The Communards Were More Than Just Beautiful Martyrs – Jacobin magazine
What to make of the Paris Commune? At the end of the nineteenth century, this was one of the key questions facing socialists. While the Commune had ended in a terrible defeat in May 1871, the executed Communards were celebrated as martyrs who had fallen in the front line of struggle. And in the decades after its crushing, socialists and anarchists reached for lessons from what they took for a unique practical experience.
In late nineteenth-century France, both survivors of the Commune (Louise Michel, Benot Malon, douard Vaillant) and those who supported it from outside Paris (like future Socialist leader Jules Guesde, in Montpellier during spring 1871) played a major role in shaping the multiple tendencies of French socialism. But the Communes memory was also kept alive by militants far beyond French shores, with March 18 commemorations each year celebrating the Communards glorious actions. From Berlin to Moscow, from London to Budapest, and soon even in Tokyo and Shanghai, the word Commune meant the Paris revolution and the heroic Communards who had fallen in combat.
The anniversary of the Commune was marked with particular ceremony in Germany, where the Social Democrats (SPD) had by the 1880s become Europes most strongly rooted workers party. In fact, this date had a rather particular meaning in Berlin. The Paris Communes own history was inextricably linked to the Franco-Prussian War; most Communards had made their patriotism clear, with the call to defend France, and Paris itself, mixed in with more properly social objectives. This international conflict made German displays of solidarity with the Commune as organized by Social Democracys founding fathers Wilhelm Liebknecht and August Bebel all the more heroic.
Coincidentally, March 18 invoked not only the start of the Paris uprising in 1871 but also the barricades erected in Berlin back in 1848. This date thus provided militants an opportunity to celebrate the two countries shared revolutionary heritage. Each of these insurrections had ended in defeat and victory for the counterrevolutionary forces. But they also marked out a path to the future and the bases of a new society.
In an era where both countries ruling classes were cultivating a harsh chauvinism, the celebration of this both French and German anniversary was one of the first concrete attempts at building an internationalist culture. This was no merely theoretical proposition: the gigantic marches that the German and Austrian Social-Democrats organized in Berlin and Vienna (and many other industrial towns) in 1898 to mark the half-centenary of 1848 also honored the French experience.
Such events show how attached militants were to this shared memory. Yet, it would be wrong to consider these demonstrations as a simple appeal to put up barricades like in 1871. For the Paris Commune also provided an experience of defeat, from which socialists had to learn.
In The Civil War in France, Marx had hailed the Commune as a political experience of a new type. His solidarity was all the more keenly felt given that the Communards had just been mercilessly crushed (he wrote this text just after the end of the uprising). But, while the Communards contribution was not in doubt, once the flames had been snuffed out Marx and Engels also showed themselves prepared to express criticisms of some of the Communes methods.
For instance, on January 14, 1871, Engels wrote to Italian Bakuninite Carlo Terzaghi (later found to have been a police informant) that If there had been a little more authority and centralization in the Paris Commune, it would have triumphed over the bourgeois. And when people tell me that these are two things to be condemned outright, it seems to me that those who talk like this either do not know what a revolution is, or are revolutionaries in name only. In this sense pushing back against some of the passages in The Civil War in France which most leaned in the direction of decentralization, Engels insisted that any political revolution lacking a centralized authority was doomed.
A few years later, Marx himself offered a critical examination of this experience. On February 22, 1881, he wrote to the Dutchman Ferdinand Domela Nieuwenhuis: Apart from the fact that this was merely the rising of a town under exceptional conditions, the majority of the Commune was in no sense socialist, nor could it be. With a small amount of sound common sense, however, they could have reached a compromise with Versailles useful to the whole mass of the people the only thing that could be reached at the time. The appropriation of the Bank of France alone would have been enough to dissolve all the pretensions of the Versailles people in terror, etc., etc.
In an October 29, 1884 letter to Bebel, Engels was even more abrupt: While the Commune was the grave of early specifically French socialism, it was, for France, also and at the same time the cradle of a new international communism. Yet, in other texts, the Commune was still taken for an example. In an 1891 preface to The Civil War in France, Engels concluded that the Commune had been an example of the dictatorship of the proletariat the dictatorship of the majority over a minority of exploiters. So, the Commune was doubtless something to be celebrated. But was this a model, or an experience that socialists had to go beyond?
