Le Mouvement socialiste

Part of a series on
Syndicalism
"The Hand That Will Rule The World—One Big Union"
Precursors
  • Guild socialism
  • Orthodox Marxism
  • Revolutions of 1848
  • Utopian socialism
Variants
  • Anarchist
  • Council communism
  • De Leonism
  • Fascist
  • Green
  • Nationalist
  • Sorelianism
Economics
  • Co-operative economics
  • Labour economics
    • General strike
    • Labour rights
    • Labour unionisation
    • Workers' self-management
  • Mutual aid
Organisations
  • icon Organized Labour portal
  • icon Politics portal
  • v
  • t
  • e
Part of a series on
Socialism
Organizations
  • International socialist organizations
  • Socialist parties
Lists
  • Related lists
  • Category
  • By country
  • Socialists
  • Songs
  • icon Socialism portal (WikiProject)
  • Communism portal
  • icon Organized Labour
  • v
  • t
  • e

The Le Mouvement socialiste (en: The Socialist Movement) was a revolutionary syndicalist journal in France founded in 1899 by Hubert Lagardelle and dissolved in 1914.[1] Other key founders included Karl Marx's grandson Jean Longuet and Émile Durkheim's nephew Marcel Mauss.[2] It advocated segregation of social classes; opposed bourgeois life, democracy, universal suffrage, and parliamentarism; and supported a society led by "conscious, rebellious" men that would develop a disciplined bold new man as part of a "worker's army".[3] The journal was popular and attracted an international audience in its examination of Marxism and revolutionary syndicalism, with well-known revolutionary syndicalists contributing to it, such as Georges Sorel and Victor Griffuelhes.[4]

References

  1. ^ A. Thomas Lane. Biographical dictionary of European labor leaders. Westport, Connecticut, USA: Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc, 1995. Pp. 533.
  2. ^ Marcel Fournier. Marcel Mauss: a biography. English translation edition. Princeton, New Jersey, USA: Princeton University Press, 2006. Pp. 100.
  3. ^ John Hellman. The communitarian third way: Alexandre Marc's ordre nouveau, 1930-2000. McGill-Queen's University Press, 2002. Pp. 35.
  4. ^ A. Thomas Lane. Biographical dictionary of European labor leaders. Westport, Connecticut, USA: Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc, 1995. Pp. 533.
Authority control databases: National Edit this at Wikidata
  • France
  • BnF data