We are living in a historical period deeply shaped by global capitalism’s Long Depression and by the worsening ecological crisis caused by this mode of production. These processes underpin both the sharpening rivalry between the West, China, and Russia and the dynamic of asymmetrical radicalization in which the right is growing stronger, the neoliberal centre is weakening, and an uneven resurgence of left radicalism lags far behind. In the current moment, left-wing forces are pulled politically either toward the stance of the rulers of the West or toward various often-reactionary forces in conflict with Western states. This results in a tendency to both pro- and anti-Western campism. Worryingly, the pull to either campism remains much stronger than the influence of insurgent popular struggles that encourage consistent internationalism, anticapitalism, and anti-imperialism. In addition, responses to pernicious anticommunism tend to adopt a sympathetic or celebratory stance to so-called “socialist” countries rather than evaluating them from an emancipatory perspective.
When so much needs to be understood about the force of these dynamics in this context and about many other distinctive and important aspects of the world today, why would anyone want to devote time to reading two US socialists writing between the late 1940s and the turn of the century, especially given their preoccupation with the “Russian Question” (the social-political character of the long-gone USSR) and the politics of Communist Parties? In spite of what some readers will perceive as the irrelevance of the texts by Phyllis and Julius Jacobson compiled by Paul Heideman and Kent Worcester in the over 550-page long reader Third Camp Socialism, these writings are both of historical interest and (in some cases) real political value today.1Thanks to Aaron Jaffe, Charlie Post, and Joshua Nicholas Pineda for their comments on drafts of this piece, and to Peter Drucker, Sam Farber, Joel Geier, and Kim Moody for correspondence or conversation about related issues. The aim of this essay is neither to laud nor to polemicize against the authors. Rather, I aim to examine their Marxist commitments from the vantage of our moment in history. The Jacobsons’s analyses of the USSR, other “socialist” societies, and Communist Parties were flawed in nontrivial ways, and their socialist politics had other notable weaknesses. Nevertheless, they had a profound grasp of the indispensability of democracy for both the transition to communism and the development of working-class movements capable of launching such a transition. They also consistently maintained a resolute internationalist opposition to both the US ruling class and its geopolitical rivals, resisting the enormous pressure to accommodate one or the other. Indeed, situated as they were between Stalinism and Stalinophobia, both the Jacobsons’ failures and resolute successes in navigating between these political poles are instructive for contemporary Marxists in today’s context of increasing geopolitical rivalry.
Julius Jacobson (1922–2003) and Phyllis Garden (1922–2010)—who switched to using her husband’s last name in the 1960s to avoid trouble with the US Social Security system—became Trotskyists in New York City in their teens.2“Third Camp Politics: An Interview with Phyllis and Julius Jacobson,” in Third Camp Socialism: A Phyllis and Julius Jacobson Reader, eds. Paul Heideman and Kent Worcester (Leiden: Brill, 2025), 541. They were part of the large minority of the Socialist Workers’ Party (SWP) that broke away in 1940 to form the Workers’ Party (WP). The split was caused by the minority’s opposition to policies they found unacceptable—unconditional defence of the USSR (whose rulers had just signed a pact with Nazi Germany) and support for its invasions of Poland and Finland—and by disagreements on the character of socialist organization.3Peter Drucker describes these as “[d]ifferent approaches to Marxist theory and Marxist method [that] found immediate expression in sharp disagreements about how socialists should discuss and decide disputed issues and what it meant for a socialist organization to function democratically.” Peter Drucker, Max Shachtman and His Left: A Socialist’s Odyssey Through the “American Century” (New Jersey: Humanities Press, 1994), 116–17. Drucker is preparing a new edition of this book. The WP renamed itself the Independent Socialist League (ISL) in 1949. As Julius later wrote, after the war the WP/ISL “went into a more or less steady decline” (a decline, it must be noted, experienced by all left forces in the USA of the time).4Julius Jacobson, “The Two Deaths of Max Shachtman,” in Third Camp Socialism, 166. In a Cold War climate intensely hostile to radicalism, “[t]here was not only a decline in membership but a gradual erosion of the movement’s revolutionary ideological perspective”—a drift noticeable in the group’s foremost leader, Max Shachtman.5Jacobson, “Two Deaths,” in Third Camp Socialism, 166. Because of the calumnies levelled against the WP/ISL from some quarters of the socialist left, it needs to be said that, although the politics of most ISL members were drifting away from revolutionary socialism in the 1950s, the group did not capitulate to supporting Western imperialism. For Shachtman and those who followed him as he moved further to the right, capitulation came after the ISL’s dissolution. See Drucker, Max Shachtman, 259–82. At Shachtman’s initiative, the ISL dissolved into the social democratic Socialist Party in 1958.
