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SITUATIONISTS AND THE 1£�CH, MAY 1968

British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data


A catalogue record for this book is available from the
British Library

ISBN 1902593383

Published by AK Press/Dark Star

AK Press Europe
PO Box 12766
Edinburgh
EH89YE
ak@akedin.demon.co.uk
http://www.akuk.com

AK Press USA
PO BOX40682
San Francisco
CA 94140-0682
USA
ak@akpress.org
http:/ fwww.akpress.org

©This anthology is copyright AK Press/Dark Star 2001

Design by Billy Hunt


en tant qu'intelligence
de la pratique huma·
qui doit etre
i reconnue et vccuc
_par les masses.

This book is dedicated to the memory of Fredy Perlman (1934- 1985)

"Having little, being much."


C:ONT£NiS

Foreword

1 On The Poverty of Student Life 9


Menibers of the lnternationale Situationniste and Students of Strasbourg

2 Our Goals & Methods 29


Situationist International

3 Totality For kids


Raoul Vaneigem

4 Paris May 1968


Solidarity

5 The Decline & Fall of the "Spectacular" Commodity-Economy


Guy Debord

6 Documents 105
Situationist International

7 Further reading 117

Afterward
Foreword
This anthology brings together the and in May 1967 it was widely distrib­
three most widely translated, distrib­ uted around the Nanterre campus by
uted and influential pamphlets of the Anarchists. November of that year saw
Situationist International available in the publication of Debord's Society of
the sixties. We have also included an the Spectacle and December the publi­
eyewitness account of the May Events cation of Vaneigem's Revolution of
by a member of Solidarity published in Everyday Life.
June 1968. (Dark Star would like to What we hope this Anthology will
point out that although Solidarity does offer the reader is not only a concise
not possess the current 'kudos' or introduction to the ideas of the
media/cultural interest possessed by Situationists but also an insight into
the Situationists, politically they are what Situationist material was readily
deserving of more recognition and available in the late sixties. For the
research). non-French speaking person with an
To briefly s ketch in some historical interest in radical politics the chances
context, both The Poverty of Student are that their encounter with and
Life (also known as Ten Days That knowledge of the Situationists would
Shook The University), and Paris: May be derived from these three pam­
1968 were conceived as pamphlets. phlets. lt is worth emphasising that
The Totality for Kids and The Decline although we recall seeing a duplicated
And Fall of The Spectacular translation of Society of the Spectacle
Commodity Economy were translated it was not until Black & Red published
from articles in the Situationist their translation in 1970 that the book
International journal. The Totality for became generally available. Likewise,
Kids, written by Raoul Vaneigem, orig­ although an edition of Revolution Of
inally appeared in two parts in Issue Everyday Life was translated by John
No 7 (April 1962) and Issue No 8 Fullerton and Paul Sieveking and pub­
Oanuary 1963). The Decline and Fall of lished by Practical Paradise in 1972 (in
The Spectacular Commodity Economy, an edition whose unique selling point ­
written by Guy Debord, originally to utilise a commercial phrase -

appeared in Issue No 10 (March 1966). seemed to be the book's ability to fall


The Poverty of Student Life, probably to pieces in pamphlet-size chunks!), it
the most famous or infamous of these was not until Donald Nicholson­
pamphlets, was originally distributed Smith's translation published by Rebel
by AFGES students on 22 November Press in 1983 that the title became
1966. lt was reissued in March 1967 widely available. If we recall that Chris
Gray's seminal Anthology was not street, the seminaries and military bar­
published until 1974 the significance racks, pure young people who refuse
of these three pamphlets in arousing to knuckle down. lt is to them and
interest in the Situationist project at them alone that I address myself, it is
the time cannot be emphasised for them alone that I am trying to
enough. defend Surrealism against the accusa­
Whether by intelligent analysis or tion that it is, after all, no more than an
chance, the pamphlets also allow the intellectual pastime like any other".
reader to acquire some knowledge of In a similar spirit we offer this
the two principal theoreticians of the anthology to young people of all ages
Paris�based Situationists, Debord and who refuse to knuckle down.
Vaneigem, before moving on to their
main texts; whilst The Poverty of park Star, London 2001
Student Life, with its provocative and
at times humourous writing, serves as
a reminder that the Situationist
International was a group project.
For a substantial period of time
these three pamphlets constituted the
main knowledge of the Situationist
project. With the translation of more .
and more texts it has become easier to
analyse the influences and events that
shaped the Situationist International,
its transition from Lettrism, the influ­
ence of Dada and Surrealism etc, and
even to contemplate Situationist
Exhibitions. However we have no
doubt that these three pamphlets have
both an historical and contemporary
significance.
In the Second Manifesto Of
Surrealism (1930), Andre Breton
·

wrote:
"There are still today, in the
lycees,even in the workshops, in the
On the poverty of student life
Considered in its. economic, political,. psychological, sexual. and particularly intellectual aspects.
and a modest proposal for its remedy

First published in 1966 at the University of the very future ofthe students of the University
Strasbourg by students of the university and of Strasbourg."
members of the lntemationale Situationniste.
A few students elected to the student union To make • shame more shameful by
printed 1o,ooo copies with university funds. The · giving it publicity
copies were distributed at the official ceremony
marking the beginning of the academic year. The We might very well say, and no one would dis­
student union was promptly closed by court agree with us, that the student is the most u ni­
order. in his summation the judge concluded: versally despised creature in France, apart from
"The accused have never denied the charge the priest and the policeman. Naturally he is
of misusing the funds of the student union, usually attacked from the wrong point of view,
Indeed, they openly admit to having made the with specious reasons derived from the ruling
union pay some £1500 for the printing and dis' ideology. He may be worth the contempt of a
tribution of 1o,ooo pamphlets, not to mention true revolutionary, yet a revolutionary critique of
the cost of other literature inspired by the student situation is currently taboo on the
"lnternationale Situationniste". These publica­ official Left. The licensed and impotent oppo·
tions express ideas and aspirations which, to nents of capitalism repress the obvious - that
put it mildly, have nothing to do with the aims of what is wrong with the students is also what i s
a student union. One has only to read what the wrong with them. They convert their uncon­
accused have written, for it is obvious that these scious contempt into a blind enthusiasm. The
five students, scarcely more than adolescents, radical intelligentsia (from Les Temps Moderries
lacking all experience of real life, their minds to L' Express) prostrates itself before the so­
confused by ill-digested philosophical, social, called rise of the student and the declining
political and economic theories, and perplexed bureaucracies of the Left (from the C6f!1munist
by the drab monotony of their everyday life, party to the Stalinist National Union of
make the empty, arrogant, and pathetic claim to Students) bids noisily for his moral and !material
pass definitive judgments, sinking to outright support.
abuse, on their fellow-students, their teachers, There are reasons for this sudd�n enthusi­
God, religion, the clergy, the governments and asm, but they are all provided by the present
political systems of the whole world.Rejectlng form of capitalism, in its overdeveloped state.
all morality and restraint, these cynics do not We shall use this pamphlet for denunclation. We
hesitate to commend theft, the destruction of shall expose these reasons one by one, on the
scholarship,·the abolition of work, total subver­ principle that the end of alienation is only
sion, and a world-wide proletarian revolution readied by the straight and narrow path of alien­
with "unlicensed pleasure" as its only goat. ation itself.
In view of their basically anarchist character, Up to now, studies of student life · have .
these theories and propaganda are eminently ignored the essential issue. The surveys and ..
noxious; Their wide diffusion in both student cir­ analyses have all been . psychologicaL or socio­
cles and among the general public, by the local, logical or. economic: in other words, academic
national and foreign press,. are a threat to the exercises, cqntent with the false categories of
morality, the studies, the reputation .and thus one spedalisation or another. None of them can
achieve what is most needed - a view of modern treated as a baby by the institutions which pro­
society as a whole. Fourier denounced their vide his education. (If ever they stop screwing
error long ago as the attempt to apply scientific his arse off, it's only to come round and kick him
laws to the basic assumptions of the science in the balls.)
("porter regulierement sur les questions primor­ "There is no student problem." Student pas­
diales"). Everything is said about our society sivity is only the most obvious symptom of a
except what it is, and the nature of its two basic general state of affairs, for each sector of social
principles - the commodity and the spectacle. life has been subdued by a similar imperialism,
The fetishism of facts masks the essential cate­ Our social thinkers have a bad conscience about
gory, and the details consign the totality to the student problem, but only because the real
oblivion. problem is the poverty and servitude of all. But
Modern capitalism and its spectacle allot we have different reasons to despise the student
everyone a specific role in a general passivity. and all his works. What is unforgivable is not so
The student is no exception to the rule. He has a much his actual misery but his complaicence in
provisional part to play, a rehearsal for his final the face of the misery of others. For him there is
role as an element in market society as conser­ only one real alienation: his own. H e is a full­
vative as the rest. Being a student is a form of time and happy consumer of that commodity,
initiation. An initiation which echoes the rites of hoping to arouse at least our pity, since he can­
more primitive societies with bizarre precision. lt not claim our interest. By the logic of modern
goes on outside of history, cut off from social capitalism, most students can only become
reality. The student leads a double life, poised mere petits cadres (with the same function in
between his present status and his future role. neo-capitatism as the skilled worker had in the
The two are absolutely separate, and the jour­ nineteenth-century economy). The student real­
ney from one to the other is a mechanical event ty knows how miserable will be that golden
"in the future." Meanwhile, he basks in a schiz­ future which is supposed to make up for the
ophrenic consciousness, withdrawing into his shameful poverty of the present. In the face of
i n itiation group to hide from that future. that knowledge, he prefers to dote o n the pres­
Protected from history, the present is a mystic ent and invent an imaginary prestige for himself.
trance. After all, there will be no magical compensation
At least in consciousness, the student can for present drabness: tomorrow will be like yes­
exist apart from the official truths of "economic terday, lighting these fools the way to dusty
life." But for very simple reasons: looked at eco­ death. Not unnaturally he takes refuge in an
nomically, student life is a hard one. In our soci­ u n real present.
ety of abundance, he is still a pauper. So% of The student is a stoic slave: the more chains
students come from income groups well above authority heaps upon him, the freer he is in
the working class, yet 90% have less money phantasy. He shares with his new family, the
than the meanest labourer. Student poverty is University, a belief in a curious kind of autono­
an anachronism, a throw-back from an earlier my. Real independence, apparently, lies in a
age of capitalism; it does not share in the new d i rect subservience to the two most powerful
poverties of the spectacular societies; it has yet systems of social control: the family and the
to attain the new poverty of the new proletariat. State. He is their well-behaved and grateful
Nowadays the teenager shuffles off the moral child, and like the .submissive child he is overea­
prejudices and authority of the family to become ger to please. He. celebrates all the values and
part of the market even before he is adolescent: mystifications of the system, devouring them
at fifteen he has all the delights of being direct­ with all the anxiety of the infant at the breast.
ly exploited. I n contrast the student covets his Once, the old illusions had to be i m posed on an
protracted infancy as an irresponsible and docile aristocracy of tabour; the petits cadres-to-be
paradise. Adolescence and its crises may bring ingest them willingly under the guise of culture.
occasional brushes with his family, but in There are various forms of compensation for
essence he is not troublesome: he agrees to be poverty. The total poverty of ancient societies
produced the grandiose compensation . of reli­ social base disappeared, the vision became
gion. The student's poverty by contrast is a mar­ banality. In the age o f free-trade capitalism,
ginal phenomenon, and he casts around for when the "liberal" state left it its marginal free­
· compensations among the most down-at-heel doms, the university could still think of itself as
images of the ruling class. He is a · bore who an independent power. Of cou rse. it was il pure
repairs the old jokes of an alienated culture. and narrow product of that society's needs par­
Even as an ideologist, he is always out of date. ticularly the need to give the privileged minority
One and all, his latest enthusiasms were ridicu­ an adequate general culture before they
lous thirty years ago. rejoined the ruling class (not that going up to
Once upon a time the unive rsities were university was straying very far from class con­
respected; the student persists in the belief that fines). But the bitterness of the nostalgic don
he is lucky to be there. But he arrived too late. (No one dares any longer to speak in the name
The bygone excellence of bourgeois culture (By of nineteenth century liberalism; so they remi­
this we mean the culture of a Hegel or of the nisce about the "free" and "popular" universi­
encyclopedistes, rathert han the Sorbonne and ties of the middle ages - that democracy of "lib­
the Ecole Normale Superieure) has vanis hed. A eral") is understandable: better, after all, to be
mechanically produced specialist is now the the bloodhound of the haute bourgeoisie than
goal of the "educational system." A modern eco­ sheepdog to the world's white-collars, Better to
nomic system demands mass production of stu­ stand guard on p rivilege than harry the flock into
dents who are not educated and have been ren­ their allotted factories and bureaux, according
dered incapable of thinking. Hence the decline to the whims of the "planned economy". The
of the universities and the automatic n ullity of university is becoming, fairly smooth ly, the hon­
the student once he enters its portals. The uni­ est broker Of technocracy and its spectacle. In
versity has become a society for the propagation the process, the purists of the academic Right
of ignorance; "high culture" has taken on the become a pitiful sideshow, purveying their "uni­
rhythm of the production line; without excep­ versal" cultural goods to a bewildered audience
tion, university teachers are cretins, men who of specialists.
would get the bird from any audience of school­ More serious, and thus more dangerous, are
boys. But all this hardly matters: the important the mod ernists of the Left and the Students'
thing . i s to go on listening respectfully. In time, if Union, with their talk of a "reform of University
critical thinking is repressed with enough con­ structure" and a "reinsertion of the University
scientiousness, the student will come to partake into social and economic life", i.e. its adaptation
of the wafer of knowledge, the professor will tell to the needs of modern capitalism. The one-time
him the final truths of the world. Till then - a suppliers of general culture to the ruling class­
menopause of the spirit. As a matter of course es, though still guarding their old prestige, must
the future revolutionary society will condemn be converted into the forcing-house of a new
the doings of lecture theatre and faculty as mere labour aristocracy. Far from contesting the his­
noise - socially undesirable. The student is torical process which subordinates one of the
already a very bad joke. last relatively autonomous social groups to the
The student is blind to the obvious that • demands of the market,. the. progressives com­
even his closed world is changing. The "crisis of plain o f delays and inefficiency in its completion.
the u niversity" - that detail of a more general They are the standard-bearers of the cybernetic
crisis of modern capitalism - is the latest fodder u niversity o f the future (which has already
for the deaf'mute dialogue o f the specialists. reared its ugly head in some unlikely quarters).
This "crisis" is simple to understand: the diffi­ And they are the enemy: the fight against the
culties of a specialised sector which is adjusting market, which is starting again in earnest,
·(too late) to a general change in the relations of means the fight against its latest lackeys.
production. As for the student, this struggle is fought
There was once a vision - if an ideological out entirely over his head, somewhere in the
one- of a liberal bourgeois unive rsity. But as its heavenly realm of his masters. The whole of his
life is beyond his control, and for all he sees of why men fell down, the students flock to the
the world he might as well be on another planet. psycho-police stations with their "problems".
His acute economic poverty condemns him to a The real poverty of his everyday life finds its
paltry form of survival. But, being a complacent immediate, p h antastic com pensation in the
creature, he parades his very ordinary indigence opium of cultural commodities. In the cultural
as if it were an original lifestyle: self-indulgent­ spectacle he is allotted his habitual role of the
ly, he affects to be a Bohemian. The Bohemian dutiful disciple. Although he i s dose to the pro­
solution is hardly viable at the best of times, and duction-point, access to t h e Sanctuary of
the notion that it could be achieved without a Thought is forbidden, and he is obliged to dis­
complete and final break with the university cover "modern culture" as an admiring specta­
m i lieu is q u ite l u dicrous. But the student tor. Art is dead, but the student is necrophiliac.
Bohemian (and every student likes to pretend He peeks at the corpse in cine-dubs and the­
that he is a Bohemian at heart) clings to his false atres, buys its fish-fingers from the cultural
and degraded version of individual revolt. He i s supermarket. Consuming unreservedly, he is in
s o "eccentric" that h e continues - thirty years his element: he is the living proof of all the plat­
after Reich's excellent lessons - to entertain the itudes of American market research: a conspicu­
most traditional forms of erotic behaviour, ous consumer, complete with induced irrational
reproducing at this level the general relations of preference for Brand X (Camus, for example),
class soCiety. Where sex is concerned, we have and irrational prejudice against BrandY (Sartre,
learnt better tricks from elderly provincial ladies. perhaps).
His rent-a-crowd militancy for the latest good I mpervious to real passions, he seeks titilla­
cause is an aspect of his real i mpotence. tion in the battles between his anaemic gods,
The student's old-fashioned poverty, howev­ the stars of a vacuous heaven: Althusser -
er, does put him at a potential advantage - if only Garaudy·Barthes • Picard - Lefebvre Levi
h e could see it. He does have marginal free­ Strauss Halliday·deChardin Brassens ... and
• •

dams, a small area of liberty which as yet between their rival theologies, designed like all
escapes the totalitarian control of the spectacle. theologies to mask the real problems by creat­
His flexible working-hours permit him adventure ing false ones: h umanism existentialism sci· ·

and experiment. But he is a sucker for punish­ entism - structuralism cyberneticism new crit­
• •

