Henry Pachter
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Henry Pachter (1907–1980) was a Marxist intellectual and a libertarian socialist activist. Perhaps best known as an essayist, who dealt with both historical and political matters, he also authored a number of books on a variety of subjects. An exile from the Nazi regime, deeply concerned with the lessons offered by the Weimar Republic, he taught at the
New School for Social Research The New School for Social Research (NSSR) is a graduate-level educational institution that is one of the divisions of The New School in New York City, United States. The university was founded in 1919 as a home for progressive era thinkers. NSSR ...
and then at the
City College City college may refer to: In the United States * Community college, a type of educational institution sometimes called a ''junior college'' or a ''city college'' in the United States * City College of New York ** 137th Street – City College (IR ...
of the
City University of New York The City University of New York ( CUNY; , ) is the Public university, public university system of Education in New York City, New York City. It is the largest urban university system in the United States, comprising 25 campuses: eleven Upper divis ...
until his death in 1980.


Biography

Born in 1907 in Berlin, Pachter joined the German Youth Movement as a teenager and, following a split in its ranks, the German Communist Party (KPD) in 1926. He enrolled in the history department at the University of Berlin and, by 1928, found himself expelled from the KPD. He then joined the Social Democratic Party (SPD), where he worked under Rudolf Hilferding at the legendary journal, Society, and finished his dissertation in 1932 on “The Proletariat Before 1848.” He would remain a libertarian socialist for the rest of his life. By the end of 1933, Pachter had been forced to flee to Paris where he took odd jobs, taught at the Universite Populaire, agitated for creating a “popular front” of all antifascist forces, and ultimately served as a publicist for the POUM, a mixed group of Trotskyist and socialists that served the loyalist cause during the Spanish Civil War. Briefly a member of the anti-Nazi underground in which he helped edit probably the first resistance journal, Proletarian Action, he wound up in the Gurs prison camp, before coming to the United States in 1940. Soon enough he was working for the Office of Strategic Services, and part-time for the Institute for Social Research at Columbia University, before becoming a founding member of '' Dissent'' and entering the academy.


Theoretical contributions

Henry Pachter understood Marxism as a critical method capable of questioning its political employment from a historical and materialist standpoint that emphasized the ability of the working class (rather than a party) to control its destiny. He never viewed it as a “science” or a form of economics guaranteeing the inevitable victory of the proletariat. In this respect, his intellectual lineage derived from Karl Korsch and the libertarian socialism associated with Rosa Luxemburg. His writings were primarily inspired by his political commitments: a work on the Weimar Republic and the Spanish Civil War; a study of economic policy under Mussolini and another dealing with the fascist use of language; the character of authoritarian political parties; foreign policy; the role of reform, and the meaning of socialism. In Pachter’s view, socialism exhibited a fundamental tension between its need to engage the world even as it projects a vision of society as it should be. That tension prevented Pachter from identifying socialism with any movement or party. Indeed, as he once put the matter: “One cannot have socialism; one is a socialist.”


Works

* ''Socialism in History: Political Writings of Henry Pachter'', ed. Stephen Eric Bronner * ''Weimar Etudes'', ed. Stephen Eric Bronner (New York: Columbia University Press, 1982). * “Brecht's Personal Politics,
''Telos''
44 (Summer 1980). * ''Modern Germany: A Social, Cultural, and Political History'', (Boulder: Westview Press, 1979). * ''The Fall and Rise of Europe'' (1975) * ''Russia as a World Power''; published in German as ''Weltmacht Russland'' (1968) * ''Collision Course: The Cuban Missile Crisis and Coexistence'' (1963) * ''Magic into Science: The Story of Paracelsus'' (New York: Henry Schumann, 1951). * ''The Spanish Crucible'' (1937); translated from Spanish into French as ''Espagne 1936-1937: La guerre devore la revolution'' (1986).


Compilations

* ''Socialism in History: Political Essays of Henry Pachter'' (edited by
Stephen Bronner Stephen Eric Bronner (born 19 August 1949) is a political scientist and philosopher, Board of Governors Professor of Political Science at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, New Jersey, United States, and is the Director of Global Relations for ...
) (New York: Columbia University Press, 1984).


External links


Henry M. Pachter Papers, 1939-1980
at the State University of New York at Albany
"Remembering Henry Pachter"
in '' Salmagundi''


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Pachter, Henry M. 1907 births 1980 deaths 20th-century American philosophers American political writers American male non-fiction writers Marxist theorists Social philosophy Rutgers University faculty City University of New York faculty American political scientists Jewish emigrants from Nazi Germany to the United States 20th-century political scientists