Review: Louise Michel - Rebel Lives Series
"If you are not cowards, kill me!"
January 9th 2005 marked the 100th anniversary of the death of the French anarchist Louise Michel's .
Michel was simply amazing, revolution personified. Known as
"The Red Virgin," she played an important role in the
creation of the Paris Commune by leading the people of Montmontre to
stop the government seizing the guns of the National Guard. She
fought on the barricades during the final days of revolt when not
tending the wounded.
"If you are not cowards, kill me!"
Review:
Louise
Michel - Rebel Lives Series
Nic Maclellan (ed.)
Ocean Press
ISBN: 1876175761
January 9th marked the 100th anniversary of Louise Michel's death.
Michel was simply amazing, revolution personified. Known as
"The Red Virgin," she played an important role in the
creation of the Paris Commune by leading the people of Montmontre to
stop the government seizing the guns of the National Guard. She
fought on the barricades during the final days of revolt when not
tending the wounded. Escaping the mass slaughter of 35,000 Parisians
after the Commune was defeated, she was arrested, tried and exiled to
New Caledonia along with thousands of other rebels. There, she
supported the indigenous people in their revolt against French
imperialism.
Finally returning to France when the government pardoned the
remaining Communards, she took an active part in the anarchist
movement. In 188X, she hoisted the Black Flag and led a protest
against unemployment across Paris. This act ensured that this flag,
previously associated with French labour struggles ("the black
flag is the flag of strikes and the flag of those who are
hungry," as she put it), became the classic anarchist symbol. A
participant in many struggles, she was arrested numerous times and
always remained defiant of the authorities she so clearly held in
utter contempt. Anarchist and feminist, Michel fought for equality
for all and for women's self-emancipation ("we women must take our
place without begging for it"). She died at the age of 74 and, by
a fitting co-incidence, she was buried before a crowd of 120,000
people the same day as the 1905 Russian Revolution started
Given her life story it is good that this book exists. It will
introduce this magnificent rebel to a new generation of radicals.
However, the book has its flaws. On the positive side, it contains a
selection of writings by Michel (including her defiant speech when on
trial after the Commune -- "If you are not cowards, kill
me!"). These are by far the best thing about the book. It also
has a couple of good selections from Emma Goldman who was profoundly
influenced by Michel. The first is from "Living My
Life" and the second is a letter about claims that Michel was
a lesbian. It is nice to know that Goldman was not a homophobe and
her anarchism extended to those of different sexuality's. There is
also a good account by Sheila Rowbotham of how the women in the
Commune were radicalised by their struggles and, as a consequence,
how they also had to fight the sexism of their male comrades. Howard
Zinn, the American radical historian, has a short piece on the "New
Left" which is concise and to the point (i.e. that history proved
Bakunin, not Marx, right). A tribute poem ( Viro Major) by her
friend Victor Hugo is also included, as are the words of "the
Internationale" (written by anarchist Communard Eugene Pottier).
Unfortunately, rather than fill the book with as many first hand
accounts of Michel's life and struggles as possible, we get subjected
to accounts of the Paris Commune by the likes of Marx and Lenin. This
hardly seems appropriate, given that these people spent some time
fighting anarchists and their ideas. In the case of Lenin, this is
doubly objectionable for as well as repressing the Russian anarchists
much more brutally than the French state did Michel he also presided
over the slaughter of the Kronstadt Commune (ironically, nearly 50
years to the day Michel faced the troops in Paris). Lenin's regime
confirmed Michel's prediction, uttered when she along with other
anarchists were expelled from the Marxist Second International, that
the Marxists "will be worse than anyone he replaces [in power]
because the Marxists claim infallibility and practice
excommunication."
It is significant that while the editor is happy to account
Michel's actions, her politics are downplayed. Given that this series
is meant to present both the rebel's ideas along with their lives
this is a serious flaw. The editor appears somewhat incredulously
states that Michel's "emotional ties were with the anarchist
movement" but that is hardly surprising as (four pages
previously) it is admitted that she "adopted anarchist
politics" in exile. What anarchism actually stands for, however,
goes unmentioned. This is surely a significant omission (although
this may be a blessing in disguise given how ignorant Marxists
generally are about our ideas!).
For example, it is mentioned in the introduction that Michel fully
supported the statement by arrested anarchists made in 1883 and that
she reproduced it in full in her memoirs. The editor fails to do
likewise. Surely such a concise summary of what Michel believed in
should warrant inclusion? Instead, we get two selections from Lenin!
And given that Michel became an anarchist after the commune, it would
make sense to reproduce, say, Kropotkin's critique of that revolution
than to include people whose analysis Michel obviously rejected or
even extracts from her own work on that event. Sadly, the editor
disagreed and we are subjected to Marx, Engels, Lenin and Paul Foot
all praising the "workers' government"! Given that Michel recognised
the "monstrous manner in which power transforms men" and
advocated ending the "crimes that power commits" by
"spreading power out to the entire human race," quoting
defenders of the centralisation of power into the hands of a few
party leaders is hardly doing her memory justice. That Bakunin and
Kropotkin are included in this section is of little comfort given the
shortness of their pieces.
This downplaying of anarchism is hardly unique to this book,
though. Marxists habitually forget to mention that rebels were
anarchists (while trying to squeeze in some link to Marxism).
Socialist Worker, for example, reproduced an (edited) version of
a 1979 talk by Paul Foot last year about Michel entitled "The
woman who built barricades" (issue 1922, 9 October 2004) That
she was an anarchist was somehow forgotten, although the fact that
she "joined the International Working Men's Association, which was
set up by Karl Marx and others" was not. This falsehood is
repeated by the editor, who makes the more modest claim that Marx
"helped found" that organisation. It is true that Marx was
present at the founding meeting of the International but he was not
involved in organising of that meeting or involved in the process
that lead to it. That honour goes to British and (especially) French
trade unionists, both of whom Marx spent a lot of time fighting once
he was a member of the General Council.
