With the focus of this piece a review of the book Radical Newcastle (Sydney, NSW: NewSouth Publishing, 2015) edited by James Bennet, Nancy Cushing and Erik Eklund, the authors range widely discussing the theory and practice of researching and writing radical history, and its depth in terms of time and variety. It was first published on the 'Labour History Melbourne' site (14 March 2016), and subsequently variously republished.
RADICAL HISTORY: THINKING, WRITING and ENGAGEMENT
by
Terry Irving and Rowan Cahill
Kicking
away the props
n recent years, in various places and on
our blog ‘Radical Sydney/Radical History’,
we have written about radical history. As radical historians we seek out,
explore, and celebrate the diversities of alternatives and oppositions, arguing
there is a basic tension between radical history and ‘mainstream history’, a history that is
constituted to prop up both capitalism and the state. We see our history as
part of the struggle against capitalism and the state. In researching the past,
we do not do it nostalgically, but with utilitarian, political intent,
recognising that the past has the capacity to variously inspire and inform the
present and the future. In a nutshell, while mainstream history would like
people to read it, radical history wants its readers to act as history makers;
while mainstream history props, radical history unprops.
Radical
Newcastle: inventing the wheel?
The reader picking up Radical Newcastle (NewSouth Publishing, Sydney, 2015), edited by
James Bennett, Nancy Cushing, and Erik Eklund, could be forgiven for thinking
that the editors, all University of Newcastle historians, have invented the
wheel, for there is no recognition in the book that Radical Newcastle is part of this vibrant and visible, if somewhat
marginalised in Australian academic circles, area of historical work. The
editors seem completely indifferent to the long tradition of writing about
history from a radical perspective, the tradition of radical history of which
the ‘radical city’ books are a part. Nor are they aware of the recent radical
scholarship by Mike Davis, David Harvey, Adam Morton, Justin McGuirk, and
others, that has transformed the study of cities.
So, in more abstract terms we believe radical
history has three distinguishing features:
its subject matter, its political stance, and its relationship to its
audience. Radical historians write about the struggles of disempowered people
to stand up to their oppressors and exploiters, and to take control of their
lives by attacking coercive authority and by socializing power. They tell
stories of resistance and agency, not of ruling and maintaining order, which
are the signs of ruling class history. Radical historians, secondly, are
partisan. They write with a social purpose, and in doing so they draw on
radical philosophies and methods. They write history as a political act.
Thirdly, although writing about the past, they want to encourage people in the
present to resist and rebel. Because the radical past was always being made
anew their work is pregnant with possibilities, alerting their readers to the
possibilities for action in their own situations. This has consequences for how
they write. Readers must be given space to reflect on the present as well as
the past. It is not enough to tell stories; the stories have to be shaped by
theory, sharpened by the historian’s passion, and riddled with unresolved
political questions. Moreover, whether writing for other radical intellectuals,
engaging with scholarship and theory, or seeking a wider audience, radical
historians place a high value on clarity of expression, avoiding like the
plague the over-theoreticized language of academic in-groups, and their
self-aggrandizing citation of trendy thinkers.
We write radical history from an urban
perspective. The capitalist city is as distinctive a historical space as, say,
the nation state, the free-trade empire or the eighteenth/nineteenth century
slave ship. Like them it is organized by the processes of capital accumulation
and class relations into zones of activity and meaning that change over time.
Because radicalism in capitalist cities expresses resistance to the
exploitation and oppression inherent in those processes, it is never free of
spatial dynamics. It always exhibits a desire to appropriate space, to make
places into resources for radical struggle and symbols of popular rights to the
capitalist city. The task of the historian of the radical city is to find the
patterns in these dynamics and to relate these to the changing nature of
radical struggle.
Radical history as a tradition, as an
approach to viewing and writing history, has depth in terms of time and
variety. It includes magisterial works like those of A. L. Morton (A People’s History of England, 1938),
G.D.H. Cole and Raymond Postgate (The
Common People, 1938), Howard Zinn (A
People’s History of the United States,
1980), and Edward Vallance (A Radical
History of Britain, 2009). It is the tradition in which practitioners like
maritime historian Marcus Rediker and commons historian Peter Linebaugh work.
When Australian historians conceived
‘labour history’ in the early 1960s, they did so in the radical history
tradition, determining to make working people part of Australian historical
discourse and challenge the prevailing hegemony of imperial/colonial/ruling
class histories, and seeking to use the study of labouring people and their
institutions as a political tool to assist the shaping of the present and
future. In 1983 Eric Fry, one of these pioneers, published Rebels & Radicals, asserting the role of conflict, struggle and
rebellion as important parts of the Australian story, a notion that had become
muted in the academic study of labourism.