In 1961 Julius and Phyllis launched the journal New Politics (first series 1961–76, second series 1986–). Their goal was to use the publication to communicate the “Third Camp” politics of the early ISL “[i]n an open forum with others” on the left who championed neither capitalism nor Stalinism.6“Third Camp Politics,” 549. The Jacobsons’s project was motivated by their opposition to Shachtman’s (and most other former members of the ISL’s) support for US imperialism against the USSR and abandonment of the politics they once supported: revolutionary-democratic socialist opposition from the standpoint of the exploited and oppressed to both capitalism and Stalinism (understood as a noncapitalist class society, or bureaucratic collectivism). Most of the articles contained in Third Camp Socialism were originally published in New Politics.
Most of the essays are credited to Julius but, as the book’s preface recognizes, he and Phyllis collaborated very closely in developing their ideas and writing. The writing is mostly very clear, well-crafted, and often lively—the product of learning to engage seriously with ideas at a young age in a vibrant working-class “infrastructure of dissent” afforded by the socialist organizations of the 1930s, rather than university classrooms.7On infrastructures of dissent, see Alan Sears, The Next New Left: A History of the Future (Winnipeg: Fernwood Publishing, 2014).
Third Camp Socialism is organized into five parts, each with a brief introduction by the editors: “Social Movements,” “Left Debates,” “The Russian Question,” “War and Peace,” and “Students and Teachers.” The reader also includes an editorial preface useful for readers unfamiliar with the authors and the WP/ISL, as well as an interesting interview with the Jacobsons.8The editors are mistaken in their claim that the Jacobsons broke politically with Shachtman “once he commenced his rightward march.” Paul Heideman and Kent Worcester, preface to Third Camp Socialism, ix). As Peter Drucker’s biography documents, that march began earlier than their break. Drucker, Max Shachtman, 189–253. Heidemann and Worcerster’s preface would have benefited from at least briefly discussing the history of the notion of the Third Camp. The major themes of the compilation are the character of the USSR and its influence on world politics, the CPUSA, the Cold War, US imperialism, fighting racism in the US, and defending civil liberties. There are also noteworthy defences of young New Leftists and Kate Millett’s Sexual Politics against criticism by Irving Howe (the founder of the journal Dissent who had quit the ISL as he moved rightwards). The book also includes Julius’s memorable short essay “The Two Deaths of Max Shachtman,” which conveys the admiration and affection many young Trotskyists of the 1930s felt for Shachtman as well as revulsion for the “moral and political death” represented by his becoming a renegade.9Jacobson, “Two Deaths,” 166.
Historical Insights and Blinkers
People interested in the history of the radical left in the US will find much of interest in Third Camp Socialism. Julius edited the magazine Anvil from 1949 to 1952 (soon renamed Anvil and Student Partisan after a merger) and his articles give the reader a sense of student politics in the early years of the Cold War, before the emergence of the New Left in the 1960s. The same is true of political debates in the Civil Rights Movement in the mid-1960s and the extent of racism in US unions in that decade. Phyllis’s review essay on the memoir Scoundrel Time by blacklisted Hollywood writer Lillian Hellman identifies the “almost complete political amnesia” and retrospective self-justification of this former longtime sympathizer of the CPUSA. Identifying these problems with participant accounts of the Red Scare is a helpful corrective to many people interested in left history today, who remain insufficiently attentive to them.10Phyllis Jacobson, “A Time of Assorted Scoundrels,” in Third Camp Socialism, 169.