ment and freedom scares him to death: he feels icism dialectics-of-naturism meta­
safer in the straight-jacketed space-time of lee· philosophism ...
ture hall and weekly essay . He is q uite happy He thinks h e is avant-garde if he has seen
with this open prison organised for his "bene­ the latest happening. He discovers "modernity"
fit", and, though not constrained, as are most as fast as the market can produce its ersatz ver­
people, to separate work and leisure, he does so sion of long outmoded (though once important)
o f his own accord - hypocritically proclaiming all ideas; for him, every rehash is a cultural revolu·
the while his contempt for assiduity and grey tion. His principal concern is status, and he
men. He embraces every available contradiction eagerly snaps up all the paperback editions of
and then mutters darkly about the "difficulties important and "difficult" texts with whiCh mass
of communication" from the uterine warmth of culture has filled the bookstores. (If he had an
his religious, artistic or political clique. atom of self-respect or lucidity, he would knock
Driven by his freely-chosen depression, he them off. But no: conspicuous consumers
submits himself to the subsidiary police force of always pay!). Unfortunately, he cannot read, so
psychiatrists set up by the avant-garde of he devours them with his gaze, and enjoys them
repression. The university mental health clinks vicariously through the gaze of his friends. He is
are run by the student mutual organisation, an other-directed voyeur.
which sees this institution as a grand victory for His favourite reading matter is the kitsch
student unionism and social progress. Like the press, whose task it is to orchestrate the con­
Aztecs who ran to greet Cortes's sharpshooters, sumption of cultural nothing-boxes. Docile as
and then wondered what made the thunder and ever, the student accepts its commercial ukases
and makes them the only measuring-rod of his society well enough to administer it.
tastes. Typically, he is a compu lsive reader . of But the student, sad to say, is not deterred
weeklies like Le Nouvel Observateur and by the odd anachronism. He feels obliged to
L' Express (whose nearest· English equivalents have general ideas on everything, to unearth a
are the posh Sundays and New Society). He gen­ coherent world-view capable of lending mean­
erally feels that Le Monde - whose style he finds ing to his need for activism and asexual promis­
somewhat difficult - is a truly obj ective newspa­ cuity. As a result, he falls prey to the last dod­
per. And it is with such guides that he hopes to dering missionary efforts of the churches. He
gain an understa nding of the mode.rn world and rushes with atavistic ardor to adore the pu tres­
become a political initiate! cent carcass of God, and cherishes all the stink­
[n France more than anywhere else, the stu­ ing detritus of prehistoric religions in the tender
dent is passively content to be politicised. In this belief that they enrich him and his time. Along
sphere too,he readily accepts the same alienat­ with their sexual rivals, those elderly provincial
ed, spectacular participation. Seizing upon all ladies, the students form the social category
the tattered remnants of a Left which was anni­ with the highest percentage of admitted ad her·
hilated more than forty years ago by "socialist" ents to these archaic cults. Everywhere else, the
reform ism and Stalinist counter-revolution, he is p riests have been either beaten off or devoured,
once more guilty of an amazing ignorance. The but university clerics shamelessly continue to
Right is well aware of the defeat of the workers' bugger thousands of students in their spiritual
movement, and so are the workers themselves, shithouses.
though more confusedly. But the students con­ We must add in all fairness that there do
tinue blithely to organise demonstrations which exist students of a tolerable intellectual level,
mobilise students and students only. This is who without difficu lty dominate the controls
political false consciousness in its virgin state, a designed to check the mediocre capacity
fact which naturally makes the universities a demanded from the others. They do so for the
happy hunting ground for the manipulators of simple reason that they have understood the
the declining bu rea ucratic organisations. For system, and so despise it and know themselves
them, it is child's play to program the student's to be its ene mies; They are in the system for
political options. Occasionally there are devia­ what they can get out of it - particularly grants.
tionary tendencies and cries of "Independence!" Exploiting the con tradiction which, for the
but after a period of token resistance the dissi­ moment at least, ensures the maintenance of a
dents are reincorporated into a status quo which small sector- "research"- still governed by a lib­
they have never really radically opposed. The eral-academic rather than a technocratic ration­
"Jeunesses Commu nistes Revolutionnaires,"
· ality, they calmly carry the germs of sedition to
whose title is a case of ideo logical falsification the highest level: their open contempt for the
gone mad (they are neither young, nor commu­ organisation is the counterpart .of a lucidity
nist, nor revolutionary), have with much brio and which enables them to outdo the system's lack­
accompanying publicity defied the iron hand o f eys, intellectually and otherwise. Such students
t h e Party b u t o n ly to rally cheerily to the pon·
.•• cannot fail to become theorists of the coming
tifical battle-cry, "Peace in Vietnam!" revolutionary movement. For the moment, they
The student prides himself on his opposi­ make no secret of the fact that what they take s o
tion to the "archaic" Gaullist regime. But he jus­ easily from t h e system shaH be used for its over­
tifies his criticism by appealing - without realis­ throw.
ing it · to older and far worse crimes. His radical· The student, if he rebels at all, must first
ism prolongs the life of the different currents of rebel against his studies, though the necessity
edulcorated Stalinism: Togliatti's, Garaudy's, of this initial move is felt less spontaneously by ·
Krush chev's, Mao's, etc His youth is synony­
•. him than by the worker, who intuitively identifies
mous with appaling naivete; and his attitudes his work with his total condition. At the same
are in reality far more archaic than the regime's - time, since the student is a product of modern
the Ga uUists do after all understand modern society just like Godard or Coca-Cola, his
extrem e alienation can only be fought through working of the system. lt reassures because it
the struggle against this whole society. lt is clear remains a m a rginal .phenomenon, in the
that the university can in no circumstances apartheid of the temporary problems of a
become the. battlefield; t h e . student, insofar as healthy pluralism (compare and contrast the
he defines himself as such, manufactures a "woman q uestion" and the "problem of racial·
pseudo-value which must become an obstacle to ism"). In reality, if there is a problem of youth in
any dearconsciousness of the reality of his dis­ modern capitalism it is part ofthe total crisis of
possession. The best criticism of student life is that society. lt is just that youth feels the crisis
the behaviour of the rest .of youth, who have most acutely.
already started to revolt. Their rebellion has . Youth and its mock freedoms are the purest
become one of the signs of a fresh struggle products of modern society. Their modernity
against modern society. consists in the choice they are offered and are
already making: total integration to neo-capital­
lt is not enough for thought to seek ism, or the most radical refusal. What is surpris­
Its realisation in practice: practice ing is not that youth is in revolt but that its eld·
must seek its theory ers are so soporific. But the reason is history, not
biology - the previous generation lived through
After years of slumber and permanent counter· the defeats and were sold the lies of the long,
revolution, there are signs of a new period of shameful disintegration of the revolutionary
struggle, with youth as the new carriers of revo­ movement.
lutionary i nfection. But the society of the spec­ In itselfYouth is a publicity myth, and as
tacle paints its own picture of itself and its ene· part of the new "social . dynamism" it is the
mies, imposes its own ideological categories on potential ally of the capitalist mode of produc·
the world and its history. Fear is the very last tion. The illusory primacy of youth began with
response. For everything that happens is reas· the economic recovery after the second world
suringly part of the natural order of things. Real war. Capital was able to strike a new bargain
historical changes, which show that this society with labour: in return for the mass production of
can be superseded, are reduced to the status of a new class of manipulable consumers, the
novelties, processed for mere consumption. The worker was offered a role which gave him full
revolt of youth against an i m posed and "given" membership of'the spectacular society. This at
way of life is the first sign of a total subversion. least was the ideal soc ial model, though as
lt is the prelude to a period of revolt the revolt
• usual it bore little · relation to socio-economic
ofthose who can no longer live in our society. reality (which lagged behind the c;onsumer ide­
Faced with a danger, ideology and · its daily ology). The revolt of youth was the first burst. of
machinery perform the usual inversion of reality. anger at the persistent realities of the new world
An historical process becomes a pseudo-catego­ • the boredom of everyday existence, t h e dead
ry of some socio'natural science: the Idea of life which is still the essential product of modern
Youth. capitalism, in spite of all its modernisations. A
Youth is in revolt, but this is only the eternal small section of youth is able to refuse that soci­
revolt of youth; every generation espouses ety and its produ cts, but without any idea that
"good causes," only to forget them when "the this society can be superseded. They o pt for a
young man begins the serious business of pro­ nihilist present.Yet the destruction of capitalism
duction and ·is · given concrete and real social is once again a real issue, an event in history, a
aims," After the social scientists come the jour· process which has already begun. Dissident
natists with their verbal inflation. The revolt is youth must achieve the coherence of a critical
contained .by overexposure: we are given it to theory, a n d the practical organisation of· that .
contemplate so that we shall forget to partici­ coherence.
pate. In the spectacle, a revolution becomes a At the most primitive level, the "delin·
social aberration in other words a social safety
• quents" (blousons noirs) of the world use vio·
valve. which has its part to play in the smooth
• lence to express their rejection of society and its
sterile options, But their refusal is an abstract the pre-ideological mass found itself under the
one: it gives them no chance of actually escap­ Bolshevik "guidance" of the artistic ruling class,
ing the contradictions of the system. They are its who justified and maintained their power by an
products - negative, spontaneous, but none the ideology of provo-democracy. At the moment
less exploitable, All the experiments of the new when the sheer violence of the delinquent had
social order produce them: they are the first become an idea - an attempt to destroy art and
side-effects of the new urban ism; of the disinte­ go beyond it - the violence was channelled into
gration of all values; of the extension of an the crassest neo-artistic reformism. The Provos
increasingly boring consumer leisure; of the are an aspect of the last reformism produced by
growing control of every aspect of everyday life modern capitalism: the reformism of everyday
by the psycho-humanist police force; and of the life. Like Bernstein, with his vision of socialism
economic survival of a family unit which has lost built by tinkering with capitalism, the Provo hier­
all significance. archy think they can change everyday life by a
The "young thug" despises work but few well-chosen improvements. What they fail to
accepts the goods. He wants what the spectacle realise is that the banality of everyday life is not
offers him - but now, with no down payment. incidental, but the central mechanism and prod­
This is the essential contradiction of the delin­ uct of modern capitalism. To destroy it, nothing
quent's existence. He may try for a real freedom less is needed than all-out revolution. The
in the use of his time, in an individual assertive­ Provos choose the fragmentary and end by
ness, even in the construction of a kind of com­ accepting the totality.
munity. But the contradiction remains, and kills. To give themselves a base, the leaders have
(On the fringe of society, where poverty reigns, concocted the paltry ideology of the provotariat
the gang develops its own hierarchy, which can (a politico-artistic salad knocked up from the
o n ly fulfil itself in a war with other gangs, isolat­ leftovers of a feast they had never known). The
ing each group and each individual within the new provotariat is supposed to oppose the pas­
group.) In the end the contradiction proves sive and "bourgeois" proletariat, still wor­
unbearable. Either the lure of the product world shipped in obscure Leftist shrines. Because they
proves too strong, and the hooligan decides to despair of the fight for a total change in society,
do his honest day's work: to this end a whole they despair of the only forces which can bring
sector of production is devoted specifically to about that change. The proletariat is the motor
his recuperation. Clothes, records, guitars, of capitalist society, and thus its mortal enemy:
scooters, transistors, purple hearts beckon him everything is designed for its suppression (par­
to the land of the cons. u mer. Or else he is forced ties; trade union bureaucracies; the police; the
to attack the laws of the market itself- either in colonisation of all aspects of everyday life)
the primary sense, by stealing, or by a move because it is the only really menacing force. The
towards a conscious revolutionary critique of , Provos hardly try to understand any of this; and
commodity society. For the delinquent only two without a critique of the system of production,
futures are possible: revolutionary conscious­ they remain its servants. In the end an anti­
ness, or blind obedience on the shop floor. union workers demonstration sparked off the
The Provos are the first organisation of real conflict. The Provo base went back to direct
delinquency - they have given the delinquent violence, leaving their bewildered leaders to
experience its first political form. They are an denounce "excesses" and appeal to pacifist sen­
alliance of two distinct elements: a handful of timents. The Provos, who had talked of provok­
careerists from the degenerate world of 'art,' ing authority to reveal its repressive character,
and a mass of beatniks looking for a new activi­ finished by complaining that they had been pro­
ty. The artists contributed the idea of the game, voked by the police. So much for their pallid
though still dressed up in various threadbare anarchism.
ideological garments. The delinquents had noth­ lt is true that the Provo base became revolu­
ing to offer but the violence of their rebellion. tionary in practice. But to invent a revolutionary
. From the start the two tendencies hardly mixed: consciousness their first task is to destroy their
leaders, to rally the objective revolutionary tions, with their blend of libertarian, political
forces of the proletariat, and to drop the and religious tendencies, are always liable to
Constants and deVries of this world {one the the obsession with "group dynamics" which
favourite artist of the Dutch royal family, the leads to the closed world of the sect. The mass
other a failed M.P. and admirer .o f the English consumption of d rugs is the expression of a real
police). There is a modern revolution, and one of poverty and a protest against it; but it remains a
its bases could be the Provos · but only without false search for "freedom" within a world dedi­
their leaders and ideology. If they want to cated to repression, a religious critique of a
change the world, they must get rid of these who world that has no need for religion, least of all a
are content to paint it white. new one.
I d le reade'r, your cry of "What about The beatniks - that right wing of the youth
Berkeley?" escapes u s not. True, American soci­ revolt - are the main purveyors of an ideological
ety needs its students; and by revolting against 'refusal' combined with an acceptance of the
their studies they have automatically called that most fantastic superstitions {Zen, spiritualism,
society in q uestion. From the start ,they have 'New Church' mysticism, and the stale porridge
seen their revolt against the university hierarchy of Ghandi·ism and humanism). Worse still, in
as a revolt against the. whole hierarchical sys­ their search for a revolutionary program the
tem, the d ictatorship of the economy and the I American students fall into the same bad faith
State. Their refusal to become an integrated part as the Provos, and proclaim themselves 'the
of the commodity economy, to put theirspe­ most exploited class in our society! They must
cialised studies to their obvious and inevitable understand one thing: there are no 'special' stu­
use, is a revolutionary gesture. it puts in doubt dent i nterests in revolution. Revolution will be
that whole system of production which alienates made by all. the victims of encroaching repres­
activity and its products from their creators. For sion and the tyranny of the market.
all its confusion and hesitancy, the American And for the East, bureaucratic totalitarian­
student movement has discovered one truth of ism is beginning to produce its own forces of
the new refusal: that a coherent revolutionary negation. Nowhere is the revolt of youth more
alternative can and must be found within the violent and more savagely repressed - the rising
"affluent society." The movement is still fixated tide of press denunciation and the new police
on two relatively accidental aspects of the measures against "hooliga n ism" are proof
American crisis - the Negroes and Vietnam - and enough. A section of youth, so the right-minded
the mini-groups of the New Le.ft suffer from the 'socialist' functionaries tell us, have n o respect
fact. for moral and family order {which still flourishes
There is an authentic whiff of democracy in there in its most detestable bourgeois forms).
their chaotic organisation, but what they lack is They prefer "debauchery," despise work and
a genuine subversive content. Without it they even disobey the party police. The USSR has set
continually fall into dangerous contradictions. up a special ministry to fight the new delinquen-
They may be hostile to the traditional politics of cy.
the old parties; but the hostility is futile, and will Alongside this diffuse revolt a more specific
be recuperated, so long as it is based on igno­ opposition is emerging. Groups and clandestine
rance of the political system and naive illusions reviews rise and fall with the barometer of police
about the world situation. Abstract opposition to repression. So far the most important has been
their own society produces facile sympathy with the publication of the "open letter to the Polish
its apparent enemies - the so-called Socialist Workers Party" by the young Poles Kuron and
bureaucracies of China and Cuba. A group like Modzelewski, which affirmed the ·necessity of
Resurgence Youth Movement.can· in the same "abolishing the present system of p roduction
breath condemn the State and praise the and social relations" and that to do this "revolu­
"Cultural Revolution" • that pse udo-revolt tion is unavoidable." The Eastern intellectuals
directed by the most elephantine bureaucracy of have one great task to make conscious the

modern times. At the same time, these organisa- concrete critical action of the workers of East
Berlin, Warsaw and Budapest: the proletarian Communist Revolutionary. League. The move­
critique of the dictatorship of the bureaucracy. I n ment is already setting and solving the new
the East the problem i s not to define the aims of problems of revolutionary organisation. Without
revolution, but to learn how to fight for them. I n illusions, it fights both western capitalism and
the West struggle m a y be easy, b u t t h e goals are the b u reaucracies of the so-called socialist
left obscure or ideological; in the Eastern states. Without hierarchies, it groups together
bureaucracies there are no illusions about what several thousand students and w orkers on a
is being fought for: hence the bitterness of the democratic basis, and aims at the participation
struggle. What is difficult is to devise the forms of every member in all the activities of the organ·
revolution m ust take in the immediate future. isation. ,
In Britain, the revolt of youth found its first They are the first to carry the struggle on to
expression in the peace movement. lt was never the streets, holding fast to a real revolutionary
a whole-hearted struggle, with the misty non­ program, and with a mass participation.
violence of the Committee of1oo as its most dar­ Thousands of workers and students have waged
ing program, At its strongest the Committee a violent struggle with the Japanese police. In
could call 30o,ooo demonstrators on to the many ways the C.R.L. lacks a complete and con­
streets, lt had its finest hour in Spring 1963 with crete theory of the two systems it fights with
the. "Spies for Peace" scandal. But it had a lready such ferocity. lt has not yet defined the precise
entered on a definitive decline: for want of a the· nature of bureaucratic exploitation, and it has
ory the unilateralists fell among the traditional hardly formulated the character of modern capi­
left or were recuperated by the Pacifist con­ talism, the critique of everyday life and the cri­
science. tique of the spectacle. The Communist
What is left is the enduring (quintessential­ Revolutionary league is still fundamentally an
ly English) archaisms in. the control of everyday avant-garde political organisation, the heir of
life, and the accelerating decomposition of the the best features of the classic proletarian
old secular values. These could still produce a movement. But it is at present the most impor­
total critique of the new life; but the revolt of tant group in the world and should henceforth