Ten years after this preface (and following Engelss death in 1895), in 1901 Marxs son-in-law Charles Longuet (husband to Marxs daughter Jenny) published a new edition of Marxs text, with a telling change of title: The Civil War in France was now The Paris Commune. Longuet clearly sought to avoid the reference to civil war and instead promote a gradualist perspective within socialist ranks.
Indeed, at this point a major trend in several socialist parties was raising questions over the revolutionary road to socialism which most had previously pursued. The leading representative of this current was the German Eduard Bernstein, whose 1899 text The Preconditions of Socialism had bemoaned the popularity of the Blanquist tradition (named after Louis Auguste Blanqui, with whom many of the Communards had close ties). Bernstein also mounted a wider attack against the French revolutionary tradition of 1793 to 1871; he held that it was time to put an end to a certain insurrectionary spirit that, he claimed, undermined the gradual development of organized socialism.
What could explain such a turn? First, it is worth emphasizing that a large share of the workers movement rejected Bernsteins perspective, from Jules Guesde to Rosa Luxemburg. But doubtless, since 1871 the political context had changed a great deal. By the turn of the twentieth century, the workers movement had built up its own parties, union organizations and co-ops. Male universal suffrage had been enacted in several European countries. So, would it be possible to conquer power by other, legal means?
One telling example was Jean Jaurs, alongside Guesde the main founder of Frances unified Socialist Party in 1905. He was unabashed in celebrating the Communes achievements, in particular its social and political measures. But upon the March 18, 1907 anniversary, in his column for lHumanit (titled Yesterday and Tomorrow) he argued that even if the Paris Commune had been victorious it would not have been able to fundamentally transform society it could perhaps have advanced the development of the Third Republic by ten years, but it could not have made socialism spring from the ground.
Jaurs emphasized that socialists now had to take two other major realities into consideration: universal suffrage (allowing the Socialist Party to conquer positions within the existing society) and the general strike (one of the General Confederation of Labor (CGT) unions main means of action, which allowed the proletariat to mount a coordinated offensive action that nonetheless stood distant from a desperate insurrection). In short, while Jaurs hailed the Communards heroic efforts, it was necessary to find other ways forward.
Some former Communards, like Benot Malon, were themselves among the originators of socialist reformism. Ten years after the Paris events, in 1881 Malon invoked the Paris Commune in order to exalt the concrete politics that could be done at the municipal in French, communal level: [s]een in these terms, the communal question is more than half of the social question.
And after him, a whole current of French socialism including Albert Thomas, future Armaments Minister during World War I placed their hopes in this municipalist perspective. Through such men, a reforming socialism took shape, with the rise of an idea of a Republic that provided public services. They mourned the insurgent Communes martyrs but took only a few concrete measures from this experience thus hollowing out its more properly subversive content.
Whatever the differences between socialist currents, they all more or less agreed that they needed organization, in order to allow them to overcome the Communes shortcomings.
This fact should not be taken lightly. Indeed, put in its proper context, the success of the party-form in the late nineteenth-century socialist movement owed a great deal to the lessons drawn from the Commune. The Paris revolutionaries of 1871 were honored for having shown the way. But it was also urgently necessary to go further than the Commune had, and take a different approach that could avoid fresh defeats. If it had not been for the trauma of 1871, it is far from clear that socialist currents like the Russian Bolsheviks or the French Guesdists would have theorized and put into practice such structured and hierarchical forms of organization.
Bolshevism in particular probably would not have taken the form it did if it were not for the Communards experience. While in the 1880s some had drawn the lesson that it was necessary to avoid any violent rupture, others instead insisted on the need to conquer the state apparatus and turn it against the enemies of the revolution. The Communes example thus molded the identity of the left wing of the international socialist movement.
Lenin showed his intense admiration for the Communards bold attempt. But he wanted the future dictatorship of the proletariat (of which Marx and Engels have spoken) to adopt means adequate to its revolutionary politics, in order to avoid fresh Bloody Weeks and further proletarian defeats. Yet while he was critical of the Communes methods, he also drew on this experience to define proletarian democracy in his State and Revolution, written a few months before the insurrection of October 1917. From Marxs The Civil War in France he took the idea of smashing the state in order to fight against bureaucracy:
Let us learn revolutionary boldness from the Communards; let us see in their practical measures the outline of really urgent and immediately possible measures, and then, following this road, we shall achieve the complete destruction of bureaucracy.
