24 Nov 2008

Edward Carpenter: gay, green victorian ecosocialist hero


Had this from Peter Tatchell....thanks Peter.

I have discussed Edward Carpenter in my 1994 book Green History.


Edward Carpenter - A life of liberty and love

By Sheila Rowbotham,

Published by Verso Books

www.versobooks.com

London and New York, November 2008

This is one of the best political biographies for many years. As well as being a book about a little-known icon of past history; it is bursting with ideas that are still relevant to the future of humanity - for LGBT and straight people.

Author Shelia Rowbotham, the much-loved socialist feminist historian, has written an incredibly moving, inspiring account of the personal and political life of the prophetic gay English author, poet, philosopher and humanitarian, Edward Carpenter, 1844-1929.

Arguably the true pioneer of the LGBT rights movement in England, he lived openly and defiantly with his life-long partner George Merrill.

In the nineteenth century, he wrote some the earliest essays and pamphlets advocating homosexual law reform and spoke out enthusiastically for women's rights.

Unlike many others, he understood the connection between sexism and heterosexism: that the struggle for women's rights and gay rights are closely tied together (a view that was resurrected by the Gay Liberation Front in the early 1970s and by OutRage! in the 1990s).

Decades ahead of his time on many social issues, Carpenter advocated green socialism, women's suffrage, contraception, curbs on pollution, sex education in schools, pacifism, animal rights, recycling, prison reform, worker's control, self-sufficiency, vegetarianism, homosexual equality, naturism and free love.

His socialism was libertarian, decentralised, self-governing, cooperative and environmentalist, with a strong streak of anarchism, individualism and (non-religious) spiritualism. He argued that socialism was as much about the way we live our personal lives as about changing the economic, political, social and cultural systems.

We need to change our hearts and minds before we can overturn the iniquities of capitalism, he observed. Otherwise, we might end up replacing one tyranny with another.

Echoing the left-wing arts and crafts movement, which was often derided by the Marxists of the Social Democratic Federation, Carpenter's vision of socialism included a cultural renaissance to promote access to the arts for everyone, not just the rich. He saw things of beauty as a way to uplift the human spirit.

Carpenter himself was not without fault; occasionally expressing anti-Semitic sentiments, which were standard and rife (but not therefore excusable) in the late 1800s. For someone who distanced himself from the mainstream and the mob on most issues, these lapses are surprising and lamentable.

Initially a member of the Social Democratic Federation (a forerunner of the Communist Party), disagreements with the SDF's advocacy of violence prompted Carpenter to leave the SDF in the 1880s and help found the Socialist League, where he worked closely with Eleanor Marx, William Morris and Edward Aveling.

In 1893, he joined with Kier Hardie, George Bernard Shaw and Ben Tillett to form the Independent Labour Party (ILP). He stuck with the left, despite the shameful homophobia of some left-wingers, including Frederick Engels and later George Orwell.

I recall meeting Fenner Brockway, the legendary ILP leader (1888-1988), in 1983, when he was 93 years old. He enthused about Carpenter's trail-blazing ideas; praising him as one of the greatest thinkers of the last 100 years. Probably he was.

This book is a fascinating, engaging insight into the life of a truly
remarkable man. Read it.

Peter Tatchell

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

This looks like a very interesting publication. Carpenter influenced a lot of proto-Green thinkers like Mahatma Gandhi, D.H. Lawrence,
C.R. Ashbee and John Cowper Powys.

It's good that interest in Carpenter and his work is being revived-when I first learned about him, I was surprised to learn there hadn't been a revival of Carpenter's ideas in the 1960s or 1970s.

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