youth needs allies. The B ritish working class be one of the poles of discussion and a rallying
remains one of the most militant in the world. lts point for the new proletarian critique.
struggles - the shop stewards movement and
the growing tempo and bitterness of wildcat To create at long last a situation
strikes - will be a permanent sore on an equally which goes beyond the point of no
permanent capitalism until it regains its revolu­ return
tionary perspective, and seeks common cause
with the new opposition. The debacle of "To be avant-garde means to keep abreast of
Labourism makes that alliance all the more pos­ reality" (lnternationa/e Situationniste 8). A radi·
Oam.arades, des Cl'�:�A! vous sible and all the more necessary. If it came cal critique of the modern world must have the
aures �ris l•6oonomie about, the explosion could destroy the old sod· totality as its object and objective. Its search­
entre vos mains, le ety � the Amsterdam riots would be child's play light must reveal the world's real past, its pres·
pouvoir des in comparison. Without it, both sides of the rev­ ent existence and the prospects for its transfor­
CONSEILS DES 'm.A.VAILLEIJBS olution can only be stillborn: practical needs will mation as an indivisible whole; If we are to reach
sera le seul find no genuine revolutionary form, and rebel­ the whole truth about the modern world and a

pouvoir lious discharge will ignore the only forces that fortori if we are to formulate the project of its
danl!: le drive and can therefore destroy modern capital­ total subversion we must be able to expose its

pa,-s 11t ism. Japan is the only industrialised country hidden history; in concrete terms this means
where this fusion of student youth and working subjecting the history of the international revo­
class militants has already taken place. lutionary movement, as set in motion over a cen­
Zengakuren, the organisation of revolution­ tury ago by the western proletariat, to a demys­
ary students, and the league of Young Marxist tified and critical scrutiny.
Workers joined to form the backbone of the "This movement against the total organisa-
tion of the old world came to a stop long ago" Russian pro letariat found its echo in the subjec­
(lnternationale Situationniste 1). lt failed. Its last tion of the great mass of workers in other coun­
historical appearance was in the Spanish social tries to castes of trade union and political func­
revolution, crushed in the. Barcelona 'May Days' tionaries, with their own private interests i n
of 1937. Yet its so-called "victories" and repression. While t h e Stalinist monster haunted
"defeats," if judged i n the light of their historical the working-class consciousness, old-fashioned
consequences, tend to confirm Uebl<necht's capitalism was becoming bureaucratised and
remark, the day before his assassination, that overdeveloped, resolving its famous internal
"some defeats are really victories, while some contradictions and proudly claiming this victory
victories are more shameful than any defeat." to be decisive, Today, though the unity is
Thus the first great 'failure' of worl<ers' power, obscured by apparent variations and opposi­
the Paris Commune, is in fact its first great suc­ tions, a single social form is coming to dominate
cess, whereby the primitive p roletariat pro­ the world - this modern world which it proposes
claimed its historical capacity to organise all to govern with the p.ri nciples of a world long
aspects of social life freely. And the Bolshevik dead and gone. The tradition of the dead gener­
revolution, hailed as the proletariat's first great ations still weighs like a nightmare on the minds
triumph, turns out in the last analysis to be its of the living.
most disastrous defeat. Opposition to the world offered from within
The installation of the Bolshevik order coin­ - and in its own terms - by supposedly revolu­
cides with the crushing of the Spartakists by the tionary organisations, can only be spurious.
German "Social-Democrats." The joint victory of Such opposition, depending o n the worst mysti­
Bolshevism and reformism constitutes a un ity fications and calling on more or less reified ide­
masked by an apparent incompatibility, for the ologies, helps consolidate the social order.
Bolshevik order too, as it transpired, was to be a Trade unions and political parties created by the
variation on the old theme. The effects of the working class as tools of its emancipation are
Russian counter-revolution were, internally, the now no more than the 'checks and bal�mces' o f
institution and development of a new mode of the system. Their leaders have made these
exploitation, bureaucratic state capitalism, and organisations their p rivate property; their step­
externally, the growth of the 'Co m m u n ist' ping stone to a role within the ruling c!ass. The
International, whose spreading branches served party program or the trade union statute may
the unique purpose of defending and reproduc­ contain vestiges of revolutionary phraseology,
ing the rotten trunk. Capitalism, under its bour­ but their practice is everywhere reformist - and
geois and bureaucratic guises, won a new lease doubly so now that official capitalist ideology
of life - over the dead bodies of the sailors of mouths the same reformist slogans. Where the
Kronstadt, the U krainian peasants, and the unions have seized power - in countries more
workers of Berlin, Kiel, Turin, Shanghai, and backward than Russia in 1917 the Stalinist
-

Barcelona. model of counterrevolutionary totalitarianism


The Third International, ap parently created has been faithfully reproduced. Elsewhere, they
by the Bolsheviks to combat the degenerate have become a static complement to the self­
reformism of its predecessor, and to unite the regulation of managerial capitalism. The official
avant-garde o f the proletariat in "revolutionary organisations have become the best guarantee
commu nist parties," was too closely linked to of repression - without this 'opposition' the
the i nterests of its founders ever to serve an h u manist-democratic facade of the system
authentic socialist revolution. Despite all its would collapse and its essential violence would
polemics, the third International was a chip off be laid bare.
the old block. The Russian model was rapidly· In the struggle ,with the m ilit!lnt proletariat,
imposed on the Western workers' organisations, these organisations are the unfailing defenders
and the evolution of both was thenceforward of the bureaucratic counter-revolution, and the
one and the same thing. The totalitarian dicta­ docile creatures of its foreign policy. They are
tors h i p of the bu reaucratic class over the the bearers of the most blatant falsehood in a
world of lies, working diligently for the perenni­ the reinvention of a total critique. The Scylla and
al and universal d ictatorship of the State and the Charybdis of present revolutionary action are
Economy. As the situationists put it, "a univer­ the m u seum of revolutionary prehistory and the
sally dominant social system, tending toward modernism of the system itself.
totalitarian self-regulation, is apparently being As for the various anarchist groups, they
resisted - but only apparently - by false forms of possess nothing beyond a pathetic and ideolog­
opposition which remain trapped on the battle­ ical faith in this label. They j ustify every kind of
field ordained by the system itself. Such illusory self-contradiction in liberal terms: freedom of
resistance can only serve to reinforce what it speech, of opinion, and other such bric-a-brac.
pretends to attack. B u reaucratic pseudo-social­ Since they tolerate each other, they would toler­
ism is only the most grandiose of these guises of ate anything.
the old world of hierarchy and alienated labour." The predominant social system, which flat­
As for student unionism, it is nothing but the ters itself on its modernisation and its perma­
travesty of a travesty, the useless burlesque of a nence, must now be confronted with a worthy
trade unionism itself long totally degenerate. enemy: the equally modern negative forces
The principal platitude of all future revolu­ which it produces. let the dead bury their dead,
tionary organisation must be the theoretical and The advance of history has a practical demysti­
practical denunciation of Stalinism in all its fying effect - it helps exorcise the ghosts which
forms. In France at least, where economic back­ haunt the revolutionary consciousness, Thus the
wardness has slowed down the consciousness revolution of everyday life comes face to face
of crisis, the only possible road is over the ruins with the enormity of its task. The revolutionary
of Stalinism. lt must become the delenda est project must be re invented, as much as the life it
Carthago of the last revolution of prehistory. announces. If the project is still essentially the
Revolution must break with its past, and abolition of class society, it is.because the mate­
derive all its poetry from the future. little groups rial conditions upon which revolution was based
of 'militants' who cl a im to represent the authen­ are still with us. But revolution must be con­
tic Bolshevik heritage are voices from beyond ceived with a new coherence and a new radical­
the grave. These angels come to · avenge the ism, starting with a dear grasp of the failure of
"betrayal" of the October Revolution will always those who first began it. Otherwise its fragmen­
support the defence of the USSR - if only "in the tary realisation will bring a bout only a new divi­
last . instance." The 'under-developed' nations sion of society.
are their promised land. They can scarcely sus­ The fight between the powers-that-be and
tain their illusions outside this context, where the new proletariat can only be in terms ofthe
their objective role is to buttress theoretical totality. And for this reason the future revolu­
underdevelopment. They struggle for the dead tionary movement must be purged of any ten­
body of 'Trotsky, ' invent a thousand variations dency to reproduce within itself the alienation
on the same ideological theme, and end up with produced by the commodity system; it must be
the same brand of practical and theoretical the living critique of that system and the nega­
impotence. Forty years of counter-revolution tion of it, carrying all the elements essential for
separate these groups from the Revolution; its transcendence. As lukacs correctly showed,
since this is not 1920 they can only be wrong revo lutionary organisation is this necessary
(and they were already wrong in 1920). med iation between theory and practice,
Consider the fate . of an ultra-leftist group between men and history, between the Dams of
like Socialisme ou Barbarie, where after the workers and the proletariat constituted as a
departure of a 'traditional Marxist' faction (the class (Lukacs' mistake was to believe that the
i mpotent Pouvoir Ouvrier) a core of revolution­ Bolsheviks fulfilled this rote). If they are to be ·
ary 'modernists' under Cardan disintegrated and realised in practice, "theoretical" tendencies or
disappeared within 18 months. While the old differences must be translated into organisa­
categories are no longer revolutionary, a rejec­ tional problems, lt is by its present organisation
tion of Marxism a la Cardan is no s ubstitute for that a new revolutionary movement will stand or
fall. The final criterion of its co herence will be for the only possible form of workers' power -
the compatibility. of its actual form with its generalised and complete autogestion - can be
essential project - the international and shared with nobody. Workers' control is the abo­
absolute power of Workers' Councils a s fore­ lition of all authority: it can abide no limitation,
shadowed by the proletarian revolutions of the geographical or otherwise: any compromise
last hundred years. There can be no compromise amounts to surrender, "Worl�ers' control m ust
with the foundations of existing society - the be the means and the end of the struggle: it is at
system of commodity production; ideology in all on�;e the goat of that struggle end its adequate
its guises; the State; and the imposed division of
·
form."
labour from leisure. Atotal critique of the world is the guarantee
The rock on which the old revolutionary of the realism and reality of a revolutionary
movement foundered was the separation of the­ organisation. To tolerate the existence of an
o ry and practice. Only at the supreme moments oppressive social system in one place or anoth­
of struggle did the proletariat supersede this er, simply because it .is packaged and sold as
division and attain theirtruth. As a rule the prin· revolutionary, i s to, condone u niversal oppres­
ciple seems to have been hie Rhodus hie non sion. To accept alienation as inevitable in any
salta. Ideology, however 'revolutionary,' always one domain' of social life is to resign oneself to
serves the ruling class; false consciousness is reification in all its forms. lt is not enough to
the alarm signal revealing the presence of the favour Workers' Councils in the abstract; in con­
enemy fifth column. The lie is the essential pro­ crete terms they mean the abolition of com­
d uce of the world of alienation, and the most modities and therefore of the proletariat.
effective killer of revolutions: once an organisa­ Despite their superficial disparities, all existing
tion which claims the social truth adopts the lie societies are governed by the logic of commodi­
as a tactic, its revolutionary career is finished. ties - and the commodity is the basis of their
All the positive aspects of the Workers' dreams of self-regulation. This famous fetishism
Councils must be already there in an organisa­ is still the essential obstacle to a total emanci·
tion which aims at their realisation. All relics of pation, to the free construction of social life. In
the Leninist theory of organisation m ust be . the world of commodities, external and invisible
fought and destroyed. The spontaneous creation forces direct men's actions; autonomous action
of Soviets by the Russian workers in 1905 was in directed towards clearly perceived goals is
itself a practical critique of that baneful theory, impossible. The strength of economic taws lies
yet the Bolsheviks continued to claim that work­ in their ability to take on the appearance of nat­
ing-class spontaneity could not go beyond ural ones, but it is also their weakness, for their
"trade union consciousness" and would be effectiveness thus depends only on "the lack of
unable to grasp the "totality." This was no less consciousness of those who help create them."
than a decapitation of the proletariat so that the The market has one central pr-inciple - the ·

Party could place itself "at the head" of the loss of selfin the aimless and unconscious ere·
Revolution. If once you dispute the proletariat's ation of a world beyond the control of its cre­
capacity to emancipate itself, as Lenin did so ators. The revolutionary core of a utogestion i s
ruthlessly, then you deny its capacity to organise the attack on this principle. Autogestion i s con·
all aspects of a post-revolutionary society. In scious direction by all of their whole existence, lt
such a .context, the slogan "All Power to the is not some vision of a workers' control of the
Soviets" meant nothing more then the subjec: market, which is merely to choose one's own
tion of the Soviets to the Party, and the installa­ alienation, . to program one's own s u rvival
tion of the Party State in place of the temporary (squaring the capitalist circle). The task of the
'State' of the armed masses. · Workers' Councils will not be the autogestion of
"All Power to the Soviets" is still the slogan, the world which exists, but its continual qualita­
but this time without the Bolshevik after. tive transformation. The commodity and its laws
thoughts. The proletariat can only play the. game (that vast detour in the history of man's procjuc·
of revolution if the stakes are the whole world, tion of himself) will be superseded by a new
social form. the basis of the poetry of the future, simply
With autogestion ends one of the funda­ because they both depend on the preservation
mental splits in modern society - between a of the old order. At most they harness over­
labour which becomes increasingly reified end a development to invent new repressions. For they
"leisure" consumed in passivity. The death of know only one trick, the accumulation of Capital
the commodity naturally means the suppression and hence of the proletariat - a proletarian being
of work and its replacement by a new type of a man with no power over the use of his life, an d
free activity. Without this firm intention, socialist who knows it. The new proletariat inherits the
groups like Socialisme ou Barbarie or Pouvoir riches of the bourgeois world and this gives it its
Ouvrier fell back on a reformism of labour historical chance. Its task is to transform and
couched in demands for its 'humanisation.' But destroy these riches, to constitute them as part
it is work itself which must be called into ques­ of a human project: the total appropriation of
tion. Far from being a 'Utopia,' its suppression is nature and of human nature by man.
the first condition for a break with the market. A realised human nature can only mean the
The everyday division between 'free time' and infinite multiplication of real desires and their
'working hours,' those complementary sectors gratification. These real desires are the underlife
of alienated life, is an expression of the internal of present society, crammed by the spectacle
contradiction between the use-val u e and into the darkest corners of the revolutionary
exchange-value of the commodity. it has become unconscious, realised by the spectacle only in
the strongest point of the commodity ideology, the dreamlike delirium of its own publicity. We
the one contradiction whi c h intensifies with the must destroy the spectacle itself, the whole
rise of the consumer. To destroy it, no strategy apparatus of commodity society, if we are to
short of the abolition of work will do. lt is only realise human needs. We must abolish those
beyond the contradiction of use-value and pseudo-needs and false desires which the sys­
exchange-value that history begins, that men tem manufactures daily in order to preserve its
make their activity an object of their will and power.
their consciousness, and see themselves in the The liberation of modern history, and the
world they have created. The democracy of free use of its hoarded acquisition, can come
Workers' Councils is the resolution of all previ­ only from the forces it represses. I n the nine­
ous contradictions. lt makes "everything which teenth century the proletariat was already the
exists, apart from individuals, impossible.'' inheritor of philosophy; now it inherits modern
What is the revolutionary project? The con­ art and the first conscious critique of everyday
scious domination of history by the men who life, with the self-destruction of the working
make it. Modern history, like all past history, is class art, and philosophy shall be realised. To
the product of social praxis, the unconscious transform the world and to change the structure
result of human action. In the epoch of totalitar­ of life are one and the same thing for the prole­
ian control, capitalism has produced its own reli­ tariat - they are the passwords to its destruction
gion: the spectacle. In the spectacle, ideology as a class, its dissolution of the present reign of
becomes flesh of our flesh, is realised here on necessity, and its accession to the realm of liber­
earth. The world itself walks upside down. And ty. As its maximum program it has the radical cri­
like the 'critique of religion' in Marx's day, the tique and free reconstruction of all the values
critique of the spectacle is now the essential and patterns of behaviour imposed by an alien­
precondition of any critique. ated reality. The only poetry it can acknowledge
The problem of revolution is once again a is the creativity released in the making of histo­
concrete issue. On one side the grandiose struc­ ry, the free invention of each moment and each
tures of technology and material production; on event: Lautreamont's poesie faite par tous - the
the other a dissatisfaction which can only grow beginning of the revolutionary celebration. For
more profo u nd. The bourgeoisie end its Eastern proletarian revolt is a festival or it is nothing; in
heirs, the bureaucracy; cannot devise the means revolution the road of excess leads once and for
to use their own overdevelopment, which will be all to the palace of wisdom. A palace which
knows only one rationality: the game : The rules it was the Rector of the University who led
are simple: to live instead of devising a lingering the chorus of modernist repression: "These stu- ·

