Daniel Knegt Amsterdam, 29 October 2015

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Daniel Knegt Amsterdam, 29 October 2015 A New Order for France and Europe? Bertrand de Jouvenel and Alfred Fabre-Luce between Liberalism, Fascism and Europeanism (1930-1954) Floris Daniël Knegt Thesis submitted for assessment with a view to obtaining the degree of Doctor of History and Civilization of the European University Institute Florence, 13 November 2015 European University Institute Department of History and Civilization A New Order for France and Europe? Bertrand de Jouvenel and Alfred Fabre-Luce between Liberalism, Fascism and Europeanism (1930-1954) Floris Daniël Knegt Thesis submitted for assessment with a view to obtaining the degree of Doctor of History and Civilization of the European University Institute Examining Board Prof. Dr. Dirk Moses (EUI/ Supervisor) Prof. Dr. Laura Lee Downs (EUI/Second Reader) Prof. Dr. Peter Romijn (University of Amsterdam) Prof. Dr. Kevin Passmore (Cardiff University) © Floris Daniël Knegt, 2015 No part of this thesis may be copied, reproduced or transmitted without prior permission of the author Thesis abstract Thanks to the success of recent attempts to study fascism within an international or transnational framework, scholarship on the subject has broken free from its traditional national orientation. By now, the European or even global interconnectedness of the revolutionary right has clearly come to light. This is not necessarily true for the links between fascism and internationalist and Europeanist intellectual currents in interwar and post-war Europe. My thesis explores the political thought of Bertrand de Jouvenel and Alfred Fabre- Luce, two French intellectuals, journalists and political writers who belonged to this Europeanist avant-garde. I argue that their Europeanist ideas and international contacts played a major role in their ‘drift’ towards fascism during the 1930s, while they were seduced by a fascist vision of a united Europe during the Second World War. Paradoxically, these ideas also enabled them to gradually reintegrate with the political mainstream during the early post- war years. Jouvenel’s post-war career as a leading neoliberal intellectual and founding member of the Mont Pèlerin society should, just like Fabre-Luce’s continued involvement with the French extreme right, be seen within the light of continuity in their ideas about Europe, fascism and democracy, stretching from the turning of the 1930s well into the 1950s. iii iv Table of Contents Acknowledgements . vii List of Abbreviations . ix Chapter 1: Both Right and Left: Historiography of Fascism in France . 1 Intellectual Fascism? . 1 Between Immunity and Pan-Fascism . 5 New Perspectives . 15 Europeanism, Fascism and Neoliberalism . 24 Chapter 2: ‘En Faisant l’Europe’: Internationalism and the Fascist Drift . 33 ‘La Nouvelle Génération Européenne’: Generation Politics in 1920s France 33 Reconciliation with Germany at all Costs? . 40 Metaphysical Europeanism . 48 Chapter 3: Planning, Fascism and the State: 1930-1939 . 55 From Liberalism to ‘l’Économie Dirigée’. 55 A National and Social Revolution . 60 Party Intellectuals at the Service of Fascism . 69 Chapter 4: Facing a Fascist Europe: 1939-1943 . 77 Defeat and Readjustment . 77 Tracing the Origins of Defeat . 86 ‘On the Threshold of a New World’ . 99 New Rulers, Old Acquaintances . 107 Collaboration and ‘Attentisme’ . 117 Chapter 5: A European Revolution? Liberation and the Post-war Extreme Right . 135 Liberation and Persecution . 135 Exile and Exclusion . 149 ‘Beyond Nazism’: Monarchism and the Heritage of Fascism . 157 v Reinventing the Extreme Right . 167 Europeanism, Federalism and the Reconfiguration of the Extreme Right . 181 Chapter 6: Europeanism, Neoliberalism and the Cold War . 193 On Private Life and Facial Hair . 193 On Power: Pessimism, Aristocracy and the Distrust of Democracy . 197 A Mountain in Switzerland: Neoliberalism and the Mont Pèlerin Society . 206 ‘This General Feeling of Open Conspiracy’ . 217 Conclusion: From the Sohlberg to Mont Pèlerin . 227 Bibliography . 