Preface to the Korean Edition of “The Magna Carta Manifesto”

This chapter from Peter Linebaugh’s Stop Thief: The Commons, Enclosures and Resistance opens with aristos’ charming spin on the human right to rest. But Linebaugh isn’t one to go on in defense of laziness. Near the end of this short piece, he invokes bookish Reds who once insisted a “Communist is a mere bluffer, if he has not worked over in his conscious­ness the whole inheritance of human knowledge.”[1] Linebaugh has surely put in work on that score. The fact that his essay is a preface to the Korean edition of one of his earlier books stands as a tribute to his worldliness. Linebaugh goes wide in this chapter (as ever) though he begins in bed…

Of the aristocratic and stylish Mitford sisters, Jessica provides us with the Lazy Interpretation of Magna Carta beloved by sluggards everywhere. As a lovely communist (two of her sisters were fascists) she was disowned by her family and fell from the social peaks of English aristocracy to the Dickensian depths of the Rotherhithe docks in London in 1939. Unable to pay the rent she and her husband lived in fear of the process-server who they avoided by going in disguises which the process server soon came to recognize. “Esmond had a theory that it was illegal and in some way a violation of Magna Carta to serve process on people in bed.”[1] So they stayed in bed all day and then all night, and again all the next day, and all the next night under the covers, before deciding to immigrate to America. (Tom Paine, too, thought that independ­ent America was a realization of Magna Carta).

Once we stop smiling, we see the wisdom of rest. William Morris’s wonderful utopian novel, News from Nowhere, is called in its subtitle ”An Epoch of Rest” and the story actually begins in bed! The Bible solemnly orders that the earth itself be given a rest every seven years. This of course made sense agronomically at the time to prevent soil exhaustion. And it makes sense today more than ever because earth, air, water, and fire, formerly common, are utterly exhausted by the world’s privatizers who call their exploitation “business.” But business is the opposite of rest.

The subtitle of this book, Liberties and Commons for All, expresses two aspects of the ancient English Charters of Liberty; first is the restraint on politi­cal power of the King, second is the protection of subsistence in the commons. The former are legal issues-rule of law, trial by jury, prohibition of torture, habeas corpus; the latter are economic principles — neighborhood, subsistence, commons, reparations, and travel. How have they fared since the book was published? A worldwide crushing financial crisis of austerity has been met with new demands in the Occupy Wall Street movement and anti-capitalist mobi­lizations in Greece, Spain, Egypt, and a renewed push-back against nuclear power. Can Magna Carta and its sister companion, the Charter of the Forest, contribute to these discussions? How to put the commons into the constitu­tion, and the constitution into the commons? Can the centuries of human wisdom found in these Charters help the people of Jeju Island preserve the last pristine commons on earth from the inevitable destruction entailed by the construction of a U.S. naval base in its bid for Pacific hegemony?

The book was conceived at a time of the systematic devaluation of the working class of the world. The USA gloated in its imagined omnipotence and one after another destroyed the internal restraints on that power, and elimi­nated the external restraints with endless global wars. War provided the shock for devaluation and enclosure. From nurses and doctors health care was turned over to insurance profiteers; from carpenters and masons housing or shelter was turned over to bankers; from gardeners and farmers food was turned over to genetic engineers; and from librarians and scholars knowledge was turned over to machine operators. Work was as much alienated drudgery as ever, only now as “jobs” became a desperate social desideratum to have one was to be privileged. “Jobbery” once was scorned as corrupt careerism second only to stockbrokers in vile repute, instead it has thoughtlessly become the ultimate good. Prison has become a mass experience. They have combined to destroy self-respect, creativity, wellness, clearness of thought, probity of mind, and actual usefulness. They undermine integrity, and re-enslave mind, body, and soul.

The Gwangju People’s Uprising of May 1980 occupied a central city square, renaming it Democracy Square. Some commentators stress three aspects of that uprising, the struggle for truth, the transcendence of secular life, and the creation of a historical community. George Katsiaficas compares it to the Paris Commune.[2] One might also compare it to the Commons Rebellion of 1381 in England both for those three aspects and for the occupation of centrai urban spaces, and for the miracle of mobilization, accom­plished at least in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries by “murmuring.”

Knowledge of previous struggles for justice is transmitted in many ways through the law and extra-legally. Among the latter are commemorations, such as July Fourth commemorating the Declaration of Independence of the thirteen American colonies in 1776 or Fourteenth of July commemorating the storming of the Bastille and the beginning of the French Revolution in 1789. The commemoration itself may become an occasion to renew the struggle of the past in the present of the events it commemorates, though this is danger­ous. Nostalgia or official piety is the safer course. “All men are created equal” sounds good, as does liberté, egalité, et fraternité though the actual process of equalization, actual real equality, entails a perilous, though necessary, histori­cal course of redistribution, confiscation, and leveling.

