Revising State Theory
Revising State Theory: Essays in Politics and Postindustrialism
Fred Block
Copyright Date: 1987
Published by: Temple University Press
Pages: 256
https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt14btcpb
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Revising State Theory
Book Description:

Socialist Review Book Award, Socialist Review, 1987 This volume makes available in one place a complete statement of Fred Block's perspective for students and participants in the ongoing debate on state theory. His substantial Introduction serves as an intellectual autobiography in which he assesses the field-including the theories of Domhoff, Poulantzas, and Skocpoland situates his own work within it. Block also discusses his relationship to different strands of Marxism. In his analysis of the relationship between business and the state, Block argues that while business interests have far more influence over state policy than other constituencies, state actors still have substantial autonomy in formulating policies. In particular, the business community's internal divisions and difficulties in assessing its own interests limit its capacity to control events. Block insists that when business influence is greatest, as during the Reagan years, state policies will be least successful in solving the society's problems. "What is at work here is a relatively simple sociological dynamic--that institutionalized relations of power tend to become visible only when they weaken. When these institutionalized relations are most effective, they tend to be invisible, precisely because the justifying ideologies so dominate people's commonsense understandings. The classic recent example is the existence of women's subordination. In the fifties, people would have responded to the claim that women were systematically discriminated against in American society with incredulity because they had so totally accepted an ideology that justified differential treatment of men and women as normal and natural. The full-blown analysis and critique of male domination emerges only in the seventies, when patriarchal arrangements are already weakening.... "In state theory, the development is analogous. In the fifties, pluralist arguments dominate because the exercise of power has been rendered invisible. The relation between business and the state works so well that it leaves few traces. Moreover, there is little real debate about how the society should be structured, so the extent to which everyone's basic assumptions fit with the interests of corporate capitalism is not at all obvious. Since nobody was even asking the big questions of who should make investment decisions and how should income and wealth be distributed, it was not apparent that the narrow limits of debate fit exactly with the interests of business.... However, the cumulative impact of Vietnam and racial conflict in the late sixties, the drama of Watergate, and the growing economic difficulties of advanced capitalist societies in the early seventies served to make the exercise of power in American society widely visible. The previous functional relation between the state and business had been disrupted and the efforts by each side to advocate its own interests became more apparent." --From the Introduction

eISBN: 978-1-4399-0352-0
Subjects: Sociology, Political Science
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  1. Front Matter
    Front Matter (pp. i-iv)
  2. Table of Contents
    Table of Contents (pp. v-vi)
  3. Preface
    Preface (pp. vii-viii)
  4. Introduction
    • 1 State Theory in Context
      1 State Theory in Context (pp. 3-36)

      This introduction is intended to provide an overview of the issues discussed in the subsequent chapters of the book. The argument is organized in two parts. In the first part, I situate my own work in state theory in relation to other lines of analysis. This gives me the opportunity to explain the genesis of my own contributions to state theory (the essays of Part I) and to discuss some of the limitations of this work. In the second part, I have sought to place the recent debate about state theory in a broader historical context. I am interested in...

  5. Part I
    • 2 Beyond Corporate Liberalism
      2 Beyond Corporate Liberalism (pp. 39-50)

      The theory of corporate liberalism emerged in the 1960s and continues to influence the thinking of many intellectuals critical of politics in American society. The core of the theory is a reinterpretation of the meaning of American liberalism. The traditional view was articulated most concisely by Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., when he argued that liberalism was the movement of other sectors of the population to restrict the power of big business.¹ In this view, the expansion of the role of the state during the twentieth century was a consequence of popular victories that succeeded in making capitalism a more benevolent system....

    • 3 The Ruling Class Does Not Rule: Notes on the Marxist Theory of the State
      3 The Ruling Class Does Not Rule: Notes on the Marxist Theory of the State (pp. 51-68)

      The Marxist theory of the state remains a muddle despite the recent revival of interest in the subject.¹ Substantial progress has been made in formulating a critique of orthodox Marxist formulations that reduce the state to a mere reflection of economic interests. However, the outlines of an adequate alternative Marxist theory are not yet clear. This is most dramatically indicated by the continued popularity in Marxist circles of explanations of state policies or of conflicts within the state that are remarkably similar to orthodox formulations in their tendency to see the state as a reflection of the interests of certain...