235 vi Acknowledgements Writing this thesis has been a bumpy road full of interesting sights, indecipherable signposts and – as the Dutch expression goes – bears. Standing at the end of it, and experiencing the feelings of relief and accomplishment I have often longed for in the past five years, I am indebted to all who have helped me on my way. First of all, I want to thank my supervisor, Dirk Moses, for his very valuable help (and unmatched email-answering speed) during the full duration of my PhD. His indefatigable feedback has also made it possible for me to critically improve my written English. My second reader Laura Lee Downs has also been crucial for the success of this thesis. From the moment she became involved with my project, many hitherto confusing signposts have become legible, and several of the roaming bears have turned out to be quite friendly and domesticable. I also express my gratitude to the other members of the jury, Professors Peter Romijn and Kevin Passmore, who have provided me with valuable feedback, and to Heinz-Gerhardt Haupt, Kiran Klaus Patel, Anthony La Vopa and everybody working at the EUI history department, in whose midst it has been a true pleasure to pursue my research. Talking about Florence: my EUI years would never have been so pleasurable without the company of my Florentine friends, with whom I have shared so many unforgettable moments. Besides being a ‘community of scholars’, the EUI is also a great place because it is an endlessly inspiring and energising melting pot on all kinds of less scholarly levels. With Jonas, Gabriele and Karena, I have thrown myself down snowy mountain slopes, discovered unknown islands and cycled through the impressive landscapes of the Mugello and the Chianti. With Robrecht, I shared so many drinks, hikes, crappy football games, serious thoughts and laughs that I can’t wait for the next Benelux meeting with him, Griet and of course little Kasper. I have also experienced countless memorable moments with Matti, Vera, Alan, Sani, Kaarlo, Pol, Bart, Roel, Tommaso, Brian, Carolina and so many others, and I hope that official and unofficial occasions will keep bringing us together. Archival research brought me to Paris for several short and less short stays. I wish to thank Anne de Jouvenel and the descendants of the Fabre-Luce family for generously giving me access to their relative’s private archives, kept at the Archives Nationales and the Bibliothèque Nationale de France. At this latter institution, I am grateful to conservator Michèle Le Pavec for preparing the manuscripts I wished to consult, and for her friendly and important guidance through the vast Jouvenel archive. I would also like to thank Anne de vii Simonin and Pascal Raimbault, who have been very helpful in directing me towards Fabre- Luce’s Épuration dossier. I even thank the librarians of the BNF’s François Mitterand site, whose relentless surveillance and draconian threats, to keep me from taking the photographs I desperately needed, have given me a valuable impression of what fascism may look like in practice. I am happy to say their efforts have been in vain. I am grateful to the Deutsches Literaturarchiv in Marbach for hosting me, for several ice cold February days, in a studio right next to their beautiful archive, where I consulted the Ernst Jünger papers. During the past few years, my good old University of Amsterdam has provided me with an academic asylum of the best kind. I am very grateful to James Kennedy and Jouke Turpijn for giving me the occasion to further develop myself, as a visiting scholar and subsequently a lecturer. My UvA office-mates, colleagues and friends, Tim, Frans, Alberto, Valentina, Guido, Eleá, Jan, Lisa, Rosanne, Robin, Lotte and Merel, have made my working environment a fantastic place where I liked to spend time, albeit occasionally slightly too much. The editors of Historisch Café deserve a special mention here, as do all the students of the Grand Tour historical study trip, with whom I spent two unforgettable weeks in Georgia and Armenia. I look forward to more adventures next year. Although it would be impossible to mention them all, I want to thank all my Amsterdam friends, Tim, Micha, Tim, Matthijs, Harmen, Tim, Onno, Willemijn, Thomas, Bo, Ambi, Lea, Maria, Sterre and so many others, for supporting me, distracting me and most importantly for just being there. For general inspiration, I wish to thank Wamberto. The German, Italian, Austrian and Swiss national railways have carried me, the seldom-flying Dutchman, across Europe on so many occasions that they also deserve my gratitude. They gave me breathtaking views of the Alps and ample time to think, read and listen to music, while feeling weirdly