The spectre of the commons has haunted the long arch of British history. The leader of the Commons Rebellion of 1381 was Wat Tyler, who forced the King to negotiate the return of expropriated commons. He was massacred on June 15, 1381. The fact that June 15 was the date when King John was forced by civil war to succumb to limitations on his power in Magna Carta in 1215 was not mentioned by the chroniclers of 1381. The archive of human knowl­edge is controlled by the rulers. This is not to argue that the class war of the Commons Rebellion of 1381 and the civil war leading w the armistice of Magna Carta in 1215 were either the same issues or led by the same social forces. In the latter the barons and nobility were enjoined to restrain the King, while in the former this was left to the commons. Yet both acted for the common­ weal, or the common good as we might say.

The concept of the commonweal emerged after the Commons Rebellion of 1381 whose insurgents included craftsmen, proletarians, and vagabonds in addition to the peasants who were the most numerous and fundamental. Ever since the semantic field of the “commons” includes this associati0n with rebel­lion. David Rollison shows that “weal” derives from the Anglo-Saxon term wele itself meaning wellness, welfare, or well-being.[3] Riches, or the accumula­tion of commodities, undermines well-being, as all the world’s religions once taught. At best, properties can be instruments for the attainment of wellness; at worst, they impeded it.

The English State in its sixteenth century depended on the centralized monarchy and established religion to oppose the commons. Thomas Elyot, Renaissance humanist, clerked for the King’s Council and did business for Star Chamber. He wrote The Book Named the Governor (1531) and dedicated it to King Henry VIII and it was published by the King’s printer. It went through eight editions in the sixteenth century. Its second paragraph is an argument against communism.

People have mistaken “republic” for a “commonweal.” The English word, “republic” derives from two Latin words, res publica, which means things belong­ing to the populous, or the public, which is to be distinguished from the plebeia, or common people. Plebs is Latin for English commonality and plebeii is commoners. Res plebeia thus should be translated as the “commonweal.” Those who make this mistake, claims Elyot, do so “that every thing should be to all men in common.” “If there should be a common weale, either the commoners only must be wealthy and the gentle and noblemen needy and miserable, or else excluding gentility, all men must be of one degree and sort, and a new name provided.” He feared the Biblical text requiring Christians “to have all things in common.”

Why was the argument against commons conducted on philological or semantic grounds? It had to do with the control of language, and thus the of monarchy should translate Utopia anew in which commoning between husband and wife has disappeared to be replaced by “discourse.”

In the USA neither aspect of Magna Carta has flourished, despite impor­tant attempts. The African American T. Thomas Fortune wrote in 188os in the depths of the Jim Crow segregation of the American south installing slavery under another name, “that land is common property, the property of the whole people.” He too reached deep into the human past, “The fires of revolution are incorporated into the Magna Carta of our liberties, and no human power can avert the awful eruption which will eventually burst upon us as Mount Vesuvius burst forth upon Herculaneum and Pompeii. It is too late for America to be wise in time. ‘The die is cast.”[6]

Franklin Roosevelt sought to be wise in the crisis of capitalism during the 1930s, and to cast the dice again. At his third inauguration as President in January 1941 he reminded America that “the democratic aspiration is no mere recent phase in human history… it blazed anew in the Middle Ages. It was written in Magna Carta.” In the context of the Four Freedoms, and the expla­nation of Freedom from Want was provided by the commoner and prole­tarian, Carlos Bulosan.[7] Bulosan had worked the succulent cornucopia of mother earth: in the orange groves, flower fields, asparagus rows, winter peas, vineyards, Wyoming beets, plant cauliflower, picked hops, lemon farms — but working as a proletarian he suffered beatings, gambling, prostitution, drugs, homelessness. As for the commons, this became a memory of family life in the Philippines.

We are the desires of anonymous men everywhere,
Who impregnate the wide earth’s lustrous wealth
With a gleaming florescence, we are the new thoughts
And the new foundations, the new verdure of the mind;
We are the new hope new joy life everywhere
If you want to know what we are —
WE ARE REVOLUTION

Woody Guthrie, the Oklahoma dust-bowl balladeer, worked his whole life for that time “when there shall be no want among you, because you’ll own everything in common…That’s what the Bible says. Common means all of us. This is old Commonism.”[8]

Magna Carta continues to play a part in for example, Michael O’Shea, a glass-cutter in Waterford, Ireland, went fishing in the River Blackwater. The twelfth duke of Devonshire, owner of Lismore Castle, convicted him of trespassing and illegal fishing. O’Shea defended himself citing Magna Carta which permitted common fishing on navigable, tidal rivers.[9] Another example occurred in December 2007 when with the encouragement of the Bristol Radical History Group the local Commoners Association of the Forest of Dean, in England, cited the Charter of the Forest to support their claim to graze sheep in the forest. Three years later the Tory government introduced the Public Bodies Bill to the House of Lords which would have allowed the government to sell the British forests. A local newspaper, The Forester, sprang into action October 2010. An organization was formed, Hands Off Our Forest. The local conservative Member of Parliament, Mark Harper, was mobbed at the Forest of Dean and had to be rescued by the police. He escaped the fury of the commoners with egg on his face. Hundreds of thousands protested, and prevented the sales. The Tory government, in a humiliating climb-down, withdrew the legislation three months later.

