1897 at Marxists.org