death, and to indulge untrammelled desire. dents have insulted their professors", h e
declared, "They should be dealt with by psychi­
Postscript: if you make a social revo­ atrists. I don't want to take any legal measures
lution, do it for fun against them - they should be in a lun atic asy­
lum. As to their incitement to illegal acts, the
If the above text needed confirmation, it was Minister of the Interior is looking into that". ("I
amply provided by the reactions to its publica­ stand for freedom", he added.) Later, besieged
tion. In Strasbourg itself, a very respeGtable and by the press, he reiterated that, "We need so c i­
somewhat olde-worlde city, the traditional reflex ologists and psychologists to explain such phe­
of outraged horror was still accessible - witness nomena to us". An Italian journalist replied that
judge Llabador's naive admission that our ideas some of his most brilliant social science stu­
are subversive (see our introduction). At this dents were in fact responsible for the whole
level too, the press seized on the passing affair. The situationists had an even better reply
encouragements to stealing and hedonism to such appeals to the psychiatric cops: through
(interpreted, inevitably, in a narrow erotic the agency of the student mutual organisation,
sense). The union cellars had become the most they officially closed the local student psychi­
infamous dive in Strasbourg. The offices had atric clinic. lt is to be hoped that one day such
been turned into a pigsty, with students daubing institutions will be physically destroyed rather
the walls and relieving the m selves in the corri­ than tolerated, but in the meantime this 'admin­
dors. They had come with inflatable mattresses istrative' decision has such an exemplary value
to sleep on the premises "with women and chil­ that it is worth quoting:
dren"! Minors had been perverted ... "The administrative comm ittee of the
The amoral popular press was of course at Strasbourg section of the Mutuelle Nationale
wit's end to find adequate labels: the Provos, the des Etudiants de France considering that the
Beatniks, and a "weird group of anarchists"were University Psychological Aid Bureaux (BAPU)
variously reported to have seized power in the represents the introduction of a para-police con­
city. Under the direction of situationist beatniks, trol of students, in the form of a repressive psy­
the University restaurant was in the red, and the chiatry whose clear function everywhere - some­
union's Morsiglia holiday camp had been used where between outright judicial oppression and
free, gratis and for nothing by these gentlemen. the degrading lies of the mass spectacle - is to
SoJ11e tried their hand at analysis, but only help maintain the apathy of all the exploited vic­
communicated the incomprehension of a man tims of modern capitalism; considering that this

CE D E R suddenly caught in quicksands: "The San


Francisco and London beatniks, the mods and .
type of modernist repression ... was evoked as
soon as the Committee of the General Federal
un pE U rockers of the English beaches, the hooligans Association of the Strasbourg Students made
behind the Iron Curtain, all have been largely known its adhesion to situationist theses by
superseded by this wave of new-style nihilism. publishing the pamphlet On Student Poverty...
Today it is no longer a matter of outrageous hair and that Rector Bayen was q u ite ready to
and clothes, of dancing hysterically to induce a denounce those responsible to the press as, "fit
state of ecstacy, no longer even a matter of cases for the psychiatrists"; considering that the
entering the artificial paradise of drugs. From existence of a BAPU is a scandal and a menace
now on, the international of young people who to all those st udents of the University who are

B =' J$
are 'against it' is no longer satisfied with provok­ determined to think for themselves, hereby
ing society, but intent on destroying it - on decides that from the twelfth of January 1967 the
destroying the very foundations of a society BAPU of Strasbourg shall be closed down."
CR P I T U L E R 'made for the old and rich' and acceding to a Another development which must have
been predictable to any studious reader of the
B E A UCOU P state of 'freedom without any kind of restriction
whatsoever' ". pamphlet was the attempt to explain away the
Strasbourg affair in terms of a "crisis in the uni ­ itself, and furthermore to confirm this critique
versities". Le Mon.de, the most 'serious' French through its reactions to it. lt was essentially a
paper, and a platform for techn ocratic liberal­ lesson in turning the tables on contemporary
ism, kept its head while all around were losing society. The official world was played with by a
theirs. After a long silence to get its breath back, group that understood its nature better than the
it published an article which shackled situation­ official world itself. The exploiters were elegant­
is! activity in . Alsace to the "present student ly exploited. But despite the virtuosity of the
malaise" (another symptom: fascist violence in · operation, it should be seen as no more than an
Paris U niversity), for which the only cure is to initial and, in view of what i s to come, very mod­
give "real responsibility" to the students (read: est attempt to create the praxis by which the cri­
let them direct their own alienation). This type of sis of this society as a whole can be precipitated;
reasoning refuses a priori to see the obvious as such. it raises far wider problems of revolu­
that so-called student malaise is a symptom of a tionary organisation and tactics. As the mysteri­
far more general disease. ous M.K. remarked to a jou rnalist, Strasbourg
Much was . made of the unrepresentative itself was no more than "a little experiment".
character o( the union committee, although it The concept of 'subversion' (detournement),
had been q u ite legally elected. lt i s qu ite true, originally used by the situationists in a purely
however, that our friends got power thanks to cultural context, can well be used to describe
the apathy of the vast majority. The action had the type of activity at present available to us on
no mass base whatsoever. What it achieved was many fronts. An early definition: "the redeploy­
.to expose the emptiness of student politics and ment of pre-existing artistic elements within a
indicate the m inimum requirements for any con­ new ensemble ... Its two basic principles are the
ceivable movement of revolutionary students. At loss of i mportance of each originally independ·
the general assembly of the National Union of ent element (which may even lose its first sense
French Students in January, the Strasbourg com p.letely), and the organisation of a new sig­
group proposed· a detailed motion calling for the nificant whole which confers a fresh meaning on
dissolution of the organisation, and obtained each element" (cf. /nternation.ale Situation.niste
the im plicit support of a large number of honest 3, pp 10-11). The historical sign ificance of this
but confused delegates, disgusted by the corri­ technique o r game derives from its ability to
dor politics and phoney revolutionary preten­ both devalue and 'reinvest' the heritage of a
sh:ms of the un ion. Such disgust, though per­ dead cultural past, so that "subversion negates
haps a beginning, is not enough: a revolutionary the value of previous forms o f expression but.•.

consciousness among students would be the at the same time expresses the search for a
very opposite of student consciousness. Until broader form, at a higher level for a new cre­

students realise that their interests coincide ative currency". S u bversi o n counters the
with those of all who are exploited by modern .manoeuvre of modern society, which seeks to
capitalism, there is little or nothing to be hoped recuperate and fossilise the relics of past ere·
for from the u n iversities. Meanwhile, the exem­ ativity within its spectacle. lt is clear that this
plary gestures of avant-garde m inorities are the struggle on the cultural terrain is no different in
only form of radical activity av�ilable. structure from the more general revolutionary
This holds good not only in the universities struggle; subversion can therefore also b e con·
but almost everywhere. In the absence of a ceived as the creation of a new use value for
widespread revolution ary consciousness, a political and social deb ris: a student union, for
q u asi-terroristic denunciation of the. official example, recuperated long ago and turned into a
world is the only possible planned public action paltry agency of repression, can become a bea·
on the part of a revolutionary group. The i m por­ con of sedition and revolt. Subversion is a form
tance of Strasbourg lies in this: it offers one pos­ of action transcending the separation between
sible model of sue � action. A situation was cre­ art and politics: it is the art of revolution.
ated in which society was forced to finance, pub­ Strasbourg marks the beginning of a new
licise. and broadcast a revolutionary critique of period of situationist activity. The social position
of situationist thought has been determined up lapsed, and ·left the misery and chaos of every­
to now by the following contradiction: the most day life without any coherent dissimulation at
highly developed critique of modern life has all. Politics, morality and culture are all in ruins

been made in one of the least highly developed and have now reached the point of being mar­
modern cou ntries - in a country which has not keted as such, as their own parody, the specta­
yet reached the point where the complete disin­ cle of decadence being the last desperate
tegration o f aU values becomes patently obvious attempt to stabilise the decadence of the spec­
and engenders the corresponding forces of radi­ tacle. Less and less masks the reduction of the
cal rejection. In the French context, situationist whole o f life to the production and consumption
theory has anticipated the social forces by which of commodities; less and less masks the rela­
it will be realised. tionship between the isolation, em ptiness and
In the more highly developed countries, the anguish of everyday life and this dictatorship of
opposite has happened: the forces of revolt the commodity; less and less masks the increas­
exist, but without a revolutionary perspective. ing waste of the forces of production, and the
The Committee of 100 or the Berkeley rebellion richness of lived experience now possible if
of 1964, for example, were spontaneous mass these forces were only used to fulfil human
movements which collapsed because they desires instead of to repress them.
proved incapable of grasping more than the inci­ If England is the tem porary capital of the
dental aspects of alienation (the Bomb, Free spectacular world, it is because no other cou ntry
Speech ), because they failed to understand
••• could take.its demoralisation so seriously. The
that these were merely specific manifestations island, having recovered from its fit of satirical
of everyone's excluSion from the whole of his giggles, has flipped out. The consumption of
experience, on every level of individual and hysteria has become a principle of social pro­
social life. Without a critique of this fundamental duction, but one where the real banality of the
alienation, these movements could never articu­ goods l<eeps breaking the surface, and letting
late the real dissatisfaction which created them loose a necessary violence - the violence of a
- dissatisfaction with the nature of everyday life man who has been given everything, but finds
- while as specialised 'causes' they could only that everything is phoney. Fashion accelerates
become integrated or dissolve. As a shrewd because revolution is treading on its tail.
Italian journalist wrote in L'Europeo, situationist With the end of the first phase of pop, the
theory is the 'missing link' in the development of spectacle i s beginning to pitch its convu lsive
the new forces of revolt the revolutionary per­
• tent in the th eatre and the art galle ry.
spective of total transformation still absent fro m Degenerate bourgeois entertainment is dying of
the immense discontent of contemporary youth, self-consciousness and impotent dislike of its
as from the industrial struggle which continues audience: rather than mount improvised 'politi­
i n all its violence at shop-floor level. The time cal' tear-jerkers, it should learn to destroy itself.
wilt come and our job is to hasten it when
• Now is the time for a Christopher Fry revival.
these two currents join forces. Louise Crowley Fake culture, fake politics. If we pass over
has indicated the reactionary role to which the student unionism in Anglo-America, it is out of
old workers' movement i s now doomed: the simple contempt. There is a sharpening o f the
maintenance of work made potentially un neces­ pseudo-struggle (Reagan versus the Regents,
sary by the progress of automation. Whatever LSE versus Addams), but its only i nterest is in
Solidarity may think, outright opposition to guessing which side is financed by the CIA. The
forced labour is going to become a rallying-point triumph of Wilsonism is more important, since
of revolutionary activity in the most advanced its harsh mediocrity reveals the logic of modern
areas of the world. capitalism: the stronger ·the Labour Movement,
Already, in the highly industrialised coun­ with its bone-hard hierarchies and its school­
tries, the decomposition of modern society is teacher notions of techno logy and s.o cial justice,
becoming obvious at a mass level. All previous the greater the guarantee of total repression.
ideological explanations of the world have col- The militant proletariat, whose opposition to the
capitalist system is unabated,. will remain revo­ process). The only real su bversion is in a new
lutionary chickenfeed till the myth of the Labour consciousness and a new alliance - the location
Movement has been finally l?id. of the struggie in the banalities of everyday life,
With the decline of the spectacular antago­ in the supermarket and the beatclub as well as
nisms (Tory /Labou.r, East/West, High on the shopfloor. The enemy is entrism, cultural
Culture/Low Culture), the official Left is looki ng or political. Art and the Labour Movement are
around for new mock battles to fight. lt has dead! long live the Situationist International!
always had a masochi�tic urge to embrace the
tough minded alternative. The orthodox 'commu­ Members of the lnternationa/e Situationniste
nist' party owed its popularity among the and Students of Strasbourg
lumpenintelligentsia to an assertion that it was
too practical to have thne for theory - a claim
amply confirmed by its . own blend of flaccid
intellectual nullity and permanent political
impotence. Those who counsel "working within
the. Labour Movement" play on the same secret
craving to rush around with buckets of water try­
ing to light a fire. The latest enthusiasm of the
left is Mao's "cultural revolution", that farce pro­
duced by cou rtesy of the Chinese bureaucracy
(complete with blue jokes about red panties). To
repeat an old adage, there is no revolution with­
out the arming of the working-class. A revolution
of unarmed schoolChildren, which even then has
to be neutered by the "support" of the army, is a
pseudo-revolution. serving some obscure need
for readjustment within the bureaucracy. As a
tactic for bureaucratic reorganisation it is famil­
iar - after the hysterical and ineffective purge of
the Right comes the appeal to "discipline", the
call "to purify our ranks and eliminate individu­
alism" (People's Daily, 21st Feb 1967), and final­
ly the essential purge of the Left. Far from mark­
ing an attack on 'socialist' bureaucracy, the
GPCR marks the bureau cracy's first adjustment
to the techniques of neo-capitalist repression,
its colonisation of everyday life. lt is the begin­
ning of the Great Leap Forward to Kruschov's
Russia and Kennedy's America.
The real revolution begins at home: in the
desperation of consumer production, in the con­
tinuing struggle of the unofficial working class.
As yet this unofficial revolt has an official ideol­
ogy, The notion that modern capitalism is pro­
ducing new revolutionary forces, new poverties
of a new proletariat, is still suppressed. Instead
there is an a priori fascination with the 'conver­
sion' or the 'subversion' of the old union move­
ment. The militants are recuperating themselves
(and their_ intellectual 'advisers' urge on the
-
. ' . '

Our Goals & Methods in the Strasbourg Scandal


The various expressions of stupor and indigna­ determined to destroy it. The fact that they were
tion in response to the situationist pamphlet On elected (quite legally) clearly showed the corn·
the Poverty of StudentLife, which was published plete apathy of the mass of students and the
at the ex pense of the Strasbourg chapter of the complete impotence of the Association's remain­
French NationaLStudent Union (U N EF), although ing bureaucrats. These latter no doubt figured
havingthe salutary effect of causing the theses that the "extremist" B u reau would be incapable
in the pamphleUtself to be rather widely read, of finding any adequate way to express its nega­
have fnevitably given rise to numerou s miscon­ tive intentions. Conversely, this was the fear of
ceptio ns in the reportage and commentaries on the students who came to see us; and . it was
the SI's role in the affair. In response to all kinds mainly for this reason that they had felt they
of illusions fostered by the press, by university themselves shouldn't take part in this 'Bureau':
officials and even by a certain n um ber of for only a coup of some scope, and not some
unthinking students, we are now going to speci­ merely humorous exploitation of their position,
fy exactly what the conditions of our interven­ i could save its members from the air of compro·
tion were and recount the goals we were pursu­ mise that such a pitiful role i m mediately entails.
ing with the methods that we considered consis·
·
To add to the com p lexity of the problem, while
tent with them. the students who spoke with us were familiar
Even more erroneous than the exaggera· with the SI's positions and declared themselves
tions of the press or of certain opposing lawyers · in general agreement with them, those who
concerning the amount of money the SI suppos­ were in the B u reau were for the most part igno·
edly took the opportunity of pillaging from the rant of them, and counted mainly on the stu­
treasury of t h e pitiful student union is the dents we were seeing to determine the activity
absurd notion, often expressed in the journalis­ that would best correspond to their subversive
tic accounts, according to which the SI sunk so intentions.
low as to cam paign among the Strasbourg stu­ At this stage we limited ourselves to sug·
dents in order to persuade them of the validity of gesting that all of them .write and publish a gen·
our perspectives and to get a bureau elected on era! critique of the student movement and of the
such a program. We neither did this nor attempt­ society, such a project having at least the advan­
ed the slightest infiltration of the U N E F by tage of forcing them to clarify in common what
secretly slipping SI partisans into it. One has was still u n clear to them. In addition, we
only to read us to realise that we have no inter­ stressed that their legal access to money. and
est in such goals and do not use such methods. credit was the most useful aspect of the ridicu·
The fact is that a few Strasbourg students came lous authority that had so imprudently . been
to us in the summer of 1966 and informed us allowed to them, and that a nonconformist use
that six of their friends - and not they them­ of these resources would certainly have · the
selves had just been elected as officers of the
• advantage of shocking many people and thus
Bureau of the local Students Association drawing attention to the nonconformist aspects
(AFGES), without any program whatsoever and of the content of their text
in spite of their being widely known in the U N E F These comrades agreed with our recom·
a s extremists i n com p lete disagreement with all mendations. In the development of this p roject
the variants of that decomposing body, and even they remained in contact with the SI, particular-
ly through Mustapha Khayati. The discussion Column, a document that had the merit of stat·
and the first drafts undertaken collectively by ing in no uncertain terms what his comrades
those we had met with and the members of the were planning on doing with their positions:
ArGES Bureau - who had all resolved to see the "The general crisis of the old union apparatuses
'
matter through - brought about an important and leftist bureaucracies was felt everywhere,
modification of the plan. Everyone agreed on the especially among the students, where activism,
basis of the critique to be made, and specifically for a long time. had no other outlet than the
on the main points as Khayati had outlined most sordid self sacrifice to stale ideologies and
them, but they fou n d they were incapable of the most unrealistic ambitions. The last squad of
effecting a satisfactory formulation, especially professionals who elected our heroes didn't
in the short time remaining before the beginning even have the excuse of mystification. They
of the term. This inability should not be seen as placed their hopes for a new lease of life in a
the result of any serious lad< of talent or experi· group that didn't hide its intentions of scuttling
ence, but was sim ply the consequence of the this archaic militantism once and for all."
extrem e heterogeneity of the group, both within The pamphlet was distributed point-blank
and outside the Bureau. Their initial coming to the notables at the official opening ceremony
together on the most vague bases prepared of the university; simultaneously, the AFG ES
them very poorly to collectively articulate a the· Bureau made it known that its only 'student' pro­
ory they had not really appropriated together. In gram was the immediate dissolution of that
addition, personal antagonisms and mistrust Association, and convoked a special general
arose among them as the project progressed; assembly to vote on that question. This perspec­
the common concern that the coup attain the tive immediately horrified many people. "This
most far-reaching and incisive effect was all that may be the first concrete manifestation of a
still held them together. In such circumstances, revolt aiming quite openly at the destruction of
Khayati ended up drafting the greater part of the society," wrote a local newspaper (Dernieres
text, which was periodically discussed and Nouvelles, 4 December 1966). And L' Aurore of
approved among the gro u p of students at 26 November: "The Situationist International,
Strasbourg and by the situationists in Paris · the an organisation with a handful of members in
only (few) significant changes being made by the chief capitals of Europe, anarchists playing
the latter. at revolution, talk of. 'seizing power' not in