    • 4 Cooperation and Conflict in the Capitalist World Economy
      4 Cooperation and Conflict in the Capitalist World Economy (pp. 69-80)

      Two interpretations have long dominated Marxist, and much non-Marxist, discussion of the world capitalist system. According to the first, developed with special force by Karl Kautsky, the growing interpenetration of capital creates the possibility of an “ultraimperialism”—a stable and cooperative organization of relations based on a convergence of interests among the dominant capitalists of the major powers. According to the second, developed in its most politically influential form by V.I. Lenin, any period of cooperation simply indicates a truce in a perpetual war since, sooner or later, capitalists in one or more countries will grow dissatisfied with their share...

    • 5 Beyond Relative Autonomy: State Managers as Historical Subjects
      5 Beyond Relative Autonomy: State Managers as Historical Subjects (pp. 81-96)

      Neo-Marxist analyses of the state and politics now center on the vexed question of the “specificity of the political.” What is the degree to which politics and the state have independent determining effects on historical outcomes? Can the state or the people who direct the state apparatus act as historical subjects? The questions are critical because without a clear set of answers, it is impossible to develop a consistent theory of the state.

      In an interview done only months before his death, Nicos Poulantzas insisted that these questions had been answered through the idea of the relative autonomy of the...

  6. Part II
    • 6 New Productive Forces and the Contradictions of Contemporary Capitalism: A Postindustrial Perspective
      6 New Productive Forces and the Contradictions of Contemporary Capitalism: A Postindustrial Perspective (pp. 99-126)
      LARRY HIRSCHHORN

      This familiar but enigmatic sentence appears in Marx’s extremely condensed statement of his world view in the Preface to theContribution to a Critique of Political Economy. The entire brief passage has been subject to textual quotations and close analysis by writers attempting to find support for one or another interpretation of Marx’s meaning. We intend here not to make another argument about Marx’s true meaning, but to show how our interpretation of this segment of Marx’s writing provides a starting point for conceptualizing the contradictions of advanced capitalism.

      The core of our theoretical framework is an effort to make...

    • 7 The Myth of Reindustrialization
      7 The Myth of Reindustrialization (pp. 127-141)

      One of the most important legacies of the 1980 election has been the rightward shift in the society’s social and political discourse. Even though the right has been largely frustrated in many of its central objectives, it has succeeded in shifting the entire terrain of political discussion. This is most evident in the restrained rhetoric of the major Democratic Party presidential hopefuls, but the Socialist left itself has not been immune to this rightward drift. In subtle ways the left has accommodated itself to certain assumptions fundamental to mainstream discourse. The danger in this accommodation is that where those assumptions...

    • 8 Postindustrial Development and the Obsolescence of Economic Categories
      8 Postindustrial Development and the Obsolescence of Economic Categories (pp. 142-170)

      For at least the past ten years, political economic discourse in the United States has been dominated by images of a shortfall in the society’s capacity to produce goods and services. In the second half of the seventies, the key issue was the slowdown in the rate of productivity growth. This slowdown was seen as evidence of fundamental problems of government policy, and it provided a powerful justification for a shift to “supply-side” policies that were supposed to lead to more rapid growth rates of both productivity and total product. In the eighties, the central issue has become the federal...

    • 9 Political Choice and the Multiple “Logics” of Capital
      9 Political Choice and the Multiple “Logics” of Capital (pp. 171-186)

      It has become an accepted truth on the political left that the conservative economic policies of Ronald Reagan are a necessary response to the needs of the capitalist system.¹ In this argument, cuts in civilian spending and reductions in the living standards of working people and the poor conform to “the logic of capital” in a period of crisis. This position grows directly out of the theory developed in the seventies that capitalist states are torn between the conflicting imperatives of legitimation and accumulation.² According to this theory, when legitimation pressures force the state to go “too far” in granting...

  7. Notes
    Notes (pp. 189-216)
  8. Index
    Index (pp. 217-220)
  9. Back Matter
    Back Matter (pp. 221-221)