When Soviet power had lasted one day longer than the Paris Commune, Lenin celebrated the passing of a key threshold for the Russian Revolution. The Parisian experience was widely discussed and studied in the young Soviet Russia: for all its limits, hadnt the Commune shown the way, in many fields?
The young communist movement adopted themes from the Commune like proletarian democracy, workers control, educational progress, and the fight against religious obscurantism. From 1917 onward, the Commune was all the more keenly commemorated because it appeared to whole generations of militants, of all tendencies, as the event which had heralded the new times.
It is rather less clear which aspects of the Commune continue to inspire the socialist movement today, and which are instead considered out of step with our contemporary realities. In this sense, the strategic debates which Jaurs and Lenin launched centering on the Commune, the state and the forms of social and political change are still ongoing. Indeed, they complement the reflection and the insights of the actors from the period that immediately followed the Commune.
Today, historians tend to look back to the Commune as an experience unto itself, distinct from the wider course of the revolutionary movement. This is a perfectly legitimate approach allowing us a closer understanding of the Communards as actors, and their motivations. Yet it would be mistaken to overlook the interpretations and disputes that raged in the workers movement of subsequent decades, taking 1871 as a point of departure. For the debates around the Commune posed major political questions facing any project of social transformation problems that are still far from resolved.
Go here to read the rest:
The Communards Were More Than Just Beautiful Martyrs - Jacobin magazine
- Inclusion of socialism, secularism into Preamble didnt reflect the will of the people - India Legal - November 21st, 2024 [November 21st, 2024]
- The Fight for Palestine and the Fight for Socialism is The Same - CounterPunch - November 17th, 2024 [November 17th, 2024]
- Students for Socialism hold press conference near the Arch - Red and Black - November 16th, 2024 [November 16th, 2024]
- No Evidence Obama Suggested Gradually Bringing Socialism to US 'Without the People Realizing' - Snopes.com - November 16th, 2024 [November 16th, 2024]
- Sounding the Alarm: Socialism Against War: Foreword to the German edition - WSWS - November 16th, 2024 [November 16th, 2024]
- Hotbed of socialism in Kipnuk? The village voters who went wild for Cornel West - Must Read Alaska - November 16th, 2024 [November 16th, 2024]
- Book presentation in Nuremberg: Leon Trotsky and the Struggle for Socialism in the 21st Century by David North attracts great interest - WSWS - November 8th, 2024 [November 8th, 2024]
- Lukashenko: The world is increasingly starting to talk about socialism - BYU News - November 8th, 2024 [November 8th, 2024]
- Senator Rick Scott after electoral victory: "There is no place for socialism in the United States." - CiberCuba - November 8th, 2024 [November 8th, 2024]
- Election Day, Rebuttal of Socialism and More on The Brett Winterble Show - WBT - November 5th, 2024 [November 5th, 2024]
- Americans dont understand the Difference between Socialism and Communism How Confusion about Socialism shapes U.S. Elections - Sarajevo Times - November 5th, 2024 [November 5th, 2024]
- Nehru-era legacy of socialism is still an obstacle to progress, but Im an optimist - The Times of India - November 5th, 2024 [November 5th, 2024]
- Socialism has never worked, wouldnt work for Harris admin - Washington Times - October 26th, 2024 [October 26th, 2024]
- Socialism and the fight against war and genocide - WSWS - October 12th, 2024 [October 12th, 2024]
- No one expected socialism, but unless wealth is challenged, whats the point of Labour? - The Guardian - September 24th, 2024 [September 24th, 2024]
- See all the bike paths around the Tri-Cities? Thats socialism coming for us all | Opinion - Tri-City Herald - September 24th, 2024 [September 24th, 2024]