Various preliminary actions announced the order to keep it, but to sow disorder and destroy
appearance of the pamphlet. On 26 October the even their own authority." And even in Turin the
cybernetician Moles, having finally attained a Gazetta del Popolo of the same date expressed
professorial chair in social psychology in order excessive concern: "lt must be considered, how­
to devote himself to the programming of young ever, whether repressive measures... might not
cadres, was driven from it in the opening min· risk provoking disturbances ln Paris and other
.••

utes of his opening lecture by tomatoes hurled university cities in France the Situationist
at him by a dozen students. (Moles was given International, galvanized by the triumph of its
the same treatment in March at the Musee des adherents in Strasbourg, is preparing to launch
Arts Decoratifs in Paris, where this certified a major offensive to take control of the student
robot was to lecture on the control of the mass­ organisations." At this point we had to take into
es by means of urbanism; this latter refutation consideration a new decisive factor: the situa·
was carried out by some thirty young anarchists tionists had to defend themselves from being
belonging to groups that want to bring revolu· recuperated as a 'news item' or an intellectual
tionary criticism to bear on all modern issues.) fad. The pamphlet had ended up being trans·
Shortly after this inaugural class which was at
• formed into an SI text: we had not felt that" We
least as u nprecedented in the annals of the uni­ could refuse to aid these comrades in their
versity as Moles himself - the ArGES began pub­ desire to strike a blow against the system, and it
licising the pamphlet by pasting up Andre was unfortunately not possible for this aid to
Bertrand's comic strip, The Return of the Durruti have been less than it was. This i nvolvement of
the S I gave us, for the duration of the project, a Bureau belongs to the Situationist International,
function of de facto leadership which we in no a movement which for some time has published
case wanted to prolong beyond this limited joint a journa,l of the same name, but we .declare our­
action: as anyone can well imagine, the pitiful selves in complete solidarity with its analyses
student milieu is of no .interest to us. Here as in and perspectives." On the· basis of this declared
any other situation, we simply had to act in such autonomy, the SI then .addressed a letter to
a way as to make the new social critique that is Andre Schneider, president of the AFGES, and
presently taking shape reappear by means of Vayr-Piova, vice-president, to affirm its total sol·
the practice without concessions that is its idarity with what they had done. The SI's soli·
exclusive basis. lt was the unorganised charac­ darity with them has been maintained ever
ter of the group of Strasbourg students which since, both by our refusal to dialogue with those
had created the necessity for the direct situa­ who tried to approach us while manifesting a
tionist intervention and at the same time pre­ certain envious hostility toward the Bureau
vented even the carrying out of an orderly dia­ members (some even having the stupidity to
logue, which alone could have ensured a mini· denounce their action to the SI as being "spec·
mal equality in decision-making. The debate tacular"!) and by our financial assistance and
that normally characterises a joint action u nder· public support during the subsequent repres·
taken by independent groups had scarcely any sion (see the declaration signed by 79
reality in this agglomeration of individuals who Strasbourg students at the beginning of April i n
showed more and more that they were united in solidarity with Vayr-Piova, who h a d been
their approval of the S I and separated in every expelled from the university; a penalty that was
other regard. rescinded a few months later). Schneider and
lt goes without saying that such a deficien· Vayr-Piova stood firm in the face of penalties and
cy in no way constituted for us a recommenda­ threats; this firmness, however, was not main­
tion for the ensemble of this group of students, tained to the same degree in their attitude
who seemed more or less interested in joining toward the SI.
the S I as a sort of easy way of avoiding having to The judi cial repression immediately initiat·
express themselves autonomously. Their lack of ed in Strasbourg · and which has since been fol­
homogeneity was also revealed, to a degree we lowed by a series of proceedings in the same
had not been able to foresee, on an u nexpected vein that are still going on concentrated on the

issue: at the last minute several of them hesitat, s upposed illegality of the AFGES Bureau, which
ed before the forthright distribution of the text was, upon the publication of the situationist
at the university's opening ceremony. Khayati pamphlet, suddenly considered as a mere 'de
had to show these people that one m ust not try facto Bureau' usurping the union representation
to make scandals half way, nor hope, in the of the.students. This repression was all the more
midst of such an act in which one has already necessary since the holy alliance of the bour·
implicated oneself, that one wilt become less geois, the Stalinists and the priests, formed in
implicated by toning down the repercussions of opposition to the AFGES, enjoyed an 'authority'
the coup; that on the contrary, the success of a even smaller than that of the Bureau among the
scandal is the only relative safeguard for those city's 18,ooo students.' lt began with the court
who have deliberately triggered it. Even more order of 13 December, which sequestered the
unacceptable than this last-minute hesitation on Association's offices and administration and
such a basic tactical point was the possibility prohibited the general assembly that the Bureau
that some of these individuals, who had so little had convoked for the 16th for the purpose of vot­
confidence even in each other, would at some ing on the dissolution of the AFGES. This ruling
point come to make statements in our name. (resulting from the mistaken belief that a major•
Kliayati was thus charged by the SI to have the ity of the students were likely to support the
AFG£5 Bureau declare that none of them was a Bureau's position if they had the opportunity to
situationist. This they did in their communique vote on it), by . freezing the development of
of 29 November: "None of the members of our events, meant that our comrades - whose only
perspective was to destroy their own position of that student unionism is a pure and simple farce
leadership without delay - were obliged to con­ and that it is urgent to put an end to it." This
tinue their resistance until the end of January. motion concluded by calling on "all revolution­
·
The Bureau's best practice u ntil then had been ary students of the world... to prepare along
their treatment of the mass of journalists who with all the exploited people of their countries a
were flocking to get interviews: they refused relentless struggle against all aspects of the old
most of them and insultingly boycotted those world, with the aim of contributing toward the
who represented the worst institutions (French advent of the .international power of the workers
Television, Planete); thus one segment of the councils." Only two associations, those of
press was induced to . give a more exact account Nantes and of the convalescent-home students,
of the scandal and to reproduce the AFG ES com­ voted with Strasbourg to deal with this prelimi­
m uniques less inaccurately. Since the fight was nary motion before hearing the report of the
now taking place on the terrain of administrative national leadership (it should be noted, howev­
measures and since the legal AFGES Bureau was er, that in the preceding weeks the young U N EF
still in control of the local section of the National bureaucrats had succeeded in deposing two
Student Mutual, the Bureau struck back by other Association bureaux that had been spon­
deciding on 11 January, and by implementing this taneously in favour of the AFGES position, those
decision the next day, to close the 'University of Bordeaux and Clermont-Ferrand). The
Psychological Aid Centre' (BAPU), which Strasbourg delegation consequently walked out
depended financially on the Mutual, "consider­ on a debate where it had nothing more to say.
ing that the BAPUs are the manifestation in the The final exit of the AFGES Bureau was not
student milieu of a repressive psychiatry's para­ to be so noble, however. At this time three situ­
police control, whose clear function is to main­ ationists (the 'G arnautins') had just been
tain ... the passivity of all exploited sectors... , exclu d ed for having jointly perpetrated - and
considering that the existence of a BAPU in been forced to admit before the SI - several slan­
Strasbourg is a disgrace and a threat to all the derous lies directed against Khayati, whom they
students of this university who are determined had hoped would himself be excluded as a
to think freely." At the national level, the U N EF result of this clever scheme (see the 22 January
was forced by the revolt of its Strasbourg chap­ tract Warning! Three Provocateurs). Their exclu­
ter - which had previously been held up as a sion had no relation with the Strasbourg scandal
model - to recognise its own general bankruptcy. - in it as in everything else they had ostensibly
· Although it obviously did not go so far as to agreed with the conclusions reached in SI dis­
defend the old illusions of unionist liberty that cussions - but two of them happened to be from
were so blatantly denied its opponents by the the Strasbourg region. In addition, as we men­
authorities, the U N E F nevertheless could not tioned above, certain of the Strasbourg students
sanction the judicial expulsion of the Strasbourg had begun to be irritated by the fact that the SI
Bureau. A Strasbourg delegation was thus pres­ had not rewarded them fo r their shortcomings
ent at the general assembly of the U N EF held in by recruiting them. The excluded liars sought
Paris on 14 January, and at the opening of the out an uncritical public among them and count­
meeting demanded a preliminary vote on its ed on covering up their previous lies and their
motion to dissolve the entire UNEF, "considering admission of them by piling new lies on top of
that the U N E F declared itself a union uniting the them. Thus all those who had been rejected
vanguard of youth (Charter of Grenoble, 1946) at joined forces in the mystical pretension of going
a time when workers' unionism had long since beyond the practice that had condemned them.
been defeated and turned into a tool for the self­ They began to believe the newspapers and even
regulation of modern capitalism, working to to expand on them. They saw themselves as
integrate the working class into the commodity masses who had really 'seized power' in a sort of
system ... considering that the vanguardist.pre­ Strasbourg Commune. They told themselves
tension of the U N E F is constantly belied by its that they hadn't been treated the way a revolu­
subreformist slogans and practice... considering tionary proletariat deserves to be treated. They
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assured themselves that their historic action to "the prestige of the SI." (More and more
had superseded all previous theories: forgetting often, recently, in the most diverse discussions,
that the only discernable 'action' i n an affair of liars end up in this way unwittingly identifying
this sort was, at most, the drafting of a text, they "the prestige of the SI" with the simple fact of
collectively compensated for this deficiency by telling the truth - a n amalgam that certainly
inflating their illusions. This amou nted to noth· does u s honour.) Before three months had gone
ing more ambitious than dreaming together for a by, "the association of Frey and consorts with
few weeks while continually upping the dose of Vayr-Piova and all those who were willing to
constantly reiterated falsifications. The dozen maintain a keenly solicited adhesion (at one
Strasbourg students who had effectively sup­ time there were as many as eight o r nine of
ported the scandal split into two equal parts. them) was to reveal its sad reality: based on
This supplementary problem thus acted as a infantile lies by individuals who considered each
touchstone. We naturally made no promises to other to be clumsy liars, it was the very picture,
those who remained "partisans of the SI" and involuntarily parodic, of a type of 'collective
we clearly stated that we would not make any: it action' that should never be engaged in; and
was simply up to them to be, unconditionally, with the type of people who should never be
partisans of the truth. Vayr-Piova and some oth· associated with! They went so fa r as to conduct
ers became partisans. of falsehood with the a ludicrous electoral campaign before the stu­
excluded "Garnautins" (although certainly with· dents of Strasbourg. Dozens of pages of pedan­
out knowledge of several excessive blunders in tic scraps o f misremembered situationist ideas
Frey's and Garnault's recent fabrications, but and phrases were, with a total unawareness of
nevertheless being aware of quite a few of the absurdity, run off with the sole aim of keep­
them). And re Schneider, whose support the liars ing the 'power' of the Strasbourg chapter of the
hoped to obtain since he held the title of AFGES MNEF, mlcrobureaucratic fiefdom of Vayr-Piova,
president, was overwhelmed with false tales who was eligible for re-election 13 April. As suc­
from all of them, and was weak enough to cessful In this ventu re as in their previous
believe them without further investigation and maneouvres, they were defeated by people as
to cou ntersign one o f their declarations. But stupid as they were Stalinists and Christians

after only a few days, independently becoming who were more naturally partial to electoralism,
aware of a number of indisputable lies that and who also enjoyed the bonus of being able to
these people thought it natural 1to tell their initi­ denounce their deplorable rivals as "false situa·
ates i n order to save their miserable cause, tionists." In the tract The SI Told You So, put out
Schneider i mmediately decide � that he should the next day,Andre Schneider and his comrades
publicly acknowledge the m istake of his first were easily able to show how this u nsuccessful
course: with his tract Memorie� from the House attempt to exploit the remains of the scandal of
of the Dead he denounced those who had five months before for promotional purposes
deceived him and led him to share the responsi­ revealed itself as the complete renunciation of
bility for a false accusation against the SI. The the spirit and the declared perspectives of that
return of Schneider, whose character the liars scandal. Finally Vayr-Piova, in a com munique
had underestimated and who had thus been distributed 2 0 April, stated: "I find it amusing to
privileged to witness the full extent o f their col­ b e at last denounced as a 'nonsituationist' •

lective m a n i pu lation of embarrassing facts, something I have openly proclaimed since the S I
struck a definitive blow in Strasbourg itself set itself up a s an official power." This is a rep­
against the excluded and their accomplices, who resentative sample of a vast and already forgot­
had already been discredited everywhere else. ten literature. That the SI has become an official
In their spite these wretches, who the week power this is one of those theses typical of
-

before had gone to so much trouble to win over Vayr-Piova or Frey, which can be examined by
Schneider in order to add to the cred ibility of those who are interested i n the q uestion ; and
their venture, proclaimed him a notoriou sly fee­ after doing this they will l<now what to think of
ble-minded person who had simply succumbed the intelligence of such theoreticians. BuHhis
1
aside, the factthatVayr-Piova proclaims - "open­ Lourau).
, iy," or even perhaps "secretly" in a "proclama­ In fact, we want ideas to become dangerous
tion'' reserved for the most discreet accom pli,c es again. We cannot be accepted with the spine­
in his lies, for example? - that he has not lessness of a false eclectic interest, as if we were
belonged to the SI since whenever was the d ate Sartres, Althussers, Aragons or Godards. Let us
of our transformation i nto an "official power" - note the wise words of a certain Professor
this is a boldfaced lie. Everyone who knows him Lhuillier, reported in the 21 December Nouvel
1knows that Vayr-Piova has never had the oppor­ Observateur: " I am for freedom of thought. But if
!tunity to claim to be anything but a "nonsitua- there are any Situationists in the room, I want


1tionist" (see what we wrote above concerning
he AFGES communique of 29 November).
The most favourable results of this whole
them to get ouf right now." While not entirely
denying the effect that the dissemination of a
few basic truths may have had in slightly accel­
affair naturally go beyond this new and oppor­ erating the movement that is impelling the lag·
1
�unely much-publicised example of our refusal ging French youth toward an awakening aware·
:to enlist anything that a neomilitantism in ness of an impending more general crisis in the
search of glorious subordination might throw society, we think that the distribution of On the
b ur way. No less negligible is that aspect of the Poverty of Student Life has been a much more
result that forced the official recognition of the significant factor of clarification in some other
Irreparable d ecomposition of the U N EF, a countries where such a process is already much
�ecomposition that was even more advanced more clearly under way. I n the afterward of their
f
han its pitiful appearance suggested: the coup edition of Khayati's text, the English situation·
�e grace was still echoing in July at its 56th ists wrote: "The most highly developed critique
Congress in Lyon, in the course of which the sad of modern life has been made in one of the least
president Vandenburie had to confess: "The highly developed modern countries in a coun­

f,Jn ity of the U N E F has long since ended. Each try which has not yet reached the point where
i:lSSociation lives (51 note: this term is preten­ the com plete disintegration of all values
tiously inaccurate) autonomously, without pay­ becomes patently obvious and engenders the
I
n g any attention to the d i rectives of the corresponding forces of radical rejection. In the
�ational Committee. The growing gap between French context, situationist theory has antid'pat·
fhe base and the governing bodies has reached ed the social forces by which it will be realised."
a state of serious degradation. The history of the The theses of On the Poverty of Student · Life
proceedings of the UN EF has been nothing but a have been much more truly understood in the
�eries of crises ... Reorganisation and a revival of United States and England (the strike at the
�ction have not been possible." Equally comical London School of Economics i n March caused a
were some side-effects stirred up among the certain stir, the Times commentator unhappily
�cademics who felt that this was another current seeing in it a return of the class struggle he had
issue to petition about. As can be well imagined, thought was over with).To a lesser degree this is
� e considered the position published by the also the case in Holland · where the SI's critique,
forty professors and assistants of the Faculty of reinforcing a much harsher critique by events
Arts at Strasbourg, which denounced the false themselves, was not without effect on the recent
students behind this "tempest in a teacup" dissolution of the ' Provo' movement · and in the
�bout fals,e problems "without the shadow of a Scandinavian countries. The struggles of the
�olution," to be more. logical and socially ration­ West Berlin students this year have picked up
al (as was, for that matter, Judge Llabador's sum­ something of the critique, though in a still very
lning up) than that wheedling attem pt at confused way.
�pproval circulated in, February by a few decrepit But revolutionary youth naturally has no
lnodern ist-institutionalists gnawing their mea­ other course than to join with the mass of work·
gre bones at the professorial chairs of 'Social ers who, starting from the experience ofthe new
Sciences' at Nanterre (impudent Touraine, loyal conditions of exploitation, are going to take u p
Lefeb�,tre, p ro-Ch inese Baudrillart, cunning once again the struggle for the domination of

I!
I
their world, for the suppression of work. When
young people begin to know the current theo­
retical form of this real movement that is every­
where spontaneously bursting forth from the
soil of modern society, this is o n ly a moment of
the progression by which this unified theoreti·
cat critique, which identifies itself with an a de·
quate practical unification, strives to break the
silence and the general organisation of separa·
tion. lt i s only in this sense that we find the
result satisfacto ry. We obviously exclude from
these young people that alienated semiprivi·
leged fraction molded by the un iversity: this
sector is the natural base for a n admiring con·
sumption of a fantasised situationist theory
considered as the latest spectacular fashion.
We will continue to disappoint and refute this
kind of approbation. Sooner or later it will be
understood that the SI must be judged not on
the su perficially scandalous aspects of certain
man ifestations through which it appears, but on
its essentially scandalous central truth.