happy. I senk ju för träweling. Lastly, I want to thank my parents, Jette and Robert, for everything that I do in life. And I thank my brother Bram and Anne-Rose for being such great people. I can’t wait to meet my little nephew, less than two months from now… And finally of course Julia, meine liebe Jule, with whom I share my life and who has given me Simon, our son born on 1 April 2014. This thesis is dedicated to him. Daniel Knegt Amsterdam, 29 October 2015 viii List of Abbreviations AFL Alfred Fabre-Luce AN Archives Nationales ARPTR Association des Représentants du Peuple de la Troisième République BdJ Bertrand de Jouvenel BNF Bibliothèque Nationale de France CdF Croix-de-Feu CFA Comité France-Allemagne CIRL Centre International d’Études pour la Rénovation du Libéralisme CNE Comité National d’Écrivains CNIP Centre National des Indépendants
Recommended publications
  • Routledge Dictionary of Cultural References in Modern French
    About the Table of Contents of this eBook. The Table of Contents in this eBook may be off by 1 digit. To correctly navigate chapters, use the bookmark links in the bookmarks panel. The Routledge Dictionary of Cultural References in Modern French The Routledge Dictionary of Cultural References in Modern French reveals the hidden cultural dimension of contemporary French, as used in the press, going beyond the limited and purely lexical approach of traditional bilingual dictionaries. Even foreign learners of French who possess a good level of French often have difficulty in fully understanding French articles, not because of any linguistic shortcomings on their part but because of their inadequate knowledge of the cultural references. This cultural dictionary of French provides the reader with clear and concise expla- nations of the crucial cultural dimension behind the most frequently used words and phrases found in the contemporary French press. This vital background information, gathered here in this innovative and entertaining dictionary, will allow readers to go beyond a superficial understanding of the French press and the French language in general, to see the hidden yet implied cultural significance that is so transparent to the native speaker. Key features: a broad range of cultural references from the historical and literary to the popular and classical, with an in-depth analysis of punning mechanisms. over 3,000 cultural references explained a three-level indicator of frequency over 600 questions to test knowledge before and after reading. The Routledge Dictionary of Cultural References in Modern French is the ideal refer- ence for all undergraduate and postgraduate students of French seeking to enhance their understanding of the French language.
    [Show full text]
  • JACKDAWS by Ken Follett Outline: 18T Draft-Annotated
    1 JACKDAWS by Ken Follett Outline: 18t draft-annotated PG: Think ofa more interesting title with ''jackdaws'' in it KF: Jackdaws by Night? AZ: The story will work to the extend to which you putpressure on Flick and Dieter. For Flick, the pressure can come from: • Dieter • Weaknesses in her team • Weaknesses ofresistors • Conflicts between communists and others • Fortescue • Love relationships • Germans in general For Dieter, it can come from: • Flick • Other resistants • Baecker • Rommel • Some deep inner yearning for concord between Germany and France 2 Preface: Exactly 50 women were sent into France as secret agents by the Special Operations Executive during the Second World War. Ofthose, 36 survived the war. The other 14 gave their lives. This novel is dedicated to all ofthem. List their names? Prologue: Some Dieter PoVin the Prologue. Sainte-Cecile is a fictional small town near the cathedral city ofReims, in the champagne district ofnorth-east France. It is 14 May 1944, and the country has been under Nazi occupation for four years. At the end ofa hot Sunday afternoon, the church bell rings a languid toll for the evening service. The square in the town centre is dominated by a walled chateau on its north side. It is a beautiful seventeenth century building, and a German officer and his wife, tourists, are taking photographs of it with a large camera on a tripod. AZ: The chateau should be more of a "character". KF: It couldbe a Gothic fantasy castle with fairy-tale turrets. It couldhave a moat. It should be very difficult to enter in all sorts ofways On the east ofthe square is the church.
