James Burnham (November 22, 1905 – July 28, 1987) was an American philosopher and political theorist. He chaired the New York University Department of Philosophy. Burnham was an editor and a regular contributor to William F. Buckley's conservative magazine National Review on a variety of topics. He rejected containment of the Soviet Union and called for the rollback of communism worldwide.
His first book was An Introduction to Philosophical Analysis (1931). Burnham became a prominent Trotskyist activist in the 1930s. His most famous book, The Managerial Revolution (1941), speculated on the future of an increasingly proceduralist<!--no wikilink for now please--> hence sclerotic society. A year before he wrote the book, he rejected Marxism and became an influential theorist of the political right as a leader of the American conservative movement.
Biography
Early life
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Born in Chicago, Illinois, on November 22, 1905, James Burnham was the son of Claude George Burnham, an English immigrant and executive with the Burlington Railroad. James was raised as a Roman Catholic but rejected Catholicism as a college student, professing atheism for the rest of his life before reverting to the faith of his youth on his deathbed. He graduated at the top of his class at Princeton University before attending Balliol College, Oxford, where his professors included J. R. R. Tolkien and Martin D'Arcy. In 1929, he became a professor of philosophy at New York University. In 1934, he married Marcia Lightner.
Trotskyism
In 1933, along with Sidney Hook, Burnham helped to organize the American Workers Party led by the Dutch-born pacifist minister A. J. Muste. Burnham supported the 1934 merger with the Communist League of America which formed the US Workers Party. In 1935, he allied with the Trotskyist wing of that party and favored fusion with the Socialist Party of America. During this period, he became a friend to Leon Trotsky. Writing for Partisan Review, Burnham was also an important influence on writers including Dwight Macdonald and Philip Rahv.
Burnham's engagement with Trotskyism was short-lived, and from 1937 a number of disagreements came to the fore. In 1937, the Trotskyists were expelled from the Socialist Party, an action which led to the formation of the Socialist Workers Party (SWP) at the end of the year. Inside the SWP, Burnham allied with Max Shachtman in a faction fight over the position of the SWP's majority faction, led by James P. Cannon and backed by Leon Trotsky, defending the Soviet Union as a degenerated workers state against the incursions of imperialism. Shachtman and Burnham, especially after witnessing the Nazi–Soviet pact of 1939 and the invasions of Poland, Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia by Joseph Stalin's regime, as well as the Soviet invasion of Finland in November 1939, came to contend that the USSR was a new form of imperialistic class society and was thus not worthy of even critical support from the socialist movement. In February 1940, Burnham wrote Science and Style: A Reply to Comrade Trotsky, in which he broke with dialectical materialism. In this text he responds to Trotsky's request to draw his attention to "those works which should supplant the system of dialectic materialism for the proletariat" by referring to Principia Mathematica by Russell and Whitehead and "the scientists, mathematicians and logicians now cooperating in the new Encyclopedia of Unified Science".
After a protracted discussion inside the SWP, in which the factions argued their case in a series of heated internal discussion bulletins, the special 3rd National Convention of the organization in early April 1940 decided the question in favor of the Cannon majority by a vote of 55–31. Even though the majority sought to avoid a split by offering to continue the debate and to allow proportional representation of the minority on the party's governing National Committee, Shachtman, Burnham, and their supporters resigned from the SWP to launch their own organization, again called the Workers Party. This break also marked the end of Burnham's participation in the radical movement, however. On May 21, 1940, he addressed a letter to the National Committee of the Workers Party resigning from the organization. In it he made it clear the distance he had moved away from Marxism:
In 1941, Burnham wrote a book analyzing the development of economics and society as he saw it, called The Managerial Revolution: What is Happening in the World. The book was included in Life magazine's list of the 100 outstanding books of 1924–1944.
OSS and National Review
During World War II, Burnham took a leave from NYU to work for the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), a forerunner of the Central Intelligence Agency. Recommended by George F. Kennan, Burnham was invited to lead the semi-autonomous "Political and Psychological Warfare" division of the Office of Policy Coordination.</blockquote>
In 1955, Burnham helped William F. Buckley Jr. found National Review magazine, which from the start took positions in foreign policy consistent with Burnham's own. In the National Review, he wrote a column titled "Third World War", which referred to the Cold War. Burnham became a lifelong contributor to the journal, and Buckley referred to him as "the number one intellectual influence on National Review since the day of its founding". In 1983, President Ronald Reagan awarded him the Presidential Medal of Freedom. In early November 1978 he suffered a stroke which affected his health and short-term memory. He died of kidney and liver cancer at home in Kent, Connecticut, on July 28, 1987. He was buried in Kent on August 1, 1987.
Ideas
The Managerial Revolution
thumb|[[Dust jacket of the 1941 edition of Burnham's seminal work]]
Later writings
In The Machiavellians (1943), Burnham developed his theory that the emerging new élite would prosper better if it retained some democratic trappings—political opposition, a free press, and a controlled "circulation of the élites." His 1964 book Suicide of the West became a classic text for the post-war conservative movement in American politics, proclaiming Burnham's new interest in traditional moral values, classical liberal economics, and anti-communism. He saw political ideologies as potential s (sets of elements)
afflicting their proponents with various internal contradictions. His works greatly influenced paleoconservative author Sam Francis (1947–2005), who wrote two books about Burnham and based his own political theories upon the "managerial revolution" and the resulting managerial state.