Situationist lntemationai 11,0ctober 1967


®
The Totality For Kids
Almost everyon e has always been excluded from everyone accepts the purity of his renunciation.
life and forced to devote the whole 1:>f their en er· To the real sacrifice of the worl<er corresponds ·

gy to survival. Today, the welfare state i mposes the mythical sacrifice of the organiser, each
the elements of this survival in the form of tech· negates h i mself in the other, the strange
nological comforts (cars, frozen foods, Welwyn becomes familiar and the familiar strange, each
Gard e n City, Shakespeare televised for the is realised in an inverted perspective. From this
masses). comm o n alienation a harmony is born, a nega·
Moreover, the organisation controlling the tive harmony whose fundamental unity lies i n
material equipment of our everyday lives is such t h e notion o f sacrifice. This objective (an d per­
that what in itself would enable us to construct verted) harmony is sustained by myth; this term
them richly, plunges us instead into a luxury of having been used to characterise the organisa·
impoverishment, making alienation even more tion of appearances in un itary societies, that is
intolerable as each element of comfort appears to say, in societies where power over s laves, over
to be a liberation and turns out to be a servitude. a tribe, or over serfs is officially consecrated by
We are condemned to the slavery of working for divine authority where the sacred a llows power
freedom. to seize the totality.
To be understood, this problem must be The harmony based initially on the 'gift of
seen i n the light of hierarchical power. Perhaps it oneself' contains a relationship which was to
isn't enough to say that hierarchical power has develop, become autonomous, and destroy it.
preserved humanity for thousands of years as This relationship is based on partial exchange
alcohol preserves a foetus, by arresting either (commodity, money, product, labour force ) the
••.

growth or decay. lt should also be made dear exchange of a part of oneself on which the bour­
that hierarchical power represents the most geois conception of liberty is based. it arises as
highly evolved form of private appropriation, commerce and technology become preponder­
and historically is its alpha and omega. Private ant within agrarian-type economies.
appropriation itself can be defined as appropria­ When the bourgeoisie seized power they
tion of things by means of appropriation of peo· destroyed its u nity. Sacred p rivate appropriation
pie, the struggle against natura l alienation became liacised. i n capitalistic mechanisms. The
engendering social alienation. totality was freed from its seizure by power and
Private appropriation entails an organisa­ became concrete and immediate once more. The
tion of appearances by which its radical contra­ era of fragmentation has been a succession of
dictions can be dissimu lated. The executives attempts to recapture an inaccessible unity, to
must see themselves as degraded reflections of shelter power behind a substitute for the sacred.
the master, thus strengthening, through the A revolutionary movement is when 'all that
looking-glass of an illusory liberty, aU that pro· reality presents' finds its immediate representa·
d uces their submission and their passivity. The tion. For the rest of the time hierarchical power.
master m ust be identified with the mythical and always more distant from its magical and mysti·
perfect servant of a god or a transcendence, cal regalia, endeavours to m a ke everyone forget
whose substance is no more than a sacred and that the totality (no more than reality!) exposes
a bstract representation of the totality of people its i mposture.
and things over which the master exercises a
power which can only become even stronger as
Bureaucratic capitalism has found its out? - at the positive pole of alienation as the
1 legitimation i n : Marx. I am not referring end of social alienation, as the end of humani­
here to orthodox Marxism's d ubious merit of ty's term of social alienation.

3
h aving reinforced the neocapitalist structures
whose present reorganisation is an i mplicit The socialisation of primitive human
homage to Soviet totalitarianism; I am empha­ groups reveals a will to struggle more
sising the extent to which Marx's most profound effectively against the mysterious and terrifying
analyses of alienation have been vulgarised in forces of nature. But struggling in the natural
the most commonplaqe facts, which, stripped of environment, at once with it and against it, sub­
their magical veil and materialised in each ges­ mitting to its most inhuman laws in order to
ture, have become the sole substance, day after wrest from it an increased chance of survival -
day, of the lives of an increasing number of peo­ doing this could only engender a more evolved
ple. In a word, bureaucratic capitalism contains form of aggressive defence, a more complex and
the palpable reality of alienation; it has brought less primitive attitude, manifesting on a higher
it home to everybody far more successfully than level the contradictions that the uncontrolled
Marx could ever have hoped to do, it has and yet influenceable forces of nature never
banalised it as the diminishing of material ceased to impose. In becoming socialised, the
poverty has been accompanied by a spreading struggle against the blind domination of nature
mediocrity of existence. As poverty has been triumphed inasmuch as it gradually assimilated
reduced in terms of mere material survival, it has primitive, natural alienation, but in another
become more .profound in terms of our way of form. Alienation became social in the fight
life - this is at least one widespread feeling that against natural alienation. Is it by chance that a
exonerates Marx from all the interpretations a technological civilisation has developed to such
degenerate Bolshevism has derived from him. a point that social alienation has been revealed
The "theory" of peaceful coexistence has accel­ by its conflict with the last areas of natural
erated such an awareness and revealed, to resistance that technological power hadn't man­
those who were still .confused, that exploiters aged (and for good reasons) to subjugate?
can get along quite well with each other despite Today the technocrats propose to put an end to
their spectacular d ivergences. primitive alienation: with a stirring humanitari­
anism they exhort us to perfect the technical
2 "Any act," writes Mircea Eliade, "can means that "in themselves" would enable us to
become a religious act. Human existence conquer death, suffering, discomfort and bore­
is realised simultaneously on two parallel dom. But to get rid of death would be less of a
planes, that of temporality, becoming, illusion, miracle than to get rid of suicide and the desire
and that of eternity, substance, reality." In the to die. There are ways of abolishing the death
n ineteenth century the brutal divorce of these penalty than can make one miss it. Until now the
two planes demonstrated that power would specific use of technology - or more generally
have done better to have maintained reality in a the socioeconomic context in which human
mist of divine transcendence. But we m ust give activity is confined - while q uantitatively reduc­
reformism credit for succeeding where ing the number of occasions of pain and death,
Bonaparte had failed, in dissolving becoming in has allowed death itself to eat like a cancer into
eternity and reality in. illusion; this union may the heart of each person's life.
not be as solid as the sacraments of religious
marriage, but it is lasting, which is the most the I• 1 The prehistoric food-gathering age was
managers of coexistence and social peace can -r succeeded by the h u nting age d u ring
ask of it. This is also what leads us to define our­ which clans formed and strove to increase their
selves - in the illusory but inescapable perspec­ chances of survival. Hunting grounds and
tive of duration - as the end of abstract tempo­ reserves were staked out from which outsiders
rality, as the end of the reified time of our acts; were absolutely excluded since the welfare of
to define ourselves - does it have to be spelled the whole clan depended on its maintaining its
territory. As a result, the freedom gained by set­ which each member was a n integral part of the
tling down more comfortably in the natural envi­ gro u p ("organic interdependence"). Their guar­
ronment, and by more effective protection antee of survival depends on their activity with­
against its rigors, engendered its own negation in the framework of privative a ppropriation.
outside the boundaries laid down by the clan They reinforce a right to property from which
and forced the group to moderate its customary they are excluded. Due to this ambiguity each of
rules in organising its relations with excluded them sees himself as participating in ownership,
and threatening groups. From the moment it as a living fragment of the right to possess, and
appeared, socially constituted economic sur· this belief in turn reinforces his condition as
vival implied the existence of bound aries, excluded and possessed. (Extreme cases of this
restrictions, conflicting rights. lt should never be alienation: the faithful slave, the cop, the body­
forgotten that until now both history and our guard, the centurion - creatures who, through a
own nature have developed in accordance with sort of union with their own death, confer on
the movement of privative appropriation: the death a power equal to the forces of life and
seizing of control by a class, group, caste or indi· identify in a destructive energy the negative and
vidual of a general power over socioeconomic positive poles of alienation, the absolutely sub­
survival whose form remains complex . - from missive slave and the absolute master.) lt is of
ownership of land, territory, factories or capital, vital importance to the exploiter that this
all the way to the "pure" exercise of power over appearance is maintained and made more
people (hierarchy). Beyond the struggle against sophisticated; not because he is especially
regimes whose vision of paradise is a cybernetic m achiavellian, but simply because he wants to
welfare state lies the necessity of a still greater stay alive. The organisation of appearance is
struggle against a fundamental and initially nat­ bound to the survival of his privileges and to the
ural state of things, in the development of which physical su rvival of the non-owner, who can thus
capitalism plays only an incidental, transitory remain alive while being exploited and excluded
role; a state of things which will only disappear from being a person. Privative appropriation and
when the last traces of hierarchical power disap­ domination are thus originally imposed and felt
pear - along with the "swine of humanity;' of as a positive right, but in the form of a negative
course. u n iversality. Valid for everyone, j ustified in

5
everyone's eyes by divine or natural law, the
To be an owner is to arrogate a good from right of privative appropriation is objectified in a
whose enjoyment one excludes other general illusion, in a universal transcendence, in
people - while at the same time recognising an essential law under which everyone individu­
everyone's abstract right to possession. By ally manages to tolerate the more or less narrow
excluding people from the real right of owner· limits assigned to his right to live and to the con­
ship, the owner extends his dominion over those ditions of life in general.
he has excluded (absolutely over non-owners,
relatively over other owners), without whom h e
is nothing. The non-owners have no choice i n the
6 In this social context the function of alien­
ation must be understood as a condition
matter. The owner appropriates and alienates of survival The labour of the non-owners is sub�
them as producers of his own power, while the ject to the same contradictions as the right of
necessity of ensuring their own physical exis­ privative appropriation. lt transforms them into
tence forces them in spite of themselves to col­ possessed beings, into producers of their own
laborate in producingtheir own exclusion and to expropriation and exclusion, but it represents
s urvive without ever being a b le to live. the only chance of survival for slaves, for serfs,
Excluded, they participate in possession for workers so m uch so that the activity that

through the mediation of the owner, a mystical allows their existence to continue by em ptying it
participation characterising from the outset all of all content ends up, through a natural and sin­
the clan and social relationships that gradually ister reversal of perspective, by taking on a pos­
replaced the principle of obligatory cohesion in itive sense. Not only has value been attributed
to work (in its form of sacrifice in the ancien sciousness and the critical penetration of insur­
regime, in its brutalising aspects in bourgeois rection, are also responsible for the fact that
ideology and in the so-called People's once the "excesses" of revolution are past, the
Democracies), but very early on to work for a struggle against alienation is grasped on a theo­
master, to alienate oneself willingly, became the retical plane, subjected to an "analysis" that is a
honourable and scarcely questioned price of carryover from the demystification preparatory
survivaL The satisfaction of basic needs remains to revolt. lt is at this point that the truest and
the best safeguard of alienation; it is best dis­ most authentic aspects of a revolt are re-exam­
simulated by being justified on the grounds of ined and repudiated by the "we didn't really
undeniable necessities. Alienation multiplies mean to do that" of the theoreticians charged
needs because it can satisfy none of them; with explaining the meaning of an insurrection
nowadays lack of satisfaction is measured in the to those who made it - to those who aim to
number of cars, refrigerators, TVs: the alienating demystify by acts, not just by words.
objects have lost the ruse and mystery of tran­ All acts contesting power call for analysis and
scendence, they are there in their concrete tactical development. Much can be expected of:
poverty. To be rich today is to possess the great­ a) the new proletariat, which is discover­
est number of poor objects. ing its destitution amidst consumer abun­
Up to now surviving has prevented us from dance (see the development of the work­
living. This is why much is to be expected of the ers' struggles presently qegi n n i n g in
increasingly evident impossibility of survival, an England, and the attitudes of rebellious
impossibility which will become all the more evi­ youth in all the modern countries);
dent as the glut of conveniences and elements b) countries that have had enough of
of survival reduces life to a single choice: suicide their partial, sham revolutions and are
or revolution. consigning their past and present theo­

7 E
rists to the museums (see the role of the
The sacred presides even over the strug­ intelligentsia in the Eastern bloc);
gle against alienation. As soon as the c) the Third World, whose mistrust of
relations of exploitation and the violence that technological myths has been kept alive
underlies them are no longer concealed by the by the colonial cops and mercenaries, the
mystical veil, there is a breakthrough, a moment last, over-zealous m ilitants of a transcen­
of clarity, the struggle against alienation is sud­ dence against which they are the best
denly revealed as a ruthless hand-to-hand fight possible vaccination;
with naked power, power exposed in its brute d) the force of the SI ("our ideas are i n
force and its weakness, a vulnerable giant everyone's m i nd"), capable o f forestalling
whose slightest wound confers on the attacker remote-controll e d revolts, "crystal
the infamous notoriety of an Erostratus. Since nights" and sheepish resistance.