Before the 1960s, and particularly within
the orbit of the Communist Party of Australia, labour intellectuals (such asBob Walshe, James Rawling, Bill Wood, and Rupert Lockwood) researched, wrote,
and published in labour movement outlets, radical histories of Australian
struggles for popular democracy and of the agency of working people. The work
and output of these historians is, still, virtually unfurrowed by researchers,
and undeservedly so. Their approach to popularizing radical history can be
traced back to socialist pioneer, agitator, artist and poet, William Morris,
whose writings Nicholas Salmon has collected in William Morris on History (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press,
1996). Dorothy Thompson, radical historian of Chartism, recalled that in 1991
she asked husband E P Thompson whether he was still the Marxist historian he
once was, and he replied “that he preferred to call himself ‘a
Morrisist’”. This reply is both poetic
and political, capturing the step ‘beyond’ to which radical historians aspire.
It is the aspiration that publisher Ian
Syson (Vulgar Press) and authors Jeff and Jill Sparrow brought to the radical
history of the geographical-political space that is Melbourne in Radical Melbourne: A Secret History (Vulgar
Press: Melbourne, 2001),. Since then other ‘radical city’ books have followed: Radical Melbourne II (by the same
authors and publisher, 2004), Radical
Brisbane (edited by Raymond Evans and Carole Ferrier, Vulgar Press, 2004),
and Radical Sydney (UNSW Press,
2010). Earlier at the University of Ballarat in 2009, Robert Hodder successfully
produced a two-part doctoral thesis (exegesis and documents) titled ‘Radical
Tasmania: Rebellion, reaction and resistance: A thesis in creative nonfiction.’
Later, a Wollongong team, working from a script written by John Rainford,
released their 60 minute-long film Radical
Wollongong: A People’s History of
Wollongong in 2014, which went on to
tour Australia and parts of Asia and to win two Awards at the Canadian Labour
International Film Festival (2014), including ‘Best in Festival’. As the
co-authors of Radical Sydney, we are
keen to see this form of radical history continued.
The editors of Radical Newcastle describe their book as ‘the outcome of
community-engaged research’ that aimed to connect ‘with the interests and
concerns of our local community’. In other words its genre is public history
with community involvement. Fair enough; that’s a recognised kind of history,
although one frequently derailed by deceptive ideas of social unity. The
problem is that the subject of their history book is radicalism, and radical
history is a tradition the editors don’t engage with. Should they have? Well,
imagine writing a book called ‘Indigenous Newcastle’ but neglecting to take
into account the literature of Aboriginal history.
The editors’ neglect of the radical history
tradition of writing is symptomatic of a deeper problem. Their approach to
writing history is called, in the trade, academic empiricism. A classic case in
fact: they begin with a definition of radicalism based on the Oxford English Dictionary and a British
handbook on radicalism, then proceed to look for examples of it in the past.
But is this how historians should work, using a timeless definition to corral
the past into a predefined pen? Relying on ahistorical thinking? Surely what
historians should do is historicize, that is, to work with an understanding of
society as process, as a series of situations in which people act, institutions
react, and structures change. Historians need to be able to think abstractly as
well as concretely, otherwise they are trapped by empiricism, and make the
mistake of starting with definitions instead of an historical understanding of
their subject. Meaning, not definition; that’s what has to be grasped, as has
their own position in relation to the subject.
Radicalism has a symbiotic relationship
with capitalism, a word that the editors fail to mention in their Introduction,
and capitalism also structured Newcastle as a city. In
Radical Newcastle, places seem to be
incidental. About a dozen appear on the maps at the start of the book, but none
of them has a main entry in the index. Of the thirty chapters just a few refer
to a place in their titles. This neglect does a great disservice to Newcastle’s
dense geography of struggle, which can be detected in Places, Protests and Memorabilia – The Labour Heritage Register of New
South Wales (Industrial Relations Research Centre, University of New South
Wales, 2002), where Terry Irving and Lucy Taksa have listed about 60 of
Newcastle and the Hunter’s sites of radical activity: the speakers’ corners,
meeting rooms, union offices, halls, factory gates, parks and so on. And these
are just the sites associated with the labour movement. What about the places
associated with the new social movements? Although one of the chapters (by Peta
Belic and Erik Eklund) identifies Newcastle’s radicalism as a defining city
characteristic, this is not enough. We have to ask how Newcastle as a city worked for and against its
radicals. Were there labour or bohemian precincts in the city? Are there
patterns in the distribution of radical sites? How did agitators move around
their radical city? Again: what route or routes were taken by radical
processions, and was the route chosen as a symbolic gesture against ruling
institutions? Did the routes change over time? Did women and children march?
Unless there is a systematic exploration of questions like these that arise out
of an awareness of Newcastle’s geography, of the city’s spatial organization as
an aspect of radical struggles, a whole dimension of the radical experience in
Newcastle is lost.
