The French Left
Title | The French Left PDF eBook |
Author | Arthur Hirsh |
Publisher | Black Rose Books Ltd. |
Pages | 276 |
Release | 1982 |
Genre | Communism |
ISBN |
The French New Left
Title | The French New Left PDF eBook |
Author | Arthur Hirsh |
Publisher | |
Pages | 253 |
Release | 1981 |
Genre | France |
ISBN |
French Intellectuals Against the Left
Title | French Intellectuals Against the Left PDF eBook |
Author | Michael Scott Christofferson |
Publisher | Berghahn Books |
Pages | 310 |
Release | 2004 |
Genre | Political Science |
ISBN | 9781571814289 |
Christofferson argues that French anti-totalitarianism was the culmination of direct-democratic critiques of communism & revisions of the revolutionary project after 1956. He offers an alternative interpretation for the denunciation of communism & Marxism by the French intellectual left in the late 1970s.
Marxism and the French Left
Title | Marxism and the French Left PDF eBook |
Author | Tony Judt |
Publisher | NYU Press |
Pages | 351 |
Release | 2011-05-01 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0814743536 |
Unlike most books, which treat labor, Socialist and Communist history separately and view French Marxism as a self-contained philosophical phenomenon, Marxism and the French Left offers a refreshingly different approach to the subject. Judt emphasizes the complex and interwoven themes that unify the topics of his essays to construct a distinctive and original interpretation of French left-wing politics over the past 150 years. “A well-informed and persuasive reinterpretation of the old French Left that is now receding beyond recall, except for historians.”—Times Literary Supplement
The French New Left, 1968-1978
Title | The French New Left, 1968-1978 PDF eBook |
Author | Alan Montet White |
Publisher | |
Pages | 146 |
Release | 1979 |
Genre | Communism |
ISBN |
Marx and the French Revolution
Title | Marx and the French Revolution PDF eBook |
Author | François Furet |
Publisher | University of Chicago Press |
Pages | 256 |
Release | 1988-12-14 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0226273385 |
Throughout his life Karl Marx commented on the French Revolution, but never was able to realize his project of a systematic work on this immense event. This book assembles for the first time all that Marx wrote on this subject. François Furet provides an extended discussion of Marx's thinking on the revolution, and Lucien Calvié situates each of the selections, drawn from existing translations as well as previously untranslated material, in its larger historical context. With his early critique of Hegel, Marx started moving toward his fundamental thesis: that the state is a product of civil society and that the French Revolution was the triumph of bourgeois society. Furet's interpretation follows the evolution of this idea and examines the dilemmas it created for Marx as he considered all the faces the new state assumed over the course of the Revolution: the Jacobin Terror following the constitutional monarchy, Bonaparte's dictatorship following the parliamentary republic. The problem of reconciling his theory with the reality of the Revolution's various manifestations is one of the major difficulties Marx contended with throughout his work. The hesitation, the remorse, and the contradictions of the resulting analyses offer a glimpse of a great thinker struggling with the constraints of his own system. Marx never did elaborate a theory of an autonomous state, but he never stopped wrestling with the challenge to his doctrine posed by late eighteenth-century France, whose changing conditions and successive regimes prompted some of his most intriguing and, until now, unexplored thought.
The Imagination of the New Left
Title | The Imagination of the New Left PDF eBook |
Author | George N. Katsiaficas |
Publisher | South End Press |
Pages | 352 |
Release | 1987 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9780896082274 |
"The Imagination of the New Left" brings to life the social movements and events of the 1960s that made it a period of world-historical importance: the Prague Spring; the student movements in Mexico, Japan, Sri Lanka, Italy, Yugoslavia, and Spain; the Test Offensive in Vietnam and guerilla movements in Latin America; the Democratic Convention in Chicago; the assassination of Martin Luther King; the near-revolution in France of May 1968; and the May 1970 student strike in the United States. Despite its apparent failure, the New Left represented a global transition to a newly defined cultural and political epoch, and its impact continues to be felt today.