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction Thinking Fascism and Populism in Terms of the Past
    Introduction Thinking Fascism and Populism in Terms of the Past Representing a historian’s inquiry into how and why fascism morphed into populism in history, this book describes the dicta- torial genealogies of modern populism. It also stresses the sig- nifi cant diff erences between populism as a form of democracy and fascism as a form of dictatorship. It rethinks the conceptual and historical experiences of fascism and populism by assessing their elective ideological affi nities and substantial political dif- ferences in history and theory. A historical approach means not subordinating lived experiences to models or ideal types but rather stressing how the actors saw themselves in contexts that were both national and transnational. It means stressing varied contingencies and manifold sources. History combines evidence with interpretation. Ideal types ignore chronology and the cen- trality of historical processes. Historical knowledge requires accounting for how the past is experienced and explained through narratives of continuities and change over time. Against an idea of populism as an exclusively European or American phenomenon, I propose a global reading of its historical 1 2 / Introduction itineraries. Disputing generic theoretical defi nitions that reduce populism to a single sentence, I stress the need to return populism to history. Distinctive, and even opposed, forms of left- and right- wing populism crisscross the world, and I agree with historians like Eric Hobsbawm that left and right forms of populism cannot be confl ated simply because they are often antithetical.1 While populists on the left present those who are opposed to their politi- cal views as enemies of the people, populists on the right connect this populist intolerance of alternative political views with a con- ception of the people formed on the basis of ethnicity and country of origin.
    [Show full text]
  • A Historiography of Fascism
    History in the Making Volume 6 Article 5 2013 A Historiography of Fascism Glenn-Iain Steinback CSUSB Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/history-in-the-making Part of the Political History Commons Recommended Citation Steinback, Glenn-Iain (2013) "A Historiography of Fascism," History in the Making: Vol. 6 , Article 5. Available at: https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/history-in-the-making/vol6/iss1/5 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the History at CSUSB ScholarWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in History in the Making by an authorized editor of CSUSB ScholarWorks. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Articles History Department’s 2013 Faculty Choice Award A Historiography of Fascism By Glenn-Iain Steinback Abstract: A long-standing historical debate revolves around the definition, fundamental nature and historical constraints of the concept of fascism. A wide array of scholarly questions about the political and ideological nature of fascism, the minimum or necessary traits of a fascist movement, arguments over the classification of semi-fascist groups and the concept of generic fascism characterize this debate. The result is a substantial body of scholarly research replete with competing theories for the evolution and origin of fascism as a concept, of individual fascist movements and even over the geographic and temporal application of the term itself within history. This paper is a historiography of fascist studies that illuminates the development of the scholarly narrative and understanding of fascism. Beginning with the historically contemporary Marxist perceptive of fascism, this paper examines competing and complimentary understandings of the phenomenon across the twentieth century, including various theories for the evolution of fascism in Europe, the relationship to and placement of fascism in the broader political spectrum, and the debate over fascism as a form of political religion.
    [Show full text]
  • Militant Democracy and Fundamental Rights, II Author(S): Karl Loewenstein Source: the American Political Science Review, Vol
    Militant Democracy and Fundamental Rights, II Author(s): Karl Loewenstein Source: The American Political Science Review, Vol. 31, No. 4 (Aug., 1937), pp. 638-658 Published by: American Political Science Association Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/1948103 Accessed: 07-08-2018 08:47 UTC JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at https://about.jstor.org/terms American Political Science Association is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to The American Political Science Review This content downloaded from 35.176.47.6 on Tue, 07 Aug 2018 08:47:36 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms MILITANT DEMOCRACY AND FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS, II* KARL LOEWENSTEIN Amherst College II Some Illustrations of Militant Democracy. Before a more system- atic -account of anti-fascist legislation in Europe is undertaken, recent developments in several countries may be reviewed as illus- trating what militant democracy can achieve against subversive extremism when the will to survive is coupled with appropriate measures for combatting fascist techniques. 1. Finland: From the start, the Finnish Republic was particu- larly exposed to radicalism both from left and right. The newly established state was wholly devoid of previous experience in self- government, shaken by violent nationalism, bordered by bolshevik Russia, yet within the orbit of German imperialism; no other country seemed more predestined to go fascist.