- Socialism means never having to say youre sorry - The Telegraph - September 21st, 2024 [September 21st, 2024]
- Interview | Wrong to Say Kulgam is a Fight Between Islamism and Socialism: CPI(M) Candidate Tarigami - The Wire - September 21st, 2024 [September 21st, 2024]
- LUCIAN DAVIDS: The ANC must be clear socialism or neoliberalism? - EWN - September 19th, 2024 [September 19th, 2024]
- Sitaram Yechury: A champion of socialism and coalition-building - The Tribune India - September 16th, 2024 [September 16th, 2024]
- 10 years on Scottish independence, the British state and the struggle for socialism - Socialist Worker - September 16th, 2024 [September 16th, 2024]
- LETTER: Starmer is a real dud. We face a cost of socialism crisis - Basingstoke Gazette - September 16th, 2024 [September 16th, 2024]
- Party for Socialism and Liberation, Green Party discuss priorities for 2024 election - WABE 90.1 FM - September 3rd, 2024 [September 3rd, 2024]
- Celebrating 75 years of Chinese Socialism - Workers World - September 3rd, 2024 [September 3rd, 2024]
- The SEP intervention in the UAW election and the fight for socialism among autoworkers - WSWS - September 3rd, 2024 [September 3rd, 2024]
- Will the 2024 election be a referendum on socialism? - The Christian Post - September 3rd, 2024 [September 3rd, 2024]
- The Unsung History of Heartland Socialism - In These Times - August 31st, 2024 [August 31st, 2024]
- LETTER: There's a big difference between neighboring and socialism - Midland Daily News - August 31st, 2024 [August 31st, 2024]
- Kamalas Plan to Address Root Cause of Migration: Expand Socialism to U.S. - California Globe - August 31st, 2024 [August 31st, 2024]
- Op-Ed: The conservatism of Gov. Kim Reynolds vs the socialism of Gov. Tim Walz - The Center Square - August 31st, 2024 [August 31st, 2024]
- How China moved from a command to a free market economy and is now restoring socialism - Pearls and Irritations - August 31st, 2024 [August 31st, 2024]
- Cattle futures dont like the prospect of socialism - Beef Magazine - August 20th, 2024 [August 20th, 2024]
- Trump: Democrats Are Party of Socialism - Newsmax - August 20th, 2024 [August 20th, 2024]
- The Crown Jewel of American Socialism - The Future of Freedom Foundation - August 18th, 2024 [August 18th, 2024]
- Kamala Harris's Economic Plan: The Road to Socialism - MacIverInstitute - August 18th, 2024 [August 18th, 2024]
- Democrats are pushing for a radical redistribution of socialism: Rep. Andy Barr - Fox Business - August 16th, 2024 [August 16th, 2024]
- Economic Growth Myth & Why Socialism Is Rising - Real Investment Advice - August 16th, 2024 [August 16th, 2024]
- Adopting free market socialism, a just thing to do - The African - August 16th, 2024 [August 16th, 2024]
- Maybe a little socialism isnt all that bad. We may get legislation that benefits everyone! - Daily Kos - August 16th, 2024 [August 16th, 2024]
- Florida Democrats try to flip the script on socialism attacks with Venezuela - POLITICO - August 14th, 2024 [August 14th, 2024]
- Salazar Mocks Walz's 'Socialism' Comment, Says Latinos 'Cringe' at the Word - The Floridian - August 14th, 2024 [August 14th, 2024]
- Milwaukee, the city hosting the Republican National Convention, has roots in socialism - Madison.com - July 15th, 2024 [July 15th, 2024]
- Why I joined the Socialist Party - Socialist Party - July 15th, 2024 [July 15th, 2024]
- Milwaukee, the city hosting the Republican National Convention, has roots in socialism - Lake Geneva Regional News - July 15th, 2024 [July 15th, 2024]
- Tubeworker/Off The Rails online meeting, 1 August, 3pm: Fighting the far right, fighting for socialism: a discussion with French transport worker... - July 15th, 2024 [July 15th, 2024]
- Party and Class the politics of revolutionary socialism - Socialist Worker - July 15th, 2024 [July 15th, 2024]
- Build the socialist opposition to Starmer's right-wing government! - WSWS - July 6th, 2024 [July 6th, 2024]
- Democratic Socialism Simulator is a reminder of the DNCs weaknesses - Polygon - July 6th, 2024 [July 6th, 2024]
