***THE
STRUGGLE FOR POWER IN THE FRENCH REVOLUTION
BOOK
REVIEW
THE
COMING OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION, GEORGES LEFEBVRE, VINTAGE BOOKS, NEW YORK,
1947
In my study of revolutions I have always been interested in two basic
questions- what were the ideas swirling around prior to the revolution that compelled
people to see the need for revolution and the related question of how those
ideas played out in the struggle for power. The study of the French Revolution
most clearly presents those two phenomena in all their manifestations. Professor
Lefebvre was a well-known and in his time a pre-eminent bourgeois historian of the
French Revolution. I have reviewed his major general work on the French
revolution elsewhere. Here, in this shorter work, he presents the events of
1789 as they unfolded and an analysis of what they meant in the period
immediately before the revolution when all hell was breaking loose in French
society.
If one can talk
legitimately about sociology of revolutions then Professor LeFebvre has
dramatically vindicated such sociology by presenting all of the factors that
goes toward such a study in the early period of the French revolutionary
experience. Clearly the Old Regime,
represented in the person of King Louis XI, was no longer capable of ruling in
the old way and the ‘people’ were no longer satisfied, for a myriad of reasons,
with being governed under the premise of the divine right of kings. The
struggle to turn from subjects of a monarch to citizens of a republic, a
question of capital historic importance in human experience, finds its most
dramatic expression this revolution. Furthermore, vast segments of society from
the liberal nobility and clergy to the nascent bourgeoisie to the working
classes (the so-called sans culottes and other plebian urban elements) to the
various layers of the peasantry each in their turn were willing to unite around
that premise. As clearly, once each class (or part of a class) gained its ends
it turned against further extension of the revolution and in the case of the
nobility and clergy very shortly turned toward counterrevolution. Professor LeFebvre
documents this trend very well, especially in the case of the peasantry which
he had special knowledge of and charted throughout his academic career.
This writer always tries to analyze and review each book on
revolutionary experiences he considers on the basis of what lessons militant
leftists can learn from the study of the old historical experiences. With that
task in mind
I was once again reminded by reading this book that the notion of the Popular
Front as a political strategy has a lot longer history than in the France of the
1920's and 1930's when it was first formally introduced through by the French
Socialist Party in an electoral alliance with the Left Radical bourgeois party.
What do I mean by Popular Front? The theory of the popular front has been
presented by forces such as the Socialist parties and later the Communist parties as a step in
the direction of revolution. The premise of the popular front revolves around a
belief that various classes can come together around a minimum social program that
will somehow make the plight of the oppressed classes involved less oppressive.
Generally, in such political blocs the oppressed classes do the donkey work and
the other classes reap whatever benefits accrue from the taking of power. This,
moreover, is basically a concept of a parliamentary path to socialism.
The long sordid
history of this political device as an attempted sop by political leaderships to
the working masses on one hand and a betrayal of their class interests on the other are
still with us today. Even in the United States this strategy is used by what passes for the left, on its own hook mind
you, when it blocs with the left-wing of
the capitalist Democratic Party. Under the best of circumstances a popular front
weakens and undermines the independence of the working classes. However, also
remember that the Popular Front, as France and Spain in the 1930's, Chile in
the 1970's and many other example show, can lead to bloody repression and destruction
of the working masses for a long time. In modern times militant leftists say no
to popular front ideology.
Well, that said, what
does all this have to do with the French Revolution. The French Revolution of
1789 represents in almost pure form the concept of the popular front. As
mentioned above several different classes were ready to take down the absolute
monarchy and furthermore were generally ready to subordinate, at least for a time,
their own interests to do this. This begs the question of what the attitude of
militants should be toward that phenomenon in 1789. Today we say no to the
popular front concept but then we would have supported such a concept with both
hands. Why? At that time the nature of French society, the tasks that needed to
be accomplished around the creation of a nation-state and the immaturity of the
working classes both socially and politically precluded a socialist solution to
the problems of the day. While our sympathies historically go to the sans
culottes who then and later were the
vanguard that pushed the revolution to the left and we honor Robespierre and
after him Babeuf and the Conspiracy of Equals at the beginning militants then could
have politically supported the popular front against the absolute monarchy. Later,
of course, under Robespierre we would have united with him and the left
elements of the bourgeoisie but we would nevertheless still have fought under the
sign of the popular front. Popular
Front, 1789- Yes. Today- No. Read on.
No comments:
Post a Comment