In fiction
While critical of Burnham's predictions - that Germany is bound to win the war; Germany and Japan are bound to survive as great states and to remain the nuclei of power in their respective areas; Germany will not attack the USSR until after the defeat of Britain; and the USSR is bound to be defeated - British writer George Orwell was inspired by Burnham's The Managerial Revolution and his explanation of power, which informed Orwell's 1949 novel Nineteen Eighty-Four. Orwell noted in 1945, "For Burnham's geographical picture of the new world has turned out to be correct. More and more obviously the surface of the earth is being parcelled off into three great empires ..." The superpowers of Oceania, Eurasia, and Eastasia in the novel are partly influenced by Burnham's assessment of the United States under Franklin D. Roosevelt, Nazi Germany, and the Soviet Union as being managerial states. In 1946 Orwell, summarized Burnham's managerial revolution and outlined the geopolitical landscape of Nineteen Eighty-Four:
While Orwell partly agreed with Burnham's analysis, he never fully accepted Burnham's attitude towards Machiavellian managerial power, and Nineteen Eighty-Four has been seen as a satire of Burnham's analysis. This unresolved thought helped to inspire the character of O'Brien, who talks about power and regimes in Nineteen Eighty-Four.
Works
Books
- Introduction to Philosophical Analysis (with Philip Wheelwright). New York: Henry Holt and Company, 1932.
- The Managerial Revolution: What is Happening in the World. New York: John Day Co., 1941.
- The Machiavellians: Defenders of Freedom. New York: John Day Co., 1943. .
- The Struggle for the World. New York: John Day Co., 1947.
- The Case for De Gaulle: A Dialogue Between André Malraux and James Burnham. New York: Random House, 1948.
- The Coming Defeat of Communism. New York: John Day Co., 1949.
- Containment or Liberation? An Inquiry into the Aims of United States Foreign Policy. New York: John Day Co., 1953.
- The Web of Subversion: Underground Networks. New York: John Day Co., 1954.
- Congress and the American Tradition. Chicago: Regnery, 1959. .
- Bear and Dragon: What is the Relation Between Moscow and Peking? New York: National Review, in cooperation with the American-Asian Exchange, 1960.
- Suicide of the West: An Essay on the Meaning and Destiny of Liberalism. New York: John Day Co., 1964.
- The War We Are In: The Last Decade and the Next. New Rochelle, NY: Arlington House, 1967.
Book contributions
- Introduction. In: Evans, Medford Bryan The Secret War for the A-Bomb. Washington: Regnery Publishing, 1953.
- Introduction. In: Dobriansky, Lev E. Veblenism: A New Critique. Washington: Public Affairs Press, 1957.
Pamphlets
- War and the Workers (as John West). New York: Workers Party of the United States, 1935. Marxists.
- Why Did They "Confess"? A Study of the Radek-Piatakov Trial. New York: Pioneer Publishers, 1937. Marxists.
- The People's Front: The New Betrayal. New York: Pioneer Publishers, 1937. Bolshevik.
- How to Fight War: Isolation, Collective Security, Relentless Class Struggle? New York: Socialist Workers Party & Young Peoples Socialist League (4th Internationalists), 1938.
- Let the People Vote on War! New York: Pioneer Publishers, 1939?.
- In Defense of Marxism (Against the Petty-Bourgeois Opposition) (with Leon Trotsky, Joseph Hansen and William Warde). New York: Pioneer Publishers, 1942.
Public speaking
- Why Does a Country Go Communist? An address delivered at the Indian Congress for Cultural Freedom on March 31, 1951. Bombay: Democratic Research Service, 1951.
Selected articles
- "Lenin’s Heir" Partisan Review, Vol.12, No.1 1945.
- "The Case Against Adlai Stevenson." American Mercury, Vol. 76, October 1952, pp. 11–19.
- "Can Washington Conduct Political Warfare?" American Mercury, December 1952, pp. 10–24.
- "Does ADA Run the New Frontier?" National Review, Vol. 14, No. 18, May 7, 1963, pp. 355–62.
See also
- Circulation of elites
- Sam Francis
- Paul Gottfried
References
Sources
Further reading
- David T. Byrne, James Burnham: An Intellectual Biography, Northern Illinois University Press, 2025
- Samuel Francis, Power and History, The Political Thought of James Burnham. London: Claridge Press, 1999.
- Grant Havers, "James Burnham's Elite Theory and the Postwar American Right," Telos 154 (Spring 2011): 29–50.
- Benjamin Guy Hoffman, The Political Thought of James Burnham. PhD dissertation. University of Michigan, 1969.
- Daniel Kelly, James Burnham and the Struggle for the World: A Life. Wilmington, DE: ISI Books, 2002.
- C. Wright Mills and Hans Gerth, "A Marx for the Managers", 1942. Reprinted in Power, Politics, and People: The Collected Essays of C. Wright Mills edited by Irving Horowitz. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1967.
- George Orwell, "Second Thoughts on James Burnham," Polemic, No. 3, May 1946.
- Paul Sweezy, "The Illusion of the 'Managerial Revolution,'" Science & Society, vol. 6, no. 1 (Winter 1942), pp. 1–23. In JSTOR.
External links
- James Burnham Internet Archive at Marxists Internet Archive
- Register of the James Burnham Papers, 1928-1983, the Online Archive of California (OAC) initiative of the California Digital Library
- Obituary of James Burnham, National Review, September 11, 1987
- Lenin's heir. By Victor Serge. At Victor Serge Archive (Marxists Internet Archive)
- James Burnham, the First Cold Warrior by Francis P. Sempa