In October 2009 Elinor Ostrom won the Nobel Prize for Economics, the first woman to have received the award. She showed that people can manage common resources like forests, fisheries, or pastures without allocation by market pricing or government direction. She did this at a time when mathematical modeling dominated the methodology of economics. Her methodol­ogy instead required talking directly to the producers such as the Indonesian fisherman or the Maine lobsterman.[10]

The commons is both a social relationship and a material thing; it is neither a commodity nor exclusively a “resource.” This double meaning was expressed clearly in the two definitions provided in Dr. Samuel Johnson’s English Dictionary of 1755. A commons might refer to “an open ground equally used by many persons,” or to “one of the common people, a man of low rank, of mean condition.[11] The commons belongs in an actual landscape, then the two meanings become clear.

In April 2010 the World People’s Conference on Climate Change published the Universal Declaration of the Rights of Mother Earth. It was issued from Cochabamba, Bolivia, a significant location for two reasons because first, led by the indigenous people, the international effort to privatize its water, was roundly defeated, and second these were the Aymara and Quechua people whose labors at the silver mountain at Potosi produced the silver of the mone­tary system at the birth of capitalism, basically turning the mountain of silver into a monumental genocidal coffin. What was ripped-out of the earth became fetishized tokens organizing the global division of labor and the exploitation and oppression of peoples. People with such a history know what it means to declare “we are all part of Mother Earth, an indivisible, living commu­nity of interrelated and interdependent beings with a common destiny.” The Cochabamba declaration includes for all beings rights of life, respect, water, air, health, and in a remarkable unintended hearkening to the past, “everybeing has the right to well-being…The pursuit of human well-being contrib­utes to the well-being of Mother Earth, now and in the future.” The common wele again.

Christopher Caudwell, the English intellectual who died fighting fascists in Spain, and Hugh MacDiarmid, the Scottish communist from the same era, both liked to quote, “Communism becomes an empty phrase, a mere facade, and the Communist a mere bluffer, if he has not worked over in his conscious­ ness the whole inheritance· of human knowledge.”[12] Wow! Unless we contin­ually make this part of our life’s practice, this working over of our conscious­ness of the whole inheritance of human knowledge, we easily become dupes of the facade of the public relations industry which hides its cynical malevo­lence, or we are duped by the emptiness of corporate media with its charm­ing spectacles, or we are conned by the basic bluffing of privatized commercial schooling which passes technique as wisdom. If we are to rework the whole inheritance of human knowledge, and give the world a rest and ourselves a break; we must do so east and west, north and south, commoning.

Ann Arbor
2012


Editor’s Note: I hadn’t realized until I read footnote 12 (below) that Linebaugh was invoking Lenin on learning/worldliness. Fuck dat! On the other hand, it was good to see Peter the Red bow to FDR in the body of this piece. I’m reminded of Italian radicals who once flummoxed anti-American American leftists in the 70s by suggesting that FDR’s terms in office amounted to the world’s first and only dictatorship of the proletariat.

I chose to reprint the chapter above from Stop Thief now because it seemed to call and respond to the corpus of another bookish Brit, R. H. Blyth, who was set to make his own immense contribution to the inheritance of human knowledge once he moved to Korea in the 20s. Blyth was never a communist, but he was a working-class hero and his texts — see “Poetry is Everyday Live” — have plenty to teach commoners in our time.

Notes to “Preface to the Korean Edition of ‘The Magna Carta Manifesto'”

1 Jessica Mitford, Hons and Rebels (London: Gollancz, r96o),

2 George Katsiaficas and Na Kahn-chae .eds., South Korean Democracy: Legacy of the Gwangju Uprising (New York: Routledge, 2006).

3 David Rollison, A Commonwealth of the People: Popular Politics and England’s Long Socit Revolution, 1o66-1649 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010)

4 The Latin is “Nempe reverso domum, cum uxore fabulandum est, garriendum cum liberis, collo­ quendum cum ministris.”

5 Silivia Federici, Caliban and the Witch: Women, The Body, and Primitive Accumulation (New York: Autonomedia, 2004).

6 Black and White: Land and Labor in the South (New York: Fords, Howard & Hulbert, 1884), 217,233.

7 America Is in the Heart (New York: Harcourt, Brace, & , 1946).

8 Ronald Briley, “Woody Sez: The People’s Daily World and Indigenous Radicalism,” California History 84, no. 1 (Fall 2006), 35.

9 Wall Street Journal, March 8,

10 Elinor Ostrom, Governing the Commons: Evolution of Institutions for Collective Action (Cambridge University Press, 1993)

11 Or in a different register of meaning entirely, the “commons” might refer to Parliament or sewage, the House of Commons or the “necessary house.” Francis Grose, A Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue (1785).

12 See E.P. Thompson, “Christopher Caudwell,” Persons & Polemics: Historical Essays (London: Merlin Press, 1994). They quoted Lenin at the fourth Congress of the Communist International (1922).