    [Show full text]
  • LE RASSEMBLEMENT DES GAUCHES REPUBLICAINES ET SES COMPOSANTES Article Extrait De La Revue Recherches Contemporaines, N° 5, 1998-1999
    LE RASSEMBLEMENT DES GAUCHES REPUBLICAINES ET SES COMPOSANTES Article extrait de la revue Recherches contemporaines, n° 5, 1998-1999 Le Rassemblement comme rassemblement Éric DUHAMEL De toutes les formations politiques, le RGR est probablement celle qui a le moins retenu l’attention des historiens. Les histoires générales de la 4e République se contentent de le qualifier de cartel électoral quand il n’est pas purement et simplement assimilé au Parti radical1. Or, le RGR, sans avoir été un parti politique stricto sensu, a été beaucoup plus qu’un cartel électoral ; en fait une confédération de forces politiques comparable à l’UDF. Mais si l’UDF, à l’origine cartel électoral, s’est transformée en "groupement politique"2, le RGR, ainsi que nous le verrons, a été pensé d’emblée comme une formule originale de regroupement de forces politiques. A ce titre, le RGR a joué un rôle et remplit une fonction non négligeable durant la 4e République. En outre, il constitue un type d’organisation dont la connaissance peut utilement enrichir les études sur les associations partisanes. Le lecteur ne trouvera pas dans les lignes qui suivent une étude exhaustive de cette formation mais, à l’occasion de la publication des notes politiques de Pierre de Léotard dans ce numéro de Recherches contemporaines, une brève présentation. L’histoire du RGR est celle de ses paradoxes. Le moindre n’a-t-il pas été de voir associés dans une même formation radicaux et manifestants du 6 février 1934, survivants de Vichy et résistants parmi les plus authentiques ? Que ce Rassemblement ait eu une influence certaine au Parlement, quand bien même ses principales composantes sont sorties discréditées de la seconde guerre mondiale, à l’exception 1.
    [Show full text]
  • Published As: Jackie Smith and Nicole Doerr, “Democratic Innovation in the U.S
    Published as: Jackie Smith and Nicole Doerr, “Democratic Innovation in the U.S. and European Social Forums” in A Handbook of the World Social Forums. J. Smith, S. Byrd, E. Reese, and E. Smythe, Eds. Paradigm Publishers. (2012) Chapter 18 Democratic Innovation in the U.S. and European Social Forums Jackie Smith and Nicole Doerr Democratization is an ongoing, conflict-ridden process, resulting from contestation between social movements and political elites (Markoff 1996; Tilly 1984). The struggle to make elites more accountable to a larger public has produced the democratic institutions with which we are familiar, and it continues to shape and reconfigure these institutions. It also transforms the individuals and organizations involved in social change, generating social movement cultures, norms and practices that evolve over time. In this chapter, we conceptualize the World Social Forum (WSF) process as part of a larger historical struggle over people’s right to participate in decisions that affect their lives. As other contributions to this volume have shown, the WSF has emerged from and brings together a diverse array of social movements, and has become a focal point for contemporary movements struggling against the anti-democratic character of neoliberal globalization. Neoliberalism’s threats to democratic governance result from its expansion of the political and economic authority of international financial institutions like the World Bank, International Monetary Fund, and the World Trade Organization; its hollowing out of national states through privatization, the international debt regime, and international trade policies; its privileging of 1 expert and technocratic knowledge over all other sources of knowledge; and its depoliticization of economic policymaking (Brunelle 2007; Harvey 2005; Markoff 1999; McMichael 2006).
