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Full Description
In the 72 days of its existence, the Paris Commune of 1871 was a political and social laboratory where Parisians would experiment with radically democratic urban self-government. Various radical theorists and traditions have claimed the Commune as their own: from the well-known account of Karl Marx and Lenin's State and Revolution to the anarchists Mikhail Bakunin or Peter Kropotkin, and from the council communists in Germany around the end of the Great War to soixante-huitards in France.
In Communalism as a Democratic Repertoire Gaard Kets and Mathijs van de Sande bring together historians, sociologists, political scientists, theorists, and philosophers to reconstruct how 'the commune' has continued to serve as a source of inspiration to different movements and tendencies throughout the past 150 years, and how communalist thought, and practices help us reimagine what radical democracy may look like today. Divided into three parts, contributors begin by exploring how the Paris Commune shaped political debates and influenced various theoretical oeuvres as well as political practices. Part Two develops communalist ideas or strategies in a contemporary context. Part Three sheds light on three different contemporary communalist practices in the Middle East, Europe, North America, and Latin America.
Bridging a gap between historical and theoretical accounts of 'the Commune', this book will be enlightening for students of democracy and a valuable resource to scholars and activists interested in the problems and possibilities facing democracy today.
Contents
Introduction. PART I - Communalisms: Traditions and Tendencies 1. The Spanish "Municipio Libre": a communalist tradition to update? 2. Anarchism and Communalism: The defeat of the Commune and the rise of communal anarchism. 3. "The Biggest Festival of the Nineteenth Century:" The Paris Commune in the Radical Imagination of the 1960s. 4. Was Communalism Born from the Commune? PART II - Communalist Ideas and Strategies 5. A Democracy Without Titles? 1871 Against the Politics of the Few. 6. Between the Past Future and the Future Past: On the Democratic Experimentalism of the Paris Commune. 7. "The revolution will be live." Towards a pedagogy of radical imaginaries beyond the Paris Commune. 8. Rethinking representation as delegation in the framework of communalist direct democracy. PART III - Contemporary Practices and Articulations 9. The Commune Beyond the Commune: Abdullah Öcalan, the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), and democratic confederalism. 10. Contemporary Communes and Council Democracy in Venezuela. 11. The new wave of ecological municipalities in Quebec: between quiet municipalism and rural communalism.