8
power survives, the event remains ambiguous.
Praxis of destruction, sublime moment when the Privative appropriation is bound to the
complexity of the world becomes tangible, dialectic of particular and generaL In the
transparent, within everyone's grasp; inexpiable m ystical realm where the contradictions of the
revolts - those of the slaves, the Jacques, the slave and feudal systems are resolved, the non­
iconoclasts, the Enrages, the Communards, owner, excluded as a particular individual from
Kronstadt, the Asturias, and - promises of things the right of possession, strives to ensure his sur­
to come - the hooligans of Stockholm and the vival through his labour: the more he identifies
wildcat strikes ... only the destruction of all hier­ with the interests of the master, the more suc­
archical power will allow us to forget these. We cessful he is. He knows the other non-owners
ai m to make sure it does. only through their common plight: the compul­
The deterioration of mythical structures and sory surrender of their labour power
their slowness in regeneratin g themselves, (Christianity recommended voluntary surrender:
which make possible the awakening of con- once the slave "willingly" offered his labour
power, he ceased to be a slave), the search for sadness); he, like each of us, was anxiously
the optimum conditions of survival, and mystical seeking the adventure where he could find him·
identification. Struggle, though born of a univer­ self on the road to his total perdition. Could the
sal will to survive, takes place on the level of master, at the very moment he alienates the oth·
appearance where it brings into play identifica· · ers, see that he reduces them to dispossessed
tion with the desires of the master and thus and excluded beings, and thus realise that he is
introduces a certain individual rivalry that only an exploiter, a purely negative being? Such
reflects the rivalry between the masters. an awareness is u nlikely and would be danger·
Competition develops on this plane as long as ous. By extending his dominion over the great­
the relations of exploitation remain dissimulat· est possible n u mber of s u bjects, isn't he
ed behind a mystical o pacity and as long as the enabling them to survive, giving them their only
conditions producing this opacity continue to chance of salvation? ("Whatever would happen
exist; as long as the degree of slavery d eter­ to the workers if the capitalists weren't kind
mines the slave's consciousness of the degree of enough to em ploy them?" the high-minded
lived reality. (We are still at the stage of calling souls of the nineteenth century liked to ask.) In
"objective consciousness" what is in reality the fact, the owner officially excludes himself from
consciousness of being an object.) The owner, all claim to privative appropriation. To the sacri­
for his part, depends on the general acknowl­ fice of the non- owner, who through his labour
edgment of a right from which he alone is not exchanges his real life for an apparent one (thus
excluded, but which is seen on the plane of avoiding immediate death by allowing the mas­
appearance as a right accessible to each of the ter to determine his variety of living death), the
excluded taken individually. His privileged posi­ owner replies by appearing to sacrifice his
tion depends on such a belief, and this belief is nature as owner and exploiter; he excludes him­
also the basis for the strength that is essential if self mythically, he puts himself at the service of
he is to hold his own among the other owners; it everyone and of myth (at the service of God and
is his strength. If, in his turn, he seems to his people, for example). With an additional ges­
renounce exclusive appropriation of everything ture, with an act whose gratuitousness bathes
and everybody, if he poses less as a master than him in an otherworldly radiance, he gives renun­
as a servant of public good and defender of col· ciation its pure form of mythical reality, rehounc·
lective security, then his power is crowned with ing common life, he is the poor man amidst illu­
glory and to his other privileges he adds that of sory wealth, he who sacrifices himself for every·
denying, on the level of appearance (which is one while all the other people only sacrifice
the only level of reference in unilateral commu­ themselves fot their own sake, for the sake of
nication), the very notion of personal appropria­ their s urvival. He turns his predicament into
tion; he denies that anyone has this right, he prestige. The more powerful he is the greater his
repudiates the other owners. In the feudal per· sacrifice. He becomes the living reference point
spective the owner is not integrated into appear­ of the whole illusory life, the highest attainable
ance in the same way as the non-owners, slaves, point in the scale of mythical values.
soldiers, functionaries, servants of all kinds. The "Voluntarily" withdrawn from common mortals,
lives of the latter are so squalid that the majori· he is d rawn toward the world of the gods, and
ty can live only as a caricature of the Master(the his more or less established participation i n
feudal lord, the prince, the major-domo, the divinity, o n the level o f appearance (the only
taskmaster, the high priest, God, Satan ) . But
.•• generally acknowledged frame of reference),
t he master himself is also forced to play one of consecrates his rank in the hie ra rc h y of the other
these caricatural roles. He can do so without owners. I n the organisation of transcendence
much effort since his pretension to total life is the feudal lord and, through osmosis, the own­

already so caricatural, isolated as he is among ers of some power or production materials, in


those who can only survive. He is already one of · varying degrees · is led to play the principal role,
our own kind (with the added grandeur of a past the �ole that he really does p lay in the economic
epoch, which adds an exquisite savour to his organisation of the group's s urvival. As a result,
EST DAN5 Lt\RUE
the existence of the group is bound on every austerity and wastes away. Model of gods and ·
level to the existence of the owners as such, to heroes, the master, the owner, is the true reality
those who, owning everything because they own of Prometheus, of Christ, of all those whose
everybody, also force everyone to renounce their spectacular sacrifice has made it possible for
lives on the pretext of the owners' unique, "the vast majority of people" to continue to sac­
absolute and divine renunciation. (From the god rifice themselves to the extreme minority, to the
Prometheus punished by the gods to the god masters. (Analysis of the owner's sacrifice ·
Christ punished by men, the sacrifice of the should be worked out more s ubtly: isn't the case
Owner becomes vulgarised, it loses its sacred of Christ really the sacrifice of the owner's son?
aura, is humanised.) Myth thus u nites owner If the owner can never sacrifice himself except
and non-owner, it envelops them in a common on the level of appearance, then Christ stands
form in which the necessity of survival, whether for the real immolation of the owner's son when
merely physical or as a privileged being, forces circumstances leave no other alternative. As a
them to live on the level of appearance and of son he is only an owner at a very early stage of
the inversion of real life, the inversion of the life development, an embryo, little more than a
of everyday praxis. We are still there waiting to dream of future ownership. In this rhythic dim en·
· live a life less than or beyond a mystique against sion belongs Bam�s· well-known remark in 1914
which our every gesture protests while submit· when war had arrived and made his dreams
ting to it. come true at last: "Our youth, as is proper, has

9 Myth, the unitary absolute in which the


contradictions of the world find an illuso­
gone to shed torrents of our blood.") This rather
distasteful little game, before it became trans­
formed into a symbolic rite, l<new a heroic peri­
ry resolution, the harmonious and constantly od when kings and tribal chiefs were ritually put
harmonised vision that reflects and reinforces to death according to their "will." Historians
order · this is the sphere of the sacred, the extra­ assure us that these august martyrs were soon
h uman zone where an abundance of revelations replaced by prisoners, slaves or criminals. They
are manifested but where the revelation of the may not get hurt any more, but they've kept the
process of privative appropriation is carefully halo.
suppressed. Nietzsche saw this when he wrote,
"All becoming is a criminal revolt from eternal The concept of a common fate is based
being and its price is death." When the bour­ 10 on the sacrifice of the own�er and the
geoisie claimed to replace the p u re Being of feu­ non-owner. Put another way, the notion of a
dalism with Becoming, all it really did was to human condition is based on an ideal and tor­
desacralise Being and resacralise Becoming to mented image whose function is to resolve the
its own profit; it elevated its own Becoming to irresolvable opposition between the mythical
the status of Being, no longer that of absolute sacrifice of the m inority and the really sacrificed
ownership but rather that of relative appropria­ life of everyone else. The function of myth is to
tion: a petty democratic and mechanical unify and eternalise, in a succession of static
Becoming, with its notions of progress, merit moments, the dialectic of "will-to-live" and its
and causal succession. The owner's life hides opposite. This universally dominant factitious
him from himself; bound to myth by a life and unity attains its most tangible and concrete rep­
death pact, he cannot see himself in the positive resentation in comm unication, particularly in
and exclusive enjoyment of any good except language. Ambiguity is most manifest at this
through the lived experience of his own exclu­ level, it leads to an absence of real com munica­
sion. (And isn't it through this mythical exclu­ tion, it puts the analyst at the mercy of ridicu­
sion that the non-owners will come to grasp the lous phantoms, atthe mercy of words eternal

reality of their own exclusion?) H e bears the and changing instants - whose content varies
responsibility for a group, h e takes on the bur­ according to who pronounces them, as does. the
den of a god. Submitting himself to its benedic· notion of sacrifice. When language is put to the
tioh and its retribution, he swathes himself in test, it can no longer dissimulate the misrepre-
· sentation and thus it provokes the crisis of par­ efit of the public: temples, churches, palaces...
ticipation. In the language of an era one can fol­ memories of a universal protection. Shelters are
low the traces of total revolution, unfulfilled but private nowadays, and even if their protection is
always imminent. They are the exalting and ter­ far from certain there can be no mistaking their
rifying signs of the upheavals they foreshadow, price.
but who takes them seriously? The discredit
striking language is as deeply rooted and 12 " Private" life is defined primarily in a
instinctive as the suspicion with which myths formal context. lt is, to be sure, born out
are viewed by people who at the same time of thJ social relations created by privative
remain firmly attached to them. How can key appropriation, but its essential form is deter·
words be defined by other words? How can mined by the expression of those relations.
phrases be used to point out the signs that U niversal, incontestable but constantly contest·
refute the phraseological organisation of ed, this form makes appropriation a right
appearance? Th·e best texts still await their justi· belonging to everyone and from which everyone
fication. When a poem by Mallarme becomes the is excluded, a right one can obtain only by
sole explanation for an act of revolt, then poetry renouncing it. As long as it fails to break free of. ·

and revolution will have overcome their ambigu· the context imprisoning it (a break that is called
ity. To await and prepare for this moment is to revolution), the most authentic experience can
manipulate information not as the last shock be grasped, expressed and communicated only
wave whose significance escapes everyone, but by way of an inversion through which its funda·
as the first repercussion of an act still to come. mental contradiction is dissimulated. In other
words, if a positive project fails to sustain a prax·
�� Born of man's will to survive the uncon· is of radically overthrowing the conditions of life
j trollable forces of nature, myth is a pub­ · which are nothing other than the conditions of
lic welfare policy that has outlived its necessity. privative appropriation - it does not have the
it has consolidated its tyrannical force by reduc­ slightest chance of escaping being taken over by
ing life to the sole dimension of survival, by the negativity that reigns over the expression of
p egating it as movement and totality. social relationships: it is recuperated like the
When contested, myth homogenises the diverse image in a mirror, in inverse perspective. In the
attacks on it; sooner or later it engulfs and totalising perspective in which it conditions the
assimilates them. Nothing can withstand it, no whole of everyone's life, and in which its real
image or concept that attempts to destroy the and its mythic power can no longer be distin­
dominant spiritual structures. lt reigns over the guished (both being both real and mythical), the
expression of facts and lived experience, on process of privative appropriation has made it
w hich it imposes its own interpretive structure impossible to express life any way except nega­
(dramatisation). Private consciousness is the tively. Life in its entirety is suspended in a nega­
tonsciousness of lived experience that finds its tivity that corrodes it and formally defines it. To
�xpression on the level of organised appear· talk of life today is like talking of rope in the
ance. house of a hanged man. Since the key of will-to·
Myth is sustained by .rewarded sacrifice. live has been lost we have been wandering in
Since every individual life is based on its own the corridors of an endless mausoleum. The dia·
renunciation, .lived experience must be defined logue of chance and the throw of the dice no '1 C 'EST
as sacrifice and recompense. As a reward for his longer suffices to justify our lassitude; those
asceticism, the initiate (the promoted worker, who still accept living in well-furnished weari·
J� PA RTI CI P£R
�� PARTICI PATION
the specialist, the manage r - new martyrs canon­ ness picture themselves as leading an indolent
i sed democratically) is granted a niche in the existence while failing to notice in each of their
organisation of appearance; he is made to feel daily gestures a living denial of their despair, a
!at home in alienation. But collective shelters denial that should rather make them despair
: S U tC I D[ '
! disappeared with unitary societies, all that's left only of the poverty of their imagination.
(QNSEIL r£Dffi�L.Rf.l
' is their later concrete embodiments for the ben· Forgetting life, one can identify with a range of
j
images, from the brutish conqueror and brutish light of a transcendence whose reign is inter­
slave at one pole to the saint and the pure hero nalised, the gods are the intransigent guardians
at the other. The air in this shithouse has been of rights, the irascible shepherds of a peaceful
unbreathable for a long time. The world and man and law-abiding flock of "Being and Wanting-To­
as representation stink like carrion and there's Be Owner.'' The gamble on transcendence and
no longer any god around to turn the charnel the sacrifice it implies are the masters' greatest
houses into beds of lilies. After all the ages men conquest, their most accomplished submis ion �
have died while accepting without notable to the necessity of conq u est. Anyone who
change the explanations of gods, of nature imd intrigues for power while refusing the purifica­
of biologic al laws, it wouldn't seem unreason­ tion of renunciation (the brigand or the tyrant)

9
able to ask if we don't die because so much will sooner or later be tracked down and killed
death enters - and for very specific reasons - into like a mad dog, or worse: as someone who nly
every moment of our lives. pursues his own ends and whose blunt concep­

13
tion of "work" lacks any tact toward others' feel­
Privative appropriation can be defined ings: Troppmann, Landru, Petiot, murde�ing
notably as the appropriation of things people without justifying it in the name: of
by means of the appropriation of people. ltis the defending the Free World, the Christian West,
spring and the troubled water where all reflec­ the State or Human Dignity, were doomed. to
tions mingle and blur. Its field of action and ev.e ntual defeat. By refusing to play the rules of
influence, spanning the whole of history, seems the game, pirates, gangsters and outlaws dis­
to have been characterised until now by a fun­ turb those with good consciences (whose c'on­
damental double behavioural determination: an sciences are a reflection of myth), but the rnas­
ontology based on sacrifice and negation of self ters, by killing the encroacher or enrolling him
(its subjective and objective aspects respective­ as a cop, re-establish the omnipotence of "eter­
ly) and a fundamental duality, a division

-�
nal truth": those who don't sell themselves lose
between particular and general, individual and their right to survive and those who do sell
collective, private and public, theoretical and themselves lose their right to live. The sacrifice
practical, spiritual and material, intellectual and of the master is the matrix of humanism, which
manual, etc. The contradiction between univer­ is what makes humanism - and let this be under"
sal appropriation and universal expropriation stood once and for all the miserable negatior:J of
implies that the master has been seen for what everything human. Humanism is the master
he is and isolated. This mythical image of terror, taken seriously at his own game, acclaimed' by
want and renunciation presents itself to slaves, those who see in his apparent sacrifice - that
to servants, to all those who can't stand living as caricatural reflection of their real sacrifice - a
they do; it is the illusory reflection of their par­ reason to hope for salvation. justice, dignity,
ticipation in property, a natural illusion since nobility, freedom ... these words that yap and
they really do participate in it through the daily howl, are they anything other than household
sacrifice of their energy (what the ancients pets whose masters have calmly awaited their
called pain or torture and we call labour or work) homecoming since the time when heroic lackeys
since they themselves produce this property in a won the right to walk them on the streets? To
way that excludes them. The master can only use them is to forget that they are the ballast
cling to the . notion of work-as-sacrifice, like that enables power to rise out of reach. And if we
Christ to his cross and his nails; it is up to him to imagine a regime deciding that the mythical sac­
authenticate sacrifice, to apparently renounce rifice of the masters should not be promoted in
his right to exclusive enjoyment and to cease to such universal forms, and setting abouttracking
expropriate with purely human violence (that is, down these word-concepts and wiping them out,
violence without mediation). The sublimity of we could well expect the Left to be incapable of
the gesture obscures the initial violence, the combating it with anything more than a plaintive
nobility of the sacrifice absolves the commando, battle of words whose every phrase, invoking
the brutality of the conqueror is bathed in the the "sacrifice" of a previous master, calls for an
equally mythical sacrifice of a new one (a leftist high finance.
master, a power mowing down workers in the lt should not be forgotten that hierarchical
name of the proletariat). Bound to the notion of power is inconceivable without transcendence,
sacrifice, humanism is born of the common fear without ideologies, without myths.
of masters and slaves: it is nothing but the soli· Demystification itself can always be turned into
darity of a shit-scared humanity. But those who a myth: it suffices to "omit," most philosophical·
reject all hierarchical power can use any word as ly, demystification by acts. Any demystification
a weapon to pu nctuate their action. so neutralised, with the sting taken out of it,
Lautreamont and the illegalist anarchists were becomes painless, euthanasic, in a word,
already aware of this; so were the dadaists. humanitarian. Except that the movement of
The appropriator thus becomes an owner demystification will ultimately demystify the
from the moment he puts the ownership of peo­ demystifiers.
ple and things in the hands of God or of some
uniyersal transcendence whose omnipotence is 11• By directly attacking the mythical
reflj!cted back on him as a grace sanctifying his ... organisation of appearance, the bour­
slig�test gesture; to oppose an owner thus con­ geois revolutions, in spite of themselves,
t
sec ated is to oppose God, nature, the father­ attacked the weak point not only of unitary

tan , the people. In short, to exclude oneself power but of any hierarchical power whatsoever.
fro T the physical and spiritual world. "We must Does this unavoidable mistake explain the guilt
nei�her govern nor be governed," writes Marcel complex that is one of the dominant traits of
Havrenne so neatly. For those who add an appro­ bourgeois mentality? In any case, the mistake
priate violence to his humour, there is no longer was undoubtedly inevitable.
any salvation or damnation, no place in the uni· lt was a mistal<e because once the cloud of
versal order, neither with Satan, the great recu­ lies dissimulating privative appropriation was
perator of the faithful, nor in any form of myth pierced, myth was shattered, leaving a vacuum
since they are the living proof of the uselessness that could be filled only by a delirious freedom
of all that. They were born for a life yet to be and a splendid poetry. Orgiastic poetry, to be
invented; insofar as they lived, it was on this sure, has not yet destroyed power. Its failure is
hope that they finally came to grief. easily explained and its ambiguous signs reveal
Two corollaries of singularisation in tran- the blows struck at the same time as they heal
scendence: the wounds. And yet · let us leave the historians
a) If ontology implies transcendence, it is and aesthetes to their collections - one has only
clear that any ontology automatically jus­ to pick at the scab of memory and the cries, ·