    [Show full text]
  • Bulletin De L'association Pour L'etude De L'oeuvre D'henri De Han
    BULLETIN DE L'ASSOCIATION POUR L'ETUDE DE L'OEUVRE D'HENRI DE HAN N° 14 - Mai 1987 ACTES DU COLLOQUE D'ANVERS tenu le 17 novembre 1985 à l'occasion du centenaire de la naissance d'Henri de Man ASSOCIATION POUR L'ETUDE DE L'OEUVRE D'HENRI DE MAN Département d'histoire du droit et des doctrines juridiques et politiques, Place de l'Université 3, 1211 GENEVE <* (Suisse) EDITEUR Association pour l'étude de l'oeuvre d'Henri de Mon [Vereniging voor de stucfie van het werk van Hendrik de Mon] p.a. Département d'histoire du droit et des doctrines juridiques et politiques Place de l'Université 3, CH-1211 Genève 4 (Suisse) [Secrétariat pour la Belgique et les Pays-Bas : Jan Ockeghemstraat 16, B-2520 Edegem-Antwerpen (Belgique)] REDACTEUR RESPONSABLE Michel Brélaz, 79A avenue Curé-Baud, CH-1212 Grand-Lancy (Suisse) Les textes, signés ou non, n'expriment pas nécessairement les vues de l'Association, de son comité et de ses membres. Ils peuvent être cités, moyennant indication de la source, mais ne peuvent être reproduits ou traduits, en tout ou en partie, qu'avec l'autorisation préalable de l'éditeur. Copyright 1987 by Association pour l'étude de l'oeuvre d'Henri de Man. Tous droits de reproduction et de traduction réservés. 3 TABLE DES MATIERES Sommaire 5 L DISCOURS D'INAUGURATION ET ACTES DU COLLOQUE 9 H.B. Cools Toespraak 11 J. de Meyer Toespraak 19 A.M. van Peski Dankwoord 21 P. Dodge Post hoc, propter hoc : A critique of Sternhell on de Man 23 K.
    [Show full text]
  • Activité 1 : Quelles Sont Les Origines Et Les Conséquences De La Crise De
    Activité 1 : 2/ une crise institutionnelle profonde et fatale Quelles sont les origines et les conséquences de Documents de référence : la crise de mai 1958 organigramme IVe République (ci-dessous) tableau des différents gouvernements de la IVe République (ci-dessous) caricature de Sennep (ci-dessous) 1/ l'Algérie et l'embrasement du 13 mai 1958 Assemblée Nationale de 1956 (à projeter) documents de référence : vidéo Crise du 13 mai 1958 • Nous évoquions l'instabilité gouvernementale française au moment de la crise Photo 2 p.190 d'Alger... ◦ Combien de gouvernements se sont succédés au cours des 12 ans • Dans quel état politique se trouve la France début mai 1958 ? d'existence de la IVe République ? Qu'en conclure ? ◦ Pourquoi une telle instabilité ? ◦ Observe la représentation politique de l'Assemblée Nationale de 1956 [doc. projeté] ; combien recenses-tu de partis pouvant peser sur la vie • A quelle date et où éclate la crise politique ? politique française ? Que peux-tu en conclure (aide-toi de la caricature ci- dessous) ? • Quelle institution semble manœuvrer afin de reprendre le contrôle de la situation en Algérie ? ◦ Cette prise de contrôle est-elle légale ? ◦ En observant l'organigramme de la IVe République, relève les éléments ◦ Quel nom donne-t-on à cette forme de prise de pouvoir ? qui permettent de comprendre l'instabilité des gouvernements et donc la fragilité du pouvoir exécutif confronté à des problèmes graves. • Quel nom est scandé par les « nouveaux dirigeants » d'Alger ? ◦ Quelle fonction exerce cet homme à ce moment ?
    [Show full text]
  • European Strategies of the New Right - the Example of the FPÖ
    European Strategies of the New Right - the example of the FPÖ The European politics of the FPÖ (Freiheitliche Partei Österreichs / Freedom Party of Austria) is not only a mirror of the entire diversity of a quite contradictory and in parts very tactical relationship of the entire New Right towards "Europe". Due to the character of the FPÖ as a populistic mass movement, the European politics of the FPÖ is often characterized by short- and medium-term concerns of realpolitik (= pragmatic politics). On the one hand, the aim is to maximize votes with populistic discourses and actions before elections, on the other to serve the economic interests of the industrialists and business circles that maintain close relations to the party. This may at least give a rough idea of the reasons for the relatively jerky changes and the lack of consistency in the position of the FPÖ towards the European Union. Nevertheless, a careful reading of various FPÖ publications reveals a view of Europe that in spite of variations in the tactical and strategic reflections shows a certain degree of continuity. The position of the FPÖ has to be seen in the context of an ideological evolution of the party which needs to be presented here so that its position on Europe can be situated in an ideological context. Continuities of the "Third Camp" In Austria, the FPÖ represents the so-called "Third Camp" that has evolved in the 19th century as a quite heterogeneous camp between national liberalism and German nationalism and has largely merged, in the 30ies of the 20th century, into the Austrian sections of the NSDAP (National- Sozialistische Deutsche Arbeiter-Partei / National-Socialist German Workers' Party).
