The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #70642   Message #1206552
Posted By: GUEST,Anton Pinkovsky
13-Jun-04 - 09:36 PM
Thread Name: BS: Anyone seen a Parsimonious Nuthatch?
Subject: RE: BS: Anyone seen a Parsimonious Nuthatch?
greetings, comrades! - freda, mate!

for those who are interested, here is my short treatise on Marxism and birdwatching!

Marxism and bird watching

The material on this page initially opened with a comment on the tenousness of the links between Marxism and bird watching. Recent research has, however, led to a revision of this assessment. It has demonstrated that the relationship in fact deepened over time.
Both Marx and Engels made early references to domesticated birds. The Engels family in Barmen kept chickens. In 1838, while a commercial apprentice in Bremen, Friedrich wrote home to his sister about breeds of chickens and pigeons he had seen. Marx mentioned French roosters in A Contribution to a Critique of Hegel's Philosophy of Right2 and items in the Neue rheinische Zeitung and roast pigeons in the Deutsch-Französische Jahrbücher. While in prison, the Georgian Bolshevik Kamo actually undertook a program of domestication, taming a sparrow. Trotsky continued this tradition in his comparison between British Labour politicians and shortbilled pigeons, bred by fanciers, which were incapable of breaking out of the shell. Unfortunately, it must also be conceded that Trotsky's ornithological interests included duck hunting.

These examples are, it must be conceded, some distance from bird watching. But, by 1874, Marx's ornithological interests were more profound. While recovering his health at the spa resort of Karlsbad (now Karlowy Vary in the Czech Republic), Marx wrote the following to Engels

The surrounding district is very pretty and one can't get enough walking through and over the wooded granite mountains. But not a bird lives in these woods. Birds are healthy and don't like the mineral vapours. It seems that the elaboration of historical materialism was associated with a rising interest in ornithology, not to mention ecology. In Karlsbad, therefore, Marx drew attention to a significant absense. Of course Marx's comment implies interest in the subject on Engels's part. And direct written evidence of Engels's concern with bird anatomy emerged a couple of years later, in a comparison between human and parrot mouths as organs for speech, in his discussion of the evolution of humankind.

It was surely no coincidence (from a materialist perspective) that the Zimmerwald Conference of 2-4 September 1916, the first international conference of anti-war socialist organisations during World War I, went under the cover of a bird watching outing. This had, no doubt, inherent plausibility as there are good views of the autumn migration in some mountainous areas of the Canton of Bern.
Lenin was a participant in the Zimmerwald Conference. In 1922 he compared Rosa Luxemburg favourably with the German Social Democrats of the 1920s by quoting a Russian fable 'Eagles may at times fly lower than hens, but hens can never rise to the height of eagles.' Earlier, the most prominent reformist Social Democrat in southern Germany, Georg von Vollmar, was much less flattering in using bird metaphors to describe her, accusing Luxemburg of 'squawking', and laying 'gaseous eggs'.

Rosa Luxemburg, herself, was probably the prominent Marxist most involved in ornithology. She had some university training in botany and zoology and 'though not to be her life's work, these subjects always retained a strong and almost professional fascination for her'. While imprisoned in Germany, between 1915 and 1918, for her revolutionary and anti-war activities, Luxemburg took particular pleasure in watching and listening to birds within and beyond prison walls. In letters to friends she mentions reading a study of bird migration and encounters with Sparrows, Blackbird, Nightinggale, Green Finch, Cat Finch and Blue Titmouse.

Several Marxists have reflected on Hegel's ornithological contention that 'The owl of Minerva, takes its flight only when the shades of night are gathering'. I would welcome other examples of the synergy between Marxism and bird watching to add to this page.
http://www.anu.edu.au/polsci/birds/marxbird.htm

always revolting

Anton