French Revolution and Anarchy: Difference between revisions

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The ''enragés'' were popular speakers and writers who articulated ideas of the ''sans-culottes''. Jean Francois Varlet, one of the ''enragés'', advocated direct democracy across France, in which sectional assemblies would send recallable delegates to coordinate national affairs.<ref>Bookchin, Murray, ''The Third Revolution: Volume I'' (Bloomsbury Academic, 1996), 325.</ref>
The ''enragés'' were popular speakers and writers who articulated ideas of the ''sans-culottes''. Jean Francois Varlet, one of the ''enragés'', advocated direct democracy across France, in which sectional assemblies would send recallable delegates to coordinate national affairs.<ref>Bookchin, Murray, ''The Third Revolution: Volume I'' (Bloomsbury Academic, 1996), 325.</ref>


On March 10 1793, Varlet and other ''enragés'' staged a failed insurrection against the Convention. A few days later, Varlet spoke before the Jacobin Club and called for a larger insurrection, a “third revolution” for direct sectional democracy and against the authoritarian Girondins who controlled the Convention. Following this call to arms, delegates of the sections met at Eveche on 2 April 1793, and on 28 May, they appointed Committee of Six to plan the uprising. On the night of May 30, the Eveche assembly announced Paris was in a state of insurrection against the Girondins.<ref>Kropotkin, ''ibid''.</ref> Together, the Jacobins and ''enragés'' succeeded in forcing the Girondins from power, but by August, the Jacobins turned against the ''enragés''. Taking state power for themselves, the Jacobins implemented a regime of terror against their political opponents.
On March 10 1793, Varlet and other ''enragés'' staged a failed insurrection against the Convention. A few days later, Varlet spoke before the Jacobin Club and called for a larger insurrection, a “third revolution” for direct sectional democracy and against the authoritarian Girondins who controlled the Convention. Following this call to arms, delegates of the sections met at Eveche on 2 April 1793, and on 28 May, they appointed Committee of Six to plan the uprising. On the night of May 30, the Eveche assembly announced Paris was in a state of insurrection against the Girondins.<ref>Kropotkin, ''ibid''.</ref> Together, the Jacobins and ''enragés'' succeeded in forcing the Girondins from power, but by August, the Jacobins turned against the ''enragés''. Taking state power for themselves, the Jacobins implemented a regime of terror against their political opponents.<ref>Graham, Robert, ''We Do Not Fear Anarchy, We Invoke It: The First International and the Origins of the Anarchist Movement'' (Oakland, Edinburgh, Baltimore: AK Press, 2015), 11-14.</ref>
 


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Revision as of 12:59, 24 August 2015

Participatory forces, notably the Parisian sections and the enragés, played an important role in the French Revolution (1789) that overthrew the French monarch and reshaped world politics. According to Immanuel Wallerstein, the French Revolution made the desirability of social change and popular sovereignty a part of global common sense.[1]

The enragés, popular intellectuals of the small-propertied class called the sans-culottes ("without culottes" - culottes were knee-breaches worn by aristocrats), argued that the French Revolution was actually comprised of three revolutions. The first revolution began in 1789 and describes the overthrow of the king and abolition of feudalism. The second revolution began in 1792 and describes the establishment of the National Convention, a supposedly radical legislature designed to supersede the moderate Legislative Assembly. The third revolution, called for by the enragés themselves in 1793, unsuccessfully attempted to replace the National Convention with a direct democratic form of governance.[2]

Parisian sections

In preparation of the 1789 Estates General meeting, the king set up sectional assemblies, local gatherings across France that chose delegates to select representatives for the Third Estate. Long after they had served their initial purposes, many assemblies continued meeting.

The sectional assemblies began governing local affairs in Paris and other large cities. Paris's 48 sections extended participation to all male adults, and in some cases to women. By 1972-3, the Parisian sections assumed responsibility for policing, finance, defense and supplies. Each section sent six delegates to the confederal Commune governing Paris.[3] Peter Kropotkin writes, “the Commune of Paris was not to be a governed State, but a people governing itself directly — when possible — without intermediaries, without masters”.[4]

Enragés

The enragés were popular speakers and writers who articulated ideas of the sans-culottes. Jean Francois Varlet, one of the enragés, advocated direct democracy across France, in which sectional assemblies would send recallable delegates to coordinate national affairs.[5]

On March 10 1793, Varlet and other enragés staged a failed insurrection against the Convention. A few days later, Varlet spoke before the Jacobin Club and called for a larger insurrection, a “third revolution” for direct sectional democracy and against the authoritarian Girondins who controlled the Convention. Following this call to arms, delegates of the sections met at Eveche on 2 April 1793, and on 28 May, they appointed Committee of Six to plan the uprising. On the night of May 30, the Eveche assembly announced Paris was in a state of insurrection against the Girondins.[6] Together, the Jacobins and enragés succeeded in forcing the Girondins from power, but by August, the Jacobins turned against the enragés. Taking state power for themselves, the Jacobins implemented a regime of terror against their political opponents.[7]


  1. Wallerstein, Immanuel, World-Systems Analysis: An Introduction (Durham and London: Duke University Press, 2004), 51.
  2. Bookchin, Murray, The Third Revolution: Popular Movements in the Revolutionary Era, Volume 1.
  3. Biehl, Janet, The Politics of Social Ecology: Libertarian Municipalism.
  4. Kropotkin, Peter, The Great French Revolution 1789-1793, http://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/petr-kropotkin-the-great-french-revolution-1789-1793.
  5. Bookchin, Murray, The Third Revolution: Volume I (Bloomsbury Academic, 1996), 325.
  6. Kropotkin, ibid.
  7. Graham, Robert, We Do Not Fear Anarchy, We Invoke It: The First International and the Origins of the Anarchist Movement (Oakland, Edinburgh, Baltimore: AK Press, 2015), 11-14.