The editor goes out their way to present a Marxist spin to the
Commune. They note that "members of Marx's First
International" were elected to the Commune's Council (taking
nearly a fifth of the seats) and then immediately adds "while
others were followers of the anarchist leader Pierre-Joseph
Proudhon." This produces an utterly false impression that
Marxists made up a fifth of the Commune while libertarians were not
members of the International. The International in Paris was made up
of libertarians in the main and many of these were elected to the
Commune (indeed, the French trade unionists who helped found the
organisation were followers of Proudhon!). The author's comment can
only be explained as a feeble attempt to imply a greater role of
Marxists in the Commune than there actually was.
For the record, there wasn't one and if there had been then the
Commune would never have happened (Marx opposed uprisings in response
to the Prussian victory as "a desperate folly" ). If you are
going to subject your readers to extracts by Marx, it may have been
useful to mention this. Or the fact that Marx initially supported the
Prussians in the Franco-Prussian war, arguing that the French needed
a "thrashing" and that a German victory would " shift the
centre of gravity of West European labour movements from France to
Germany " which would " mean likewise the dominance of our
theory over that of Proudhon" ! That Marx later considered the
Commune as " merely the rising of a town under exceptional
conditions" and that "the majority of the Commune was in no
sense socialist, nor could it be" could also be considered
relevant by some.
And, just to state the obvious, it was not, as the editor states,
"Karl Marx's communist International." Marx neither owned it
(although he acted like he did most times!) nor did it expound his
theories. When Marx finally succeeded in imposing his ideas onto it,
to combat the rising influence of the anarchists around Bakunin, he
only succeeded in killing it off. Perhaps we should be grateful, as
this ensured that the First International did not share the
ignominious fate of the Second International which did espouse and
practice his theories on "political action" (and so proving Michel,
and Bakunin, right). So while the editor is right to note that the
1881 international anarchist congress failed to produce a viable
organisation, it was considered as a continuance of the First
International rather than creating a "Black
International" to "match Karl Marx's communist First
International."
All this may come from a problem with the Marxist appropriation of
the Commune, namely how it singularly fails to fit into that
ideology's paradigm. Perhaps this explains the editor's apparent
unwillingness to discuss anarchism and, consequently, why Michel
embraced it so wholeheartedly? If the editor had bothered to include,
say, the Commune's declaration to the French people it would become
pretty clear that the ideas that inspired much of the Commune were
derived from Proudhon's federalism. Similarly, while the editor
showers praise on the Commune's attempt to step up co-operatives in
closed workplaces they fail to indicate that this also has clear
links with Proudhon's anarchism.
Proudhon, of course, popularised many of the ideas then held by
French workers. The term "mutualism" he used to describe his ideas
was derived, like many of those ideas themselves, from the workers in
Lyon who had raised the Black Flag in insurrection in the 1830s.
Which indicates another missed opportunity in the book. While the
editor does include three declarations by Parisian workers in the
section on women during the Commune, the book is sadly lacking in
such voices from below. Rather than allow the Communards to speak for
themselves, in terms of reproducing their key declarations and
statements, the editor prefers to inflict Lenin onto the reader
(although it is amusingly ironic to read Lenin singing the praises of
"the Internationale , " a "proletarian"
anthem written by a Communard follower of Proudhon, i.e. a "petty
bourgeois" anarchist!).
This, perhaps, is unsurprising. For if the Commune was allowed to
speak for itself, it's decentralised, federalist vision of a
socialism based on self-managed workers' associations would show how
alien mainstream Marxism is from it. That both Proudhon and Bakunin
predicted key aspects of the Commune (such as its federalism, the
mandating and instant recall of delegates, its self-managed
workplaces, and so forth) should not come as a surprise. Nor should
the fact that Marx had in 1866 dismissed the French workers as being
"corrupted" by "Proudhonist" ideas, "particularly
those of Paris, who as workers in luxury trades are strongly
attached, without knowing it, to the old rubbish."
I should stress that I am not suggesting that these comments by
the editor are the produce of malice or sectarianism. I am sure they
think they are being fair to their subject and celebrating a rebel
life. They probably really do think of it as "Marx's First
International." I would put it down to the ignorance that affects
so many Marxists about anarchism and their own tradition as well as
the usual bias in favour of history from above when it involves
Marxist leaders. Thus Marx is considered more important than the
Communards themselves or the working people who actually founded the
First International just as the shenanigans of the Bolshevik
leadership are the focus of their accounts of the Russian Revolution
rather than what was happening in the streets and workplaces
(particularly when the latter clashed with the former!).
The Marxist biases and its corresponding historical revisionism
are annoying, but should not detract the reader from finding out
about the life of this amazing woman. Until such time as her memoirs
come back in print or an anarchist writes an equivalent book or short
biography (or translates an existing one from the French!), we are
dependent on this book. So while an interesting read, it must be
considered a wasted opportunity as it does not do justice of this
remarkable women, her struggles and particularly her ideas.
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Jump To Comment: 1The editor goes out their way to present a Marxist spin to the Commune. They note that "members of Marx's First International" were elected to the Commune's Council (taking nearly a fifth of the seats) and then immediately adds "while others were followers of the anarchist leader Pierre-Joseph Proudhon." This produces an utterly false impression that Marxists made up a fifth of the Commune while libertarians were not members of the International. The International in Paris was made up of libertarians in the main and many of these were elected to the Commune (indeed, the French trade unionists who helped found the organisation were followers of Proudhon!). The author's comment can only be explained as a feeble attempt to imply a greater role of Marxists in the Commune than there actually was.
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