- Hal Draper
Hal Draper (1914-1990) was a
Third Camp Americansocialist activist,Marxist andauthor , perhaps best known for his role in the Berkeley, CaliforniaFree Speech Movement . His "Third Camp" focus differed from that ofMax Schachtman in its emphasis on the "grass roots" as the "third" alternative to capitalism and bureaucracy domination. The former represented the potential for "socialism from below" in opposition to the other two, which represented the domination from above.His brother,
Theodore Draper , is best known for his studies of the Communist Party of the United States of America and himself once an activist in the socialist movement before becoming a liberal anti-communist. __FORCETOC__His life
Draper was initially a member of the
Young People's Socialist League , then the youth affiliate of theSocialist Party of America . He was won with that organization toTrotskyism . Along with the YPSL he took part in the founding of the Socialist Workers Party in 1938.By 1940 he was part of a faction within the SWP which objected to the internal regime of that party and was developing an analysis of the USSR as a 'bureaucratic collectivist society' in which a new class, the state bureaucracy, held social and state power. In 1940 they became the Workers Party led by
Max Shachtman .By 1948 the WP believed that the prospects for revolution were receding and that it must transform itself into a propaganda group. Therefore it became the Independent Socialist League and Hal Draper continued as one of its leading writers and functionaries. Based in his native New York, Draper would often write and edit almost the entire contents of issues of the groups paper.
With a shrinking membership (although its youth work was buoyant) the ISL leadership around Shachtman decided that the time had come to join forces with the Socialist Party of America and in 1958 fused into it. This was a development that Draper opposed although he went along with for lack of an alternative orientation.
In 1962, after an ultimatum from
Joel Geier (later a leader of the International Socialists), Draper - now resident in Berkeley, California - formed the Independent Socialist Club (ISC) outside the SPA. In 1964 Draper was heavily involved in theFree Speech Movement , an important precursor of that decade'sNew Left , on theUniversity of California, Berkeley campus. During this time, he was employed by the University as a microfilm acquisitions librarian [http://www.driftline.org/cgi-bin/archive/archive_msg.cgi?file=spoon-archives/marxism-intro.archive/marxism-intro_1997/97-04-23.102&msgnum=18&start=780&end=889] .In 1968 ISC became the International Socialists as it expanded nationally. But in 1971 he quit the IS due to his concern that the group was no longer placing the working class at the center of its analysis. From then onwards he produced a stream of scholarly works on Marxism and the workers' movement.
His work
His most enduring legacy is likely to be his five volume study "Karl Marx's Theory of Revolution", a seminal re-evaluation of Marx's whole political theory, based on an exhaustive survey of the writings of both Marx and Engels. He saw their political perspective as summarized by the phrase "socialism from below," which he had introduced in his pamphlet "
The Two Souls of Socialism ".In the Introduction to Draper's "Berkeley: The New Student Revolt" (1965) [http://www.marxists.org/archive/draper/1965/berkeley/intro.htm] ,
Mario Savio acknowledges his encouragement and friendship, and cites the influence of his earlier pamphlet "The Mind of Clark Kerr" (October 1964) [http://marxists.org/archive/draper/1964/10/kerr.htm] on the development of theFree Speech Movement .Outside his overtly political writings, Draper's most outstanding work is arguably the
short story "Ms Fnd in a Lbry ", asatire of theinformation age , written in 1961.Draper also published an English translation (Surkampf/Insel, 1984) of the complete works of the German 19th c. poet
Heinrich Heine , the fruit of three decades of work conducted alongside his better-known political activity.Hal Draper's brother,
Theodore Draper , was a historian of the American Communist movement. Unlike Hal, Theodore Draper had been a Stalinist in the 1930s before breaking with the Communist Party and abandoning Marxism to become a liberal anti-Communist.Hal Draper's sister, Dorothy (Dora) Draper married Jacob Rabkin (1905-2003), one of the intellectual founders of US tax law.
Organizations he was a member of:
*Young People's Socialist League
*Socialist Workers Party
*Independent Socialist League
*Socialist Party of America
*BerkeleyFree Speech Movement
*Independent Socialist ClubExternal links
* [http://www.socialisthistory.org Center for Socialist History]
* [http://www.anu.edu.au/polsci/marx/contemp/pamsetc/twosouls/twosouls.htm The Two Souls of Socialism]
* [http://marxists.org/archive/draper/index.htm Hal Draper Internet Archive]
* NY Times obituary [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C0CE3D61038F932A05752C0A966958260DEFAULTSORT:Draper, Hal]
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