    [Show full text]
  • The Poverty of Philosophy and Its Contemporary Relevance
    Crisis, Revolution, and the Meaning of Progress: The Poverty of Philosophy and its Contemporary Relevance Michael Joseph Roberto Proudhon and Marx ABSTRACT: In 1847, Marx wrote The Poverty of Philosophy, his polemical response to Pierre Joseph Proudhon’s System of Economical Contradictions Or, The Philosophy of Poverty, published a year earlier. Marx and Proudhon were the principal antagonists in the struggle for influence and control of the emerging European workers movement then fueled by the first great crisis of modern capitalism. While Marx propagated communist revolution as a solution to the crisis, Proudhon sought to preserve “good capitalism” by attempting to formulate a new political economy that would reconcile contradictions of capitalist exchange by means of reciprocal agreements and transactions; in a word, mutualism. In The Poverty of Philosophy, Marx took Proudhon to task for creating a massive “dialectical phantasmagoria” in the System of Economical Contradictions. Usually regarded as his first detailed treatment of political economy, Marx’s book also contains an implicit conception of social and historical progress based on the principles of contradiction, paradox, and Copyright © 2009 by Michael Joseph Roberto and Cultural Logic, ISSN 1097-3087 Michael Joseph Roberto 2 practice. Today, as the U.S. experiences an irreversible and possibly terminal capitalist crisis, Marx’s polemic against Proudhon remains instructive as an historical, theoretical, and practical-political guide. Key features of the Marx- Proudhon divide in the 1840s are now being recast in contemporary guises and forms. The Left must distinguish between revolutionary Marxist solutions and variations of the New Proudhonism. While Marxism holds the potential for revolutionary, socialist transformation and renewed social progress, the New Proudhonism seeks to save “good capitalism” – ironically and tragically, carrying with it the plausibility of a more coercive and barbarous system.
    [Show full text]
  • Europe (In Theory)
    EUROPE (IN THEORY) ∫ 2007 Duke University Press All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper $ Designed by C. H. Westmoreland Typeset in Minion with Univers display by Keystone Typesetting, Inc. Library of Congress Cataloging-in- Publication Data appear on the last printed page of this book. There is a damaging and self-defeating assumption that theory is necessarily the elite language of the socially and culturally privileged. It is said that the place of the academic critic is inevitably within the Eurocentric archives of an imperialist or neo-colonial West. —HOMI K. BHABHA, The Location of Culture Contents Acknowledgments ix Introduction: A pigs Eye View of Europe 1 1 The Discovery of Europe: Some Critical Points 11 2 Montesquieu’s North and South: History as a Theory of Europe 52 3 Republics of Letters: What Is European Literature? 87 4 Mme de Staël to Hegel: The End of French Europe 134 5 Orientalism, Mediterranean Style: The Limits of History at the Margins of Europe 172 Notes 219 Works Cited 239 Index 267 Acknowledgments I want to thank for their suggestions, time, and support all the people who have heard, read, and commented on parts of this book: Albert Ascoli, David Bell, Joe Buttigieg, miriam cooke, Sergio Ferrarese, Ro- berto Ferrera, Mia Fuller, Edna Goldstaub, Margaret Greer, Michele Longino, Walter Mignolo, Marc Scachter, Helen Solterer, Barbara Spack- man, Philip Stewart, Carlotta Surini, Eric Zakim, and Robert Zimmer- man. Also invaluable has been the help o√ered by the Ethical Cosmopol- itanism group and the Franklin Humanities Seminar at Duke University; by the Program in Comparative Literature at Notre Dame; by the Khan Institute Colloquium at Smith College; by the Mediterranean Studies groups of both Duke and New York University; and by European studies and the Italian studies program at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
    [Show full text]