Tuesday, March 7, 2017

Approaches to the Class Struggle in North Korea


Approaches to the Class Struggle in North Korea

 

Does the class struggle exist in North Korea? Two main issues includes in this question the first one is a definition, what is the class struggle, the second one is what social formation North Korea has as a predominant characteristic. These subjects simply are the matter of question whether the concept of the class struggle is valid in North Korea. Before confronting directly, talk about the early history of North Korea as concerned whether the people have a method for the class struggle.

The tool for the class struggle, labor union, was transformed to the General Federation of Trade Unions of Korea (GFTUK, Jikubchongdongmang in Korean) on Nov, 30, 1945, which was the organization more for contributing to education of the ideology of labor party, discipline such as seminar, small group activities etc, than for striking against the capitalist before 1945 the (pro) Japanese capitalist. It seemed like the continuity between two organizations lasts, but the labor union's roles of taking sides of workers, gathering, protesting against employers, negotiating wage, welfare, was gradually diminished by the debate between O, Ki-sub, Head of  Labor Department and Kim, Il-sung. O argued GFTUK ought to guarantee the rights of workers, but was criticized by Kim that he applied the principle of labor union in capitalism, after the 2th congress of the Korean Workers’ Party, the labor right was emphasized on the duty of workers, O was dismissed from one of his position at party. In short, there is no labor union familiar to a present view after, at most, 1947.

The reorganization of the labor union in North Korea is following the experience right after 1917 when the U.S.S.R. had been in chaos, the remains of imperial military and the outside countries started to attack the Bolshevik all over the territory and from every direction, and they reorganized the union for settling the transition. North Korea wasn't in a different situation after the liberation, needed to stabilize the society, keeping eyes on the political, military movement of the southern part over the 38th parallel and, plus, Japan.

Meanwhile, O, Ki-sub is a famous socialist from the colonial period, especially one of the leaders of the Won-san great strike in 1929. After 1945, he was in a loose meaning a head of socialists fought in the northern part of Korea. It, however, wasn’t same kinds of Kim, Il-sung's Man-chu partisans as an undividable unity, because they rarely had a chance to organize an official group by the reason of difficulty of the public gathering by the crackdown of the (pro) Japanese police. His dismissal as consequence of the clash in 1947 wasn’t serious, returned soon, but engaged in the series of the fraction conflicts through 1950s. The debate between O and Kim in 1947 had a meaning of the first opposition against the power of Kim, Il-sung at one point which indicate a prolusion of purges in 1950s

Without labor union, no class struggle? Haven’t North Korea had the class struggle from the near beginning? From here, all things are debatable, a repeated supposition, which means beyond the dimension of history. North Korea basically is based on "socialism". Someone couldn't approve this word, then, at least, can say that one of the principles of North Korea is "socialism". Socialism means the society without the capitalist by collectivizing or nationalizing the means of production each industry such as manufacturing, commerce, agriculture. North Korea officially declared in 1958 they finished collectivizing all the means of production. Without the capitalist, for employee no subject was to fight for the class struggle.

However, disagreed with assumption North Korea grounded on the socialism rule, one could assert a subject in a meaning of the capitalist or a feature of a hybrid form between capitalism and socialism exists in North Korea. This is an opening question entering to the debate of the social formation of North Korea, which arguing what kinds of means of production North Korea are predominant and from when could determine its form of North Korea changed. For example, one claim the 10 percent of the current economy of North Korea is in the form of the capitalism production. Who is capitalist? It's difficult to presume the capitalist is in North Korea because the capitalist is a human being representing the interests of capital. And then, though it’s impossible to know and judge how much degree privatization proceeded in the bureaucracy organization, if assumed the bureaucrat works like a quasi-capitalist, where is the class struggle? As concerned with the class struggle, there’s been no news in North Korea. Turing to the eyes over the north border, the East Northern China had a great strike after 2004. Then, questions continue in a row. How much difference China and North Korea have? Could conclude the people in North Korea have become so brainwashed that lost their power of resistance, lacked in judgments?

The other way handling this is through the conceptual redefinition. Understanding of the class struggle is molded into general impressions such as the strike of labor union, negotiation of wage, labor condition. A group rethinking Marxism accepts one of the failure reasons in the socialism experiment as understanding of Marxism and tries to reinterpret Marx’s works. In one of their thought, all the clashes between the owner and the workers in distribution of value production, not only the economical but the political, are the class struggle. If agreeing with this, every behavior e.g. slowdown, absence etc. is included in the class struggle, and the place for the production become a spot of occurring the class struggle itself, thus find the possibility of explaining the class struggle in North Korea.

Above, however, is pivoting the unavoidable question about the social formation of North Korea, existence of the capitalist by generalizing the entire place to the site of the class struggle. Back to the question from the start, “Does the class struggle exist in North Korea?” could be answered in the different approaches, though a certain way of explanations couldn’t be a “correct answer” and, also, finding a “correct answer” is difficult right now, but it is obvious that this question is closely interrelated to asking how North Korea and its society could be defined in or over the capitalism.

 

Reference




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After writing, checked this posting which make to want to ask myself, then, what the socialist experiment has been.
http://freekorea.us/2017/03/03/class-warfare-in-north-korea/#sthash.oTmJIsUC.dpbs



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