- Sri Lankan workers and youth support public meeting to demand release of Ukrainian socialist Bogdan Syrotiuk - WSWS - July 6th, 2024 [July 6th, 2024]
- France's Problem Is Not The 'Far Right': It Is Socialism, A Warning For All OpEd - Eurasia Review - July 6th, 2024 [July 6th, 2024]
- Socialist America, state capitalist China - Pearls and Irritations - July 6th, 2024 [July 6th, 2024]
- Socialism And Communism Are Weasel Words For Slavery - The Federalist - July 6th, 2024 [July 6th, 2024]
- UK Socialist Equality Party election rally advances socialist and internationalist opposition to war - WSWS - July 6th, 2024 [July 6th, 2024]
- Cuban Leader Daz-Canel Reminds Business Owners: "We're All Here to Save the Revolution and Socialism" - Cuba Headlines - July 6th, 2024 [July 6th, 2024]
- Tories smashed - build the socialist opposition - Socialist Party - July 6th, 2024 [July 6th, 2024]
- Is Keir Starmer a socialist? - The Conversation Indonesia - June 20th, 2024 [June 20th, 2024]
- Assassinations, socialism and conspirators dens: Inside Berlins Rote Insel - The Berliner - June 20th, 2024 [June 20th, 2024]
- Socialist Equality Party candidate Tom Scripps speaks at London hustings - WSWS - June 20th, 2024 [June 20th, 2024]
- UK risks generation of socialism if you vote Reform, Tories say as they warn Labour will change rules to... - The US Sun - June 20th, 2024 [June 20th, 2024]
- Its OK to be angry about socialism | Johnny Leavesley - The Critic - June 18th, 2024 [June 18th, 2024]
- U.K.'s Keir Starmer tones down the socialism in 'changed Labour Party' - The Washington Post - June 18th, 2024 [June 18th, 2024]
- Socialist Equality Party election campaign wins support in Holborn and St Pancras, London - WSWS - June 18th, 2024 [June 18th, 2024]
- Black voters at odds with Jamaal Bowman could help sink him - New York Post - June 18th, 2024 [June 18th, 2024]
- After Macron's snap election call, which way forward against neofascism and war? - WSWS - June 18th, 2024 [June 18th, 2024]
- No to Gaza genocide and NATO war against Russia! Fight for a socialist alternative to Starmer's Labour Party! Build a ... - WSWS - June 18th, 2024 [June 18th, 2024]
- Statements from Japan and Australia demand freedom for Bogdan Syrotiuk - WSWS - June 18th, 2024 [June 18th, 2024]
- Why Kautsky Was Wrong (and Why You Should Care) - Left Voice - May 31st, 2024 [May 31st, 2024]
- Campaign to free anti-war Ukrainian socialist Bogdan Syrotiuk is gaining international support - WSWS - May 31st, 2024 [May 31st, 2024]
- Interested in socialism? Read our book - Socialist Worker - May 31st, 2024 [May 31st, 2024]
- Sri Lanka: Statements demanding the immediate release of Ukrainian socialist Bogdan Syrotiuk - WSWS - May 31st, 2024 [May 31st, 2024]
- Understanding what Democratic Socialists of America are and how they differ from social Democrats - Fullerton Observer - May 1st, 2024 [May 1st, 2024]
- Australia: Gold Coast Gaza rally hears socialist anti-war perspective - WSWS - May 1st, 2024 [May 1st, 2024]
- The Marxists Come Out at George Washington University - Daily Signal - May 1st, 2024 [May 1st, 2024]
- Communists and the party: a contribution to the debate with the Socialist Movement - In Defence of Marxism - March 22nd, 2024 [March 22nd, 2024]
- Leipzig Book Fair: David North to present his book Leon Trotsky and the Struggle for Socialism in the Twenty-First ... - WSWS - March 22nd, 2024 [March 22nd, 2024]
- Portugal's Socialists Highlight the Rot Within the European Left - The European Conservative - March 18th, 2024 [March 18th, 2024]
- Global temperatures increasing fight for socialism - Socialist Party - March 18th, 2024 [March 18th, 2024]
- SEP candidates Joseph Kishore and Jerry White discuss war, inequality and the COVID-19 pandemic on the - WSWS - March 18th, 2024 [March 18th, 2024]
- Veteran of 1984-5 UK Miners' Strike Malcolm Bray speaks on its lessons and the fight to build a socialist leadership in ... - WSWS - March 18th, 2024 [March 18th, 2024]
- Why is the Chron so freaked out about Socialism? - 48 hills - 48 Hills - December 19th, 2023 [December 19th, 2023]