tifies the being of the master and the words and gestures of the past make the whole
hierarchical power wherein the master is body of power bleed again. The whole organisa­
reflected in degraded, more or less faith· tion of the survival of memories will not prevent
ful images. them from dissolving into oblivion as they come
b) Over the distinction between manual to life; just as our survival will dissolve in the
and intellectual work, between practice construction of our everyday life.
and theory, is superimposed the distinc­ And it was an inevitable process: as Marx
tion between work-as-real-sacrifice and showed, the appearance of exchange-value.and
the organisation of work in the form of its symbolic representation by money opened a
apparent sacrifice. profound latent crisis in the heart of the unitary
lt would be tempting to explain fascism • world. The commodity introduced into human
among other reasons for it · as an act of faith, relationships a universality (a 1ooo-franc note
the auto-da-fe of a bourgeoisie haunted by the represents anything I can obtain for that sum)
murder of God and the destruction .of the great · and an egalitarianism (equal things are
sacred spectacle, dedicating itself to the devil, exchanged). This "egalitarian universality" par­
to an inverted mysticism, a black mysticism with tially escapes both the exploiter and the exploit·
its rituals and its holocausts. Mysticism and ed, but they recognise each other through it.
They find themselves face to face confronting unity of the Logos were well aware that .
each other no longer within the mystery of only unity can stabilise power. Examined
divine birth and ancestry, as was the case with more closely, their efforts can be seen not
the nobility, but within an intelligible transcen· to have been as vain as the fragmentation
dence, the Logos, a body of laws ttiat can be of the logos in the nineteenth and twen·
understood by everyone, even if such under· tieth centuries would seem to prove. ln
standing remains cloaked in mystery. the general movement of atomisation the
A mystery with its i nitiates: first of all Logos has been broken down into spe·
priests struggling to maintain the Logos in the cialised tec h n iq ue s (physics, biology,
limbo of divine mysticism, but soon yielding to sociology, papyrology, etc.), but at the
philosophers and then to technicians both their same time the need to re-establish the
positions and the dign ity of their sacred mission. totality has become more imperative. lt
From Plato's Republic to the Cybernetic State. should not be forgotten that all it would
Thus, under the pressure of exchange-value and take would be an all-powerful technocrat·
technology (generally available mediation), ic power in order for there to be a totali·
myth was gradually secu larised. Two facts tarian domination of the totality, for the
should be noted, however: Logos to succeed myth as the seizure of
a) As the Logos frees itself from mystical the totality by a future u n itary (cybernet·
u nity, it affirms itself both within it and ic) power. In such an event the vision of
against it. Upon magical and analogical the Encyclopedistes (strictly rationalised
structures of behaviour are superim· p rogress stretching indefinitely into the
posed rational and logical ones which future) would have known only a two·cen·
negate the former while preserving them tury postponement before being realised.
(mathematicS, poetics, economics, aes· This is the direction in which the Stalino·
thetics, psychology, etc.). cyberneticians are preparing the future.
b) Each time the Logos, the "organisation In this perspective, peaceful coexistence
of intelligible appearance, becomes more should be seen as a preliminary step
autonomous, it tends to break away from toward a totalitarian u nity. lt is time
the sacred and become fragmented. In everyone realised that they are already
this way it presents a double d anger for resisting it.
unitary power. We have already seen that
the sacred expresses power's seizure of
the totality, and that anyone wanting to
15 We know the battlefield. The problem
now is to .prepare for battle before the
accede to the totality must do so through pataphysidan, armed with his totality without
the mediation of power: the interdict technique, and the cybernetician, armed with
against mystics, alchemists and gnostics his technique without totality, consummate their
is sufficient proof of this. This also political coitus.
explains why present,day powe� "pro· From the standpoint of hierarchical power,
tects" specialists (though without com· myth could be desacralised only if the Logos, or
pletely trusting them): it vaguely senses at least its desacralising elements, were
that they are the missionaries of a resacralised. To attack the sacred was at the
resacralised Logos. There are historical same time s upposed to liberate the totality and
'
signs that testify to the attempts made t hus d estroy power (we've heard that one
within mystica�nitary power to found a before!). B u t t h e power of t h e bourgeoisie · frag­
rival power asserting its unity in the name mented, i m poverished, constantly contested­
ofthe Logos · Christian syncretism (which maintains a relative stability by relying on this
.makes God psychologically explainable), ambiguity: Technology, which objectively
· the Renaissance, the Reformation and the desacralises, s ubjectively appears as an instru­
Enlightenment. ment of liberation. Not a real liberation, which
The masters who strove to maintain the could be attained only by cdesacralisation ' that
'.. :.{'·
is, by the end of the spectacle - but a caricature, was revealed and, as the capricious laws of the
an imitation, an induced hallucination. What the economy s ucceed those of Providence, the
unitary vision of the world transferred into the power of men began to appear behind the power
beyond (above) fragmentary powet pro-jects of gods. Today a multitude of roles corresponds
('throws forward') into a state of future well· tb the mythical role everyone once played under
being, of brighter tomorrows proclaimed from the divine spotlight. Though their masks are
atop the dunghill of today-tomorrows that are now h uman faces, these roles still require both
nothing more than the present m u ltiplied by the actors and extras to deny their real lives in
number of gadgets to be produced. From the accordance with the dialectic of real and mythi­
slogan " live in God" we have gone on to the · cal sacrifice. The spectacle is nothing but
humanistic motto "Survive until you are old," desacralised and fragmented myth. lt forms the
euphemistically expressed as: "Stay young at armour of a power (which could also be called
heart and you'll live a long time." essential mediation) that becomes vulnerable to .
Once desacralised and fragmented, myth every blow once it no longer succeeds in dissim-
loses its grandeur and its spirituality. lt becomes . ulating (in the cacophony where all cries drown
an impoverished form, retaining its former char­ out each other and form an overall harmony) its
acteristics but revealing them in a concrete, nature as privative appropriation, and the
harsh, tangible fashion. God doesn't run the greater or lesser dose of misery it allots to
show anymore, and until the day the logos everyone.
takes over with its arms of technology and sci­ Roles have become i mpoverished within the
ence, the phantoms of alienation will continue context of a fragmentary power eaten away by
to materialise and sow disorder everywhere. desacralisation, just as the spectacle represents
Watch for them: they are the first symptoms of a an impoverishment in comparison with myth.
future order. We must start to play right now if They betray its mech anisms and artifices so
the future is not to become impossible (the clumsily that power, to defend itself against
hypothesis of humanity destroying itself-and popular denunciation of the spectacle, has no
with it obviously the whole experiment of con­ other alternative than to itself take the initiative
structing everyday life). The vital objectives of a in this denunciation by even more 'clumsily
struggle for the construction of everyday life are changing actors or ministers, or by organising
the sensitive key points of all hierarchical power. pogroms of s upposed or prefabricated scape­
To build one is to destroy the other. Caught in goat agents (agents of Moscow, Wall Street, the
the vortex of desacralisation and resacralisa­ ) udeocracy or the Two Hundred Families). Which
tion, we stand essentially for the negation oft he also means thatthe whole cast has been forced
following elements the organisation of appear· to become hams, that style has been replaced
ance as a spectacle in which everyone d enies by manner.
himself, the separation on which private life is Myth, as an immobile totality, encompassed
based, since it is there that the o bjective separa­ all movement (consider pilgrimage, for example,
tion between owners and dispossessed is lived as fulfilment and adventure within immobility).
and reflected on every level and sacrifice These On the one hand, the spectacle can seize the
three elements are obviously interdependent, totality only by reducing itto a fragment and to
just as are their opposites: participation, com­ . a series of fragments (psychological; sociologi·
mu nication, realisation. The same applies to cal, biological, philological and mythological
their context nontotality (a bankrupt world, a world-views), while o n the other hand, it is situ­
co n t rol l ed totality) a n d totality. ated at t h e p o i n t where the m ov e m e nt of
desacralisation converges with the efforts at

16 The human relationships that were for-


merly dissolved in divine transcen­
resacralisation. Thus it can succeed in imposing
immobility only within the real moveme nt, the
dence (the totality crowned by the sacred) set­ movement that changes it despite .its re,sistance.
tled out and solidified as soon as the sacred In the era of fragmentation the organisation of
stopped acting as a catalyst. Their materiality appearance makes movement a linear succes·
sion of immobile instants (this notch-to-notch
progression is perfectly exem plified by Stalinist
17 lt's not the mono poly of intelligence
that we. hold, but. that of its use. Our
.
"Dialectical Materialism"). U nder what we have position is strategic, we are a tthe heart of every
called "the colonisation of everyday life," the conflict The qualitative is our striking force.
only possible changes are changes of fragmen· People who half understand this journal ask us
tary roles. In terms of more or . less inflexible for an explanatory monograph thanks to which
conventi'ons, one is successively citizen, head of they will be able to convince themselves that
f;imily, sexual partner, politician, specialist, pro· they are intelligent and cultured that is to say,
fessional, producer, consumer. Yet what boss id iots. Someone who gets exasperated and
doesn't himself feet bossed? The proverb chucks it in the gutter is making a more mean·
applies to everyone: You sometimes get a fuel<, ingful gesture. Sooner or later it will have to be
but you always get fucked! understood that the words and phrases we use
The era of fragmentation has at least elimi· are still lagging behind reality. The distortion
nated all doubt on one point: everyday life is the and clumsiness in the way we express ourselves
battlefield where the war between power and (which a man of taste called, not inaccurately, "a
the totality takes place, with power using all its rather irritating kind of hermetic terrorism")
strength to control the totality. comes from our central position, our position on
What do we demand in. backing the power of · the ill-defined and shifting frontier where lan­
everyday life against hierarchical power? We guage captured by power (conditioning) and
demand everything .We are taking our stand in
• free language (poetry) fight out their infinitely
the generalised conflict stretching from domes· complex war. To those who follow behind us we
tic squabbles to revolutionary war, and we have prefer those who reject us impatiently because
gambled on the will to live. This means that we our language is not yet authentic poetry-the free
must survive as aritisurvivors. Fundamentally we construction of everyday life.
are concerned only with the moments when life Everything related to thought i s . related to
breaks through the glaciation of survival the spectacle. Almost everyone lives in a state of
(whether these moments are unconscious or terror at the possibility that they might awake to
theorised, .historical-like revolution-or person­ themselves, and their fear is deliberately fos·
al). But we must recognise that we are also pre· tered by power. Conditioning, the special poetry
vented from freely following the course of such of power, has extended its dominion so far (all
moments (except for the moment of revolution material equipment belongs to it: press, televi­
itself) not only by the general repression exert· sion, stereotypes, magic, tradition, economy,
ed by power, but also by the exigencies of our technology what we call captured language)

own struggle, our own tactics, etc. lt is also that it has almost succeeded in dissolving what
important to find the means of compensating for Marx called the undominated sector, replacing it
this additional "margin of error" by widening the with another dominated one (see below our
scope of these moments and demovstrating composite portrait of "the s urvivor"). But lived
their qualitative significance. What prevents ex perience cannot so easily be reduced to a sue·
what we say on the construction of everyday life cession of empty configurations Resistance to
from being recuperated by the c u ltural estab· the external organisation of life to the organisa­
lishment (Arguments, academic thinkers with tion of life as survival contains more poetry than
paid vacations) is the fact that all situationist any volume of verse or prose and the poet in the
ideas are nothing other than faithful develop· literary sense of the word is one who has at least
ments of acts attempted constantly by thou­ understood or felt this But such poetry is in . a
sands of people to try and prevent another day most dangerous situation Certainly poetry in the
from being no more than twenty�four hours of situationist sense of the word is irreducible and
wasted time. Are we an avant·garde? If so, to be cannot be recuperated by power (as soon as an
avant·garde !)leans to move in step with reality. act is recuperated it becomes a stereotype, con­
ditioning, language of power). But it is encircled
by power. Power encircles the irreducible and
PU L A I R E
holds it by isolating it; yet such isolation is Everyone is asked their op1mon about every
impracticable. The two pincers are, first; the detail in order to prevent them from having one
threat of disintegration (insanity, illness, desti­ about the totality. However clumsy this maneou­
tution, suicide), and second, remote-controlled vre may be, it might have worked if the salesmen
therapeutics. The first grants death, the second in charge of peddling it from door to door were
grants no more than survival (empty communi· not themselves waking up to their own alien­
cation, the company of family or friendship, psy­ ation. To the passivity imposed on the dispos­
choanalysis in the service of alienation, medical sessed masses is added the growing passivity of
care, ergotherapy). Sooner or later the SI must the directors and actors su bjected .to the
define itself as a therapy: we are ready todefend abstract laws of the market and the spectacle
the poetry made by all against the false poetry and exercising less and less real power over the
rigged up by power (conditioning). Doctors and world. Already signs of revolt are appearing
psychoanalysts better get it straight too, or they among the actors - stars who· try to escape pub'
may one day, along with architects and other licity or rulers who criticise their own power;
apostles of survival, have to take the conse­ Brigitte Bardot or Fidel Castro. The tools of
quences for what they have done. power are wearing out; their desire for their own
freedom should be taken into account.

18 19
All unresolved, unsuperseded antago·
nisms weaken. Such antagonisms can At the very moment when slave revolt
evolve only by remaining impri!?oned in previous threatened to overthrow the structure
unsuperseded forms (anticultural art in the cul­ of power and to reveal the relationship between
tural spectacle, for example). Any radical oppo­ transcendence and the mechanism of privative
sition that fails or is partially successful (which appropriation, Christianity appeared with its
amounts to the same thing) gradually degener­ grandiose reformism, whose central democratic
ates into reformist opposition. Fragmentary demand was for the slaves to accede not to the
oppositions are like the teeth on cogwheels, reality of a human life which would have been
·

they mesh with .each other and make the impossible without denouncing the exclusionary
machine go round, the machine of the spectacle, aspect of privative appropriation · but rather to
the machine of power. the unreality of an existence whose source of
Myth maintained all . antagonisms within the happiness is mythical (the imitation of Christ as
archetype of Manicheanism. But what can func­ the price of the hereafter). What has changed?
tion as an archetype in a fragmented society? In Anticipation of the hereafter has become antici­
fact, the memory of previous antagonisms, pre­ pation of a brighter tomorrow; the sacrifice of
sented in their obviously devalued and unag­ real, immediate life is the price paid for the illu­
gressive form, appears today as the last attempt sory freedom of an apparent life. The spectacle
to bring some coherence into the organisation of • is the sphere where forced labour is transformed
appearance, so great is the extent to which the into voluntary sacrifice. Nothing is more suspect
spectacle has become a spectacle of confusion than the formula "To each according to · �is
and equivalences. We are ready to wipe out all work" in a world where work is the blackmail of
trace of these memories by harnessing all the survival; to say nothing of the formula "To each
energy contained in previous antagonisms for a according to his needs" in a world where needs
radical struggle soon to come. All the springs are determined by power Any construction that
blocked by power will one day burst through to attempts to define itself autonomously and thus
form a torrent that will change the face of the partially, and does not take into account that it is
world. in fact defined by the negativity in which every­
In a caricature of antagonisms, power urges thing is suspended enters into the reformist
everyone �o be for or against Brigitte Bardot, the project. lt is trying to build on quicksand as
nouveau roman, the 4-horse Citroen, spaghetti, though it were rock. Contempt and misunder­
mescal, miniskirts, the UN, the classics, nation· standing of the context fixed by hierarchical
alisation, thermonuclear war and hitchhiking. power can only end up reinforcing that context.
On the other hand, the spontaneous acts we can tially an operatic revolt didn't Nietzsche see

see everywhere forming against power and its Wagner as a prj!cursor? - in which actors who
spectacle must be warned of all the obstacles in have been pushed aside for a long time and see
their path and must find a tactic taking into themselves as less and less free suddenly
account the strength ofthe enemy and its means demand to play the leading roles. Clinically
of recuperation. This tactic, which we are going speaking, fascism is the hysteria of the spectac·
to popularise, is detournement. ular world pushed .to the point of paroxysm. I n

20
this paroxysm the spectacle momentarily
Sacrifice must be rewarded. In ensu res its unity while at the same time reveal­
exchange for their real sacrifice the ing its radical inh umanity. Through fascism and
workers receive the instruments of their libera­ Stalinism, which constitute its romantic crises,
tion (comforts gadgets) but this liberation is the spectacle reveals its true nature: it is a dis·
purely fictitious since power controls the ways in ease.
which all the material equipment can be used; We are poisoned by the s pectacle. All the
since power uses to its own ends both the elements necessary for a detoxification (that is,
instruments and those who use them. The for the construction of our everyday lives) are in
Christian and bourgeois revolutions democra­ the hands of specialists. We are thus highly
tised mythical sacrifice, the "sacrifice of the interested in all these specialists, but in differ­
master.'' Today there are countless initiates who ent ways. Some are hopeless cases: we are not,
receive crumbs of power for putting to public for example, going to try and show the special­
service the totality of their partial knowledge. ists of pQwer, the rulers, the extent of their delir·
They are no longer called "initiates" and not yet ium. On the other hand, we are ready to take into
"priests of the logos"; they are simply known as account the bitterness of specialists imprisoned
specialists. in roles that are constricted, absurd or ignomin·
On the level of the spectacle their power is ious. We must confess, however, that our indul·
undeniable: the contestant on "Double Your gence has its limits. If in spite of all our efforts,
Money" and the postal clerk running on all day . they persist in putting their guilty conscience
about all the mechanical details of his car both and their bitterness in the service of power by
identify with the specialist, and we know how fabricating the conditioning that colonises their
production managers use such identification to own everyday lives; if they prefer an illusory rep­
bring unskilled workers to heel. Essentially the resentation i n the hierarchy to true realisation; if
true . mission of the technocrats would be to they persist in ostentatiously brandishing their
unify the logos; if only - because of one of the. specialisations (their painting, their novels, their
contradictions of fragmentary power - they equations, their sociometry, their psychoanaly­
weren't so absurdly compartmentalised and iso­ sis, their ballistics); finally, if, knowing perfectly
lated. Each one is alienated in being out of well and soon ignorance of this fact will be no

phase with the others; he knows the whole of excuse · that only power and the S I hold the key
one .fragment and knows no realisation. What to using their specialisation, they nevertheless
real control can the atomic technician, the still choose to serve power because power, bat·
strategist or the political specialist exercise over tening on their inertia, has chosen