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Week 10 Industrialization and Labor Mobilization

  • Last week I explored the economic foundations of Europe's global power by looking at the first and second industrializations throughout the long 19th c.
  • One of the effects of industrialization was the creation of distinct social classes based on property and wealth => we saw the consolidation of the middle class and the situation of the working-class
  • As you remember the latter was an exploited class, its income of a working-class family is mostly concentrated on nutrition and above all bread; then comes clothing and lodging; anything in addition is a luxury

Slide 1

  • That being said, workers will soon develop their own, independent means of self-protection and political struggle
    • And in so doing they actually proposed a new form of society, a society of equals not only in terms of the law, but in opportunities and wealth
    • Emblematic of these movements are of course communism and anarchism

Slide 2

  • Communism is mostly associated with its founder, Karl Marx, sometimes with his erstwhile co-writer, Friedrich Engels
    • It is seen as the ideological foundation of socialism, which claims social and economic equality for all
  • In fact however communism is only a later manifestation of socialist doctrines that were born in the early 19th c. in the wake of the French Revolution
  • Throughout the 19th c. a series of intellectuals will develop different trends of socialism to give a doctrinal coherence to the political and social struggles of the working class

Slide 3

  • In the realm of socialist thought there is one central historical event where all these tendencies will meet => This is the Paris Commune when for three months (March-May 1871), workers will take the power in Paris and create the first communist state ever

Slide 4

  • The Paris Commune is the result of two meeting processes:
    • One is the late phase of the French Empire of Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte, Napoleon III when socialist organizations are revived
      • 1868: legalization of meetings, people meet in cafés, warehouses, etc. and begin to talk about politics and reform
      • Wave of strikes in 1870, which until then had been illegal
    • The second process is of course the Franco-Prussian War => dynastic succession in Spain and the Hohenzollern bid
      • Prussia and its southern allies roundly defeat France and in 4th Sept. 1870 you have an insurrection in Paris
      • A crowd storms the city hall/belediye, they proclaim the Republic and declare that they want to continue the fight against the Prussians
  • February 1871 Elections in France => The conservative provinces make up for an extremely conservative National Assembly that is going to determine the future constitution of France
  • March 1871 the Provisional government of France sends the troops to Montmartre to take the guns of the National Guards which had defended Paris during the siege of the Prussians

Slide 5

  • The troops are kicked out by the Parisian workers and then Paris is again besieged, this time by French troops
    • The Commune truly begins on 18 March 1871 and lasts until the end of May 1871
      • For the first time ordinary Parisians find themselves masters of their own lives
      • Wealthy people get out again
  • Inevitably Parisians need to get organized and they create various bodies and committees to run the city
  • The idea germs among besieged Parisians that Paris can become the laboratory of a new world, a more equal world

Slide 6

  • A large body of social legislation is passed
    • Abolition of the state army and replacing it with a National guard of working men, the people at arms
    • Separation of Church and state
    • All public offices are universally elective and can only be held for a short period of time
    • Establishment of a labor exchange => Where unemployed people can ask for and find work
    • Abolition of night baking considered unhealthy for bakers
    • Nurseries are created for working women
    • Women's unions are recognized become responsible to make the uniforms of the National Guard
    • A lay, secularized education system is planned
    • Womens' clubs proliferate

Slide 7

  • This is indeed a key event in women's history because women have the opportunity to publicly voice their claim for political rights and representation and to be listened
    • This will also explain why the reaction against them will be so brutal

Slide 8

  • Symbols are important during the Commune
    • Red becomes a ubiquitous colour during the Commune (Red was a forbidden colour until then and between 1849 and 1851 because it was believed to excite one group of people against another)
    • Crashing of Napoleon's statue on place Vendome
      • Importance of having your picture taken in front of the fallen column => for once the people, the ordinary folks, have won
  • The Communards are essentially working-class people, ordinary people, artisans, craftsmen, domestic servants but their defense of Paris reflects also an urban pride

Slide 9

  • The ways the conservatives perceive them is of course very different => for them, and especially the middle and upper-middle classes, the Communards are furies from hell, immoral and bloodthirsty drunks who dare to question the social order

Slide 10

  • It all ends on 21 May 1871, when the troops finally managed to pour into Paris through the Western Gate using the boulevards that were built by Haussman and Napoleon III especially to repress popular revolts
  • Troops and forces of order go first and foremost to the working-class neighborhoods to massacre the communards
  • First are the women because for bourgeois ideology a woman who would get involved into politics and public life ceased to be a respectable person
    • Total of about 15,000-25,000 people are killed