There are thirty
chapters in this book; less than half of them qualify as radical history. The
others would have been at home in a book on Liberal Newcastle, their tone bland
and even-handed, the product of an academic culture that values description
over commitment. Readers, it seems, must not be allowed to assume that the
authors are identifying with embarrassing ideas like class and domination or
contentious action that ignores the ‘right’ channels for protest. Taking the
book as a whole this is hodge-podge history, without any sense of radical
Newcastle’s patterns in time or space. The deficiencies
of the book - as spatial history and radical history - are down to the editors;
luckily, some of the contributors show us what the book could have been.
The radical chapters: thinking, writing and
engagement
What makes their
chapters examples of radical history is that in them we can detect a radical
point of view. It is not just that their chapters are about people in movement,
challenging, resisting, and so on. Rather the authors are keen to tell us about
it in a way that stirs the heart and the head to consider our own situation.
Sometimes our attention is caught by the drama of the struggle, as in Rod
Noble’s account of the mass civil disobedience of mining communities in the
late nineteenth century, and in Ross Edmonds’ chapter on the Silksworth dispute in which militant
unionists showed that ‘the radical spirit of anti-imperialism and
internationalism’ could overcome ‘unthinking racism’. In Ann Curthoys’ chapter
on Barbara Curthoys’ involvement in the Aboriginal rent strike at Purfleet
Reserve, however, it is the attention to organisation that compels. We learn
not just about the tasks and the planning, the meetings and publicity, but also
about the history of Aboriginal politics and Communist Party strategy. We also
learn, of course, about a remarkable woman, an intellectual as well as an
activist, who, as Ann writes, had a deep effect on her own involvement in
Aboriginal issues. There is another mother-daughter connection in Jude Conway’s
chapter on the Right to Choose Abortion Coalition that Josephine Conway helped
to form. When Josephine turned 80 a friend said that she was a living reminder
that radicalism was a way of life, a description that comes across also in the
first-hand accounts of their environmental campaigning by Bernadette Smith, and
Paula Morrow. The personal dimension of these chapters helps us understand
radicalism as a living force rather than a dead definition.
It has always been a
radical approach to history writing to insist on rescuing the common people and
subversive ideas that mainstream history neglects. There are several chapters
that meet that criterion. Tony Laffan’s chapter on the Hall of Science
discovers a local free thought movement nurturing and nurtured by industrial
militancy, while the chapter by Peta Belic and Erik Eklund on the One Big Union
shows the persistence of syndicalist ideas.
Among the courageous anti-conscriptionists of 1916, there was a range of
forces and views, and Tod Moore and Harry Williams argue that the most radical
were not reported in the press and have consequently disappeared from history. In
his chapter, John Maynard successfully restores the significant activism of two
white activists, John Maloney and his daughter Dorothy. They campaigned for
Aboriginal rights, making contact with the Australian Aboriginal Progressive
Association, the first all-Aboriginal political organisation in Australia. And
here’s another sign of radicalism as a living tradition: one of the founders of
this association was Fred Maynard, the grandfather of the author, John Maynard.
In the best radical
history, the actors are never ciphers but real flesh-and-blood people. Two
chapters stand out in this regard: Troy Duncan’s on Father Alf Clint, and Shane
Hopkinson’s and Tom Griffiths’ on Neville Cunningham. We cherish the image of
the reverend inviting the militant Jim Comerford, a teetotaller and temperance
advocate, to drink a pint with him in the local miners’ pub. And we are filled
with uncomfortable admiration for the idiomatic flair of an ASIO informant who
described Neville Cunningham – Communist, activist and working class
intellectual – as ‘a fighter … a crude one, rough but direct … Nev has no time
for nice trimmings, nor for calling a spade by any other name … He is a
likeable chap, all proletarian, dead set against authority.’
Finally, we want to
cheer for two chapters of forensic social analysis. Bernadette Smith situates
the 1979 Star Hotel riot in the context of Newcastle’s history of class
struggle, before placing the state in the frame and
looking at local policing and power politics. She also explains the culture of
the pub in a sociological way, challenging/undermining a whole lot of
safe/traditional academic wisdom. Griff
Foley, internationally respected in adult education and social learning
circles, has brought together five cases of ‘community conservation’ – a
neglected aspect of environmental history – in order to address the most
important question in social movement as well as revolutionary politics: how do
activists learn? The answer: informally and incidentally, and making this
explicit helps their practice. It’s a lesson that radical historians should
take on board: we should be thinking about our intellectual practice as we
engage with our next project.
Overall, Radical Newcastle is a mixed bag of hits, almosts, and misses.
Considered in the context of Australian radical historical writing, it provides
opportunity to reflect upon the nature of radical history, how it is written,
and how the historian can render struggles of the past in ways that instruct
and inspire the present.
Terry Irving and Rowan Cahill
University of Wollongong
March 2016.