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The Political Theory of Extra-Parliamentarism*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 November 2009
Abstract
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- Articles
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- Canadian Journal of Political Science/Revue canadienne de science politique , Volume 6 , Issue 1 , March 1973 , pp. 65 - 88
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- Copyright © Canadian Political Science Association (l'Association canadienne de science politique) and/et la Société québécoise de science politique 1973
References
1 Leviathan, Everyman's Library (London and New York, 1959), 90.
2 The Political Theory of Possessive Individualism (Oxford, 1962), 53–106.
3 Two Treatises of Government, ed. Laslett, Peter, Mentor Library edition (New York, 1965Google Scholar), Treatise 2, no 151, 414.
4 Ibid., no 222, 461.
5 Ibid., no 226, 464.
6 Ibid., no 168, 426.
7 Ibid., 427.
8 Laski, Harold, The Rise of European Liberalism (London, 1962), 75.Google Scholar
9 De L'esprit des lois, ed. Mayer, J.P. and Kerr, A.P., Collection Idées (Paris, 1970Google Scholar), Livre XI, chap. 6, 172–3. This and all subsequent translations from the French and German, except where indicated, are my own.
10 “Représentants” in l'Encyclopédie, in Œuvres Politiques (Paris, 1963), 51.
11 “That state is a happy one and its sovereign powerful when all the orders in the state mutually help each other. To bring about so desirable a result, the rulers of political society should seek to maintain a just equilibrium among the different classes of citizens that prevents each class from interfering with the others.” Ibid., 51.
12 The Federalist Papers, Mentor Edition (New York, 1961), no 10, 81.
13 Ibid., 83.
14 Ibid., no 51, 324.
15 Ibid., no 62, 379.
16 Ibid., no 70, 423.
17 Utilitarianism, Liberty, Representative Government, Everyman's Library (London, 1960), chap. 3, 209.
18 Ibid., 255.
19 Ibid., 285.
20 Ibid., 235–9.
21 Laski, Harold, Democracy in Crisis (Raleigh, NC, 1935), 75.Google Scholar
22 Sartori, G., Democratic Theory (Detroit, 1962), 77, 88.Google Scholar
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25 Du contrat social, Livre III, Chap, XV in Œuvres complètes, III (Paris, 1966), 430.
26 Huitième lettre de la montagne, ibid., 841.
27 “If there were a people of gods, it would govern itself democratically. So perfect a government is not suitable for men.” Du contrat social, Livre III, Chap, IV, ibid., 406.
28 Thomas Jefferson on Democracy, ed. Padover, S.K., Mentor edition (New York, 1939), 168.Google Scholar
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30 La lutte des classes sous la première république, nouvelle édition (Paris, 1968), vol 1, chap, IV, 194–257.
31 Le Tribun du Peuple 10/18 (Paris, 1969), 317.
32 Idée générate de la révolution au XIXe siècle (Paris, 1923), Tome 2, 199.
33 Œuvres choisis, ed. Blancal, Jean (Paris, 1967), 192.Google Scholar
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35 See Guérin, Daniel, “Proudhon et l'autogestion ouvrière,” in Pour un marxisme libertaire (Paris, 1969), 99–125Google Scholar; Bancal, Jean, “Proudhon: une sociologie de l'autogestion,” Autogestion nos 5 and 6 (mars-juin 1968Google Scholar).
36 See in particular Lefebvre's, Henri references to Proudhon in La proclamation de la commune (Paris, 1965), 149–54Google Scholar, and the discussion of “The Relevance of Anarchism” by Arblaster, Anthony in The Socialist Register 1971 (London, 1971), 157–84.Google Scholar
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39 “[The social organism] is the work of everyone, through time, through certain changes, through progressive experience, through an unknown spontaneous current.” Cited in Dommanget, Auguste Blanqui, 146. The key word is spontaneous.
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43 “The Civil War in France” in Marx/Engels Selected Works (London, 1968), 288–92, passim.
44 Parlementarisme et socialisme (Paris, 1900), 146.
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52 Die Halbe Macht den Räten (Cologne, 1969), 279.