Slide 11

  • Symbolic war also in the sense that symbolic places were created on the spot to purge the sins of the Commune => Basilique de Sacré Coeur
  • Lessons learned for everybone:
    • The Left => The state is powerful and vicious, profoundly evil and repressive; The Commune will be a model of future revolutions
    • The Conservatives => The horror of communism, fear of a plebeian revolution

Slide 12

Slide 13

  • Anarchism is another form of socialist reaction that will gain ground during the late 19th c. and is also linked to socialist thinking as it developed in the nineteenth century
  • There are various shades of anarchism, which I will mention in a little while, but basically it is important to remember that despite differences, anarchism is both a political philosophy and a mode of political action
    • As a political philosophy it advocates the abolition of the state
      • The state is merely seen as the repressive arm (law, police, army) of bourgeois society
      • This is their big difference with the Communists => The Communists wanted to capture the state and establish a dictatorship of the proletariat
      • Because they want to keep away from the state, they're not interested in reforming it and therefore are not interested in political participation
      • They viewed political participation as for propping up capitalism and its army, defending the interests of wealthy people.
      • This is something they share with hardcore trade unionists, syndicalists
      • Religion is seen as a means to keep the working-class quiet and subdued
      • This they share with the communists
    • As a mode of action it advocates immediate, direct action which often means violent action including bombings etc.

Slide 14

  • Theoretically, anarchism developed essentially in France and in Russia:
    • In Russia the two most influential anarchist thinkers are, interestingly enough, nobles
      • Peter Kropotkin, The Conquest of Bread, 1892
      • Mikhail Bakunin, God and the State, 1882
    • Both thinkers were influenced by the French anarchist thinker, Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, What is Property? 1840
      • Property is theft!

Slide 15

Slide 16

Slide 17

  • I said that anarchism was also a mode of political action, violence as political action => It was Kropotkin who popularized the phrase "propaganda by the deed" => a single spark, a single assassination, a single bomb to start revolution rolling.
  • For Michael Bakunin destruction was "a creative passion that would bring about the end of the State, capitalism, and private property." "The modern state," Bakunin wrote, "with all its terrible means of action given to them by modern centralization, was becoming an immense, crushing, threatening reality," as those slaughtered communards saw up close in May of 1871.

Slide 18

  • In fact anarchism sort of prefigured political terrorism
  • This developed essentially in France, Russia and Spain => a lot of bombing attacks and assassinations

Slide 19

  • But there was another element that was central in the development of anarchism => This was the full bloom of consumerism + capitalism in late 19th c. Europe
    • Increase of the wealth gap => Very rich people living close to, and at the expense of, increasingly poorer people

Slide 20

  • In contrast, the poor workers lived along the narrow grey streets of the plebeian neighborhoods of eastern Paris, where cholera had killed as late as 1884.

Slide 21

  • The rebuilding of Paris by Haussmann in the fifties and sixties had chased thousands of ordinary people, by higher rents, to the exterior neighborhoods of northern Paris, northeastern Paris, and to the working class suburbs.

Slide 22

  • Also, after the Commune, Police and soldiers were everywhere, and there were indeed many more of them.

Slide 23

  • A wave of anarchist bombings swept the capital between 1892 and 1894.
  • The favorite weapon of anarchists was dynamite => Dynamite interestingly was invented by Alfred Nobel in 1868
    • Why dynamite though?
    • Dynamite was considered to level the playing field => Weapons of the weak

Slide 24

  • But as a mentioned before there were significant differences between anarchists including in how they carried out their attacks
    • Some were group decisions and focused on attacking symbols of the state => politicians, police officers or army personnel
    • Other were somewhat outcast, loner individuals who made no difference between civilians and officials
      • Case of Emile Henry for instance
  • Were the anarchists terrorists? When you think of the word terrorism, the word terrorism was originally applied to actions taken by the State to terrorize. "The Terror" was terrorizing opponents in the French Revolution.
    • And it's often forgotten that the vast majority of victims of terror are victims of State terrorism. And the anarchists hated the State because they'd seen up close what State terrorism did in the wake of the Commune, the massacre of the innocents, of these women
    • During the 1890s the anarchist attacks killed a maximum of sixty people wounding more than two hundred. State terrorism, killed 260 times that number
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