Difference between revisions of "Anarchy 89/Reflections on the revolution in France"
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revolution in France 1789, 1830, 1848, 1871— from the storming of the Bastille to the fall of the Commune. A reminder that most of our political ideas (and the words they are expressed in) come from France. (It makes it easier to understand why old Kropotkin wanted to fight for France in 1914.) But how the tradition has become divided! The Tricolour, the Republic, the Marseillaise, the Resistance— all symbols of the establishment, of the extreme right. But that is nothing new. “Liberty, equality, fraternity, when what the Republic really means is infantry, cavalry, artillery”— said Marx 120 years ago. What is new is that people are surprised when the French students occupy the universities and the French workers occupy the factories. The tradition must be part of the French people’s political education. We still remember our Hunger Marches, our General Strike, our Suffragettes, our Black Sunday, our chartists; surely the French may be expected to remember the Resistance, the sit-in strikes of 1936, the <span data-html="true" class="plainlinks" title="Wikipedia: mutinies in strike in Besancon (Proudhon’s home town!) at the beginning of last year (Chris Marker in anarchy 76). After all, the Nanterre students have been struggling with the authorities for a year; where have all the experts been?
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Revision as of 20:08, 15 March 2018
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Reflections on therevolution in France
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of 1917">mutinies 194
of 1917, the syndicalist movement before the First World War, the Commune, the July Days, the Great Fear. We are hardly in close touch with French affairs, but recent issues of anarchy mentioned “the sort of activism which is endemic at the bourgeois Sorbonne” (Peter Redan Black in anarchy 84) and described the sit-★
Revolution.