53 Bricianer, Serge, Pannekoek et les conseils ourvriers (Paris, 1969), 275.Google Scholar
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55 Ibid., 56.
56 “To decide once every few years which member of the ruling class is to repress and crush the people through parliament – this is the real essence of bourgeois parliamentarism …” “State and Revolution,” in Lenin, , Selected Works (London, 1969), 295–6.Google Scholar
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59 “Left-Wing Communism – An Infantile Disorder,” ibid., 575–6.
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63 L'année politique 1967 (Paris, 1968), 4. See also L'année politique 1963 (Paris, 1964), for an account of the purging of so-called pro-Italian elements from the leadership of the Union des étudiants communistes.
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77 La Révolution Introuvable (Paris, 1968), 101.
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79 Leaflet no 3, Der Basisgruppe des SDS Heidelberg (5 June 1968).
80 Singer, Prelude to Revolution, 303.
81 Diskus, a Frankfurt student newspaper, special issue on the emergency laws (May, 1968).
82 Situationist International, Of Student Poverty Considered it its Economic, Political, Psychological, Sexual and, Particularly, Intellectual Aspects, and a Modest Proposal for its Remedy (England, no date), 19.
83 “La cause du peuple,” no 16 (13 June 1968), in Schnapp and Vidal-Naquet, “Commune étudiante, 361.
84 Vester, Michael, “Die Strategie der direkten Aktion,” Nene Kritik (Frankfurt, June, 1965Google Scholar), no 30, 13.
85 Dutschke, Rudi, in an interview in Der Spiegel (10 July 1967), 29–33.Google Scholar
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88 Un mois de mai orageux, an interview with 113 Paris students. Privat (Paris, 1968), 50–5.
89 Action, no VII, 11 June, and no X, 14 June 1968.
90 Leaflet signed Union nationale des étudiants de France, in Schnapp and Vidal-Naquet, Commune étudiante, 310.
91 Sozialistische Korrespondenz, info 2 (26 April 1969).
92 Ibid., info 9 (July, 1969), reproducing the discussion of parliamentarism that took place at the SDS federal convention in March 1968.
93 Der Spiegel interview, 10 July 1967; “Demokratie, Universitat und Gessellschaft,” Demon-strationen: Ein Berliner Modell, ed. B. Larsson (Berlin), 156.
94 Neue Kritik, nos 51–2 (February 1969), 5. A Heidelberg SDS publication (16 April 1970), Rote Zelle Soziologie, argued the need to go beyond anti-authoritarianism in the student movement and raise class issues.
95 Leaflet, signed “Les comités d'action” (8 May 1968Google Scholar) in Schnapp and Vidal Naquet, Commune étudiante, 212.
96 “Organization is created in and by the movement itself … The movement has no need for leaders or professional guides; it can lead itself …” reads one definition, Mouvement (4 June 1968), ibid., 496.
97 See for example Mothé, Daniel, Militant chez Renault (Paris, 1965), 102, 125Google Scholar; and Monpied, Ernest, Militant de base (Clermont Ferrand, 1969), 115.Google Scholar
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100 Cited in Centre nationale d'information pour la productivité des entreprises, Evénements de mai-juin.
101 Cahiers de mai, no 1 (Paris, June 1968). There is a less satisfactory account in Guin, Yannick, La commune de Nantes (Paris, 1969Google Scholar), chap. 5.
102 Feuerstein, Pierre, Printemps de révoke a Strasbourg (Strasburg, 1968), 63–4.Google Scholar
103 See for example the discussion “Autogestion et la ‘Révolution de Mai,’” in Autogestion (June 1968), nos 5–6.
104 [National Charter for French Universities] proposed at Nanterre in June 1968, reprinted in Schnapp and Vidal-Naquet, Commune étudiante, 738.
105 Thus the CFDT, at its 1970 Congress, accepted a report calling for “the democratization of enterprises within a perspective of social transformation and autogestion.” Le Monde (February 5 1970).
106 Un Mois cle Mai Orageux, a comment by a student.
107 See for example the leaflet, “Les étudiants et la révolution,” in Schnapp and Vidal-Naquet, Commune étudiante, 560–1.
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