Revolutionary Thought after the Paris Commune, 1871–1885: 122 (Ideas in Context, Series Number 122)
Cambridge University Press, 7/18/2019
EAN 9781108499262, ISBN10: 1108499260
Hardcover, 330 pages, 23.1 x 16.3 x 2.3 cm
Language: English
This first comprehensive account of French revolutionary thought in the years between the crushing of France's last nineteenth-century revolution and the re-emergence of socialism as a meaningful electoral force offers new interpretations of the French revolutionary tradition. Drawing together material from Europe, North America, and the South Pacific, Julia Nicholls pieces together the nature and content of French revolutionary thought in this often overlooked era. She shows that this was an important and creative period, in which activists drew upon fresh ideas they encountered in exile across the world to rebuild a revolutionary movement that was both united and politically viable in the changed circumstances of France's new Third Republic. The relative success of these efforts, moreover, has significant implications for the ways in which we understand the founding years of the Third Republic, the nature of the modern revolutionary tradition, and the origins of European Marxism.
Introduction
Part I. The Paris Commune and Accounting for Failure
1. The commune as Quotidian event
2. The commune as violent trauma
Part II. Revolution and the Republic
3. The French revolutionary tradition
4. Rehabilitating revolution
Part III. Marx, Marxism, and International Socialism
5. Texts in translation
6. The origins of Marxism in modern France
Part IV. Empire and Internationalism
7. Deportation, imperialism, and the Republican State
8. Exile and universal solidarity
Conclusion.