Tired of flabby and limp analytic terms in scholarly work? Those terms abound – supplement, intersectionality, complexity, thick analysis, intertextuality, hybridity, mimicry, interstices, habitus, objet petit a, wellbeing index … [add terms here].
Instead, I propose two key terms with some bite.
1. Putschism, or the Kornilov putsch.
Lenin defines a putsch as an attempt at insurrection that is ‘nothing but a circle of conspirators or stupid maniacs, and has aroused no sympathy among the masses’ (Collected Works, Volume 22, p. 355). The Kornilov putsch of August-September 1917 was a conservative conspiracy, led by General Kornilov and supported by the old aristocracy, landowners and capitalists. It sought to impose its will by deception, force and old patterns of deference, first on parts of the army so that the conspiracy could achieve its aims and then on the people. The putsch disintegrated when Bolsheviks and SRs infiltrated Kornilov’s wavering troops and persuaded them either to refuse to fight or to defect. The putsch gave the Bolsheviks their chance, since the vast majority of workers and peasants swung over to their side and enabled the October Revolution.
Applied to scholarly work: picture yourself listening to a weak paper that relies the support of a few heavyweights. During the discussion that follows, begin your response with: ‘Putschist! Your argument is nothing other than putschist, just like Kornilov!’ Or, if you operate with brittle American politeness, you may say: ‘Thankyou for your wonderful and insightful paper. However, I would like to ask you why it is given to the mentality of a putsch, fit only for a circle of conspirators and stupid maniacs …’
2. The Kursk salient.
A salient may be defined as a feature of the battlefield projecting into enemy territory. It is surrounded on three sides by the enemy, rendering the troops in the salient vulnerable to being encircled and cut off. The enemy line facing a salient is defined as a ‘re-entrant’ (that is, a reverse salient). If the salient is long and narrow it is called a ‘deep salient’, which is susceptible to being ‘pinched out’ across the base. If it is ‘pinched out’, the salient becomes a ‘pocket’ in which the defenders are trapped.
The Kursk salient appeared on the eastern front in 1943. Since the Red Army tacticians had long realised that the Germans would attack there during the summer campaign, they developed an innovative strategy of high-concentration, well-camouflaged, multi-layer defences that were 250 kms deep. For the first time during World War II a German blitzkrieg was absorbed, blunted and turned back in a devastating counter-attack that broke the Wehrmacht and essentially won the war.
Applied to, say, literary analysis, one may venture a bold new, ‘Kursk salient’, theory that appears to its critics highly vulnerable. Salivating at the prospect of pinching out the saliential theory and creating a pocket that may be captured, your opponents set out to attack. In response, you develop a strategy like the Red Army that will lure critics into the trap, absorb their punishment and then destroy them in a crushing counter-attack.
The possibilities are endless: Galileo is the Kursk salient of astronomy, or rather, we now have the Galileo salient. In queer theory we have the Stonewall salient. The subconscious becomes the Freudian salient. Capital is the Marxian salient of economic theory …


25 March, 2012 at 2:04 am
The singular genius of Our Lord & Savior Comrade Marshall Stalin (PBUH) evidenced in the “Kursk Salient” is also adapted to the sport of boxing via the “rope-a-dope”. In the second video here you will hear the crowd chanting “Ali Kumbaya” which roughly translates from Lingala as “Marxism-Leninism is the birthright of all free men”. And Manny Pacquiao, it is interesting to note, was in his youth a prominent member of the small breakaway faction of the New People’s Army, the NPA (Marxist-Leninist) that sought to reconcile the pragmatic Maoism of the mainline NPA with a more orthodox anti-revisionist politics.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Auca1xe-0To
25 March, 2012 at 2:05 am
My error, here is the Ali-Frazier video:
25 March, 2012 at 2:15 am
The possibilities of such robust analysis are almost endless. But you have been lax concerning not one (selecting a youtube link) but two items: salient and putsch are part of the Leninist-Stalinist contribution to scholarly work. It is time to restore that well-nigh forgotten term – Leninist-Stalinist.
25 March, 2012 at 3:06 am
But might this desire for clarity not inadvertently produce a petty bourgeois relativism by implying that there is a form of Leninism that is not always already Stalinism; that Leninism does not presuppose, dialectically, it’s fulfillment in the triumphs of Stalinism?
25 March, 2012 at 3:21 am
This is great. I love it.
25 March, 2012 at 4:44 am
Thanks, Ms O’Nym.
25 March, 2012 at 3:24 am
You may know that and I may know that, but does the chicken know that?
25 March, 2012 at 4:21 am
Well, apparently the NPA doesn’t, even after the necessary corrections to their positions advanced by Pacquiao’s NPA(M-L).
25 March, 2012 at 4:45 am
Well, they just just lack the ‘insight’.
25 March, 2012 at 7:31 am
The Kant scholar Stephan Körner of the Uni of Bristol got snared by a Kursk salient at a joint meeting of the Mind Association and the Aristotelian Society in the 1960s. He was giving an address on ‘categories’ (I think), and was giving his usual very flamboyant lecture, with much striding around the podium and many hand gestures. He ended with a flourish: ‘If you accept X, don’t you have to accept Y?’, ‘And if you accept Y, don’t you have to accept not-Z?’, ‘And if you accept not-Z, don’t you have to….?”. His respondent was the noted eccentric and aristocrat AP Cavendish, who was given 15 minutes for his response. Cavendish got up and said ‘My answer to Professor Körner’s three questions are yes, no, yes, in that order”, and promptly sat down.
Cavendish, head of philosophy at Lampeter, once interviewed me for a job there in medieval philosophy. He showed not the slightest interest in his candidate, and instead spent the 20 minutes talking about the excellent fishing to be had around Lampeter, and how Arabic logic was vastly superior to anything Frege and Russell had come up with, so much so that he could read nothing else.
25 March, 2012 at 8:29 am
This is precisely why we must, with Terry Eagleton, oppose the postmodernist, for whom one person’s (or more-than-human-other’s) deep salient is just another person’s (or more-than-human-other’s) putsch.
To the contrary, the deep salient clearly has the form of an Event, an irruption, whereas the putsch is a reactionary event; the one belongs to the unknowable future future, the other to the knowable present future. Is not this postmodern confusion of salient and putsch itself the dominant form of the putsch in late capitalism?
25 March, 2012 at 8:32 am
This is precisely why we must, for the sake of sanity, oppose all forms of Zizek-speak.
25 March, 2012 at 8:33 am
Preshishly.
25 March, 2012 at 8:30 am
On related matters, I have a number of papers to ponder in the coming months, for AAR, Historical Materialism, a translation conference.
Possible titles may include:
Putsch vs Salient: Translation Between Kornilov and Kursk
Revisiting Antioch: Peter, Paul and the Kursk Salient
Occupy? Lessons to be Learned from the Battle of Kursk
Jesus and Kursk: A Saliential Interpretation of the Resurrection
A Desert Putsch? Korah Meets Kornilov at Kursk
26 March, 2012 at 1:03 am
I believe Comrade FLENADY, Liam is engineering a Kursk Salient in the seat of South Brisbane for the Socialist Alliance against the infantile ultra-leftist “Informal”. With 69.07% he is just 10 votes behind “Informal”, 393 to 403. But just wait until those pre-poll votes come in!
26 March, 2012 at 1:54 am
Not to mention Britain’s commendable defenders of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea who have fooled the petty bourgeois imperialist press of the impoverished imperialist plantation “south” Korea into believing that there are a mere handful of Loyal Soldiers of Comrade Kim Jong Un!
For instance, just three people fill the posts of chairman, secretary-general and organization secretary of JIGSE; official delegate and organization secretary of the U.K. KFA; president of Staffordshire KFA; and president of ASSPUK.
Yes, you fools, yes, that is just what we want you to think…
26 March, 2012 at 4:31 am
That would be more than the Queensland Labor Party.
26 March, 2012 at 4:56 am
But Queensland is a one party state, Roland. There was a 99.99% vote for the Party of I’m-Just-Sitting-Around-Waiting-To-Be-Purged.
26 March, 2012 at 11:44 am
Apart from the sad, sad sight of someone actually salivating over the results at the national tally room of a state election, I would agree on one count: Queensland is a weird place – witness Bob Katter, Clive Palmer and his CIA conspiracy theory and the Greens, a blockhead who apparently calls himself ‘Can-do’… But at another level, it’s just like any other ‘bourgeois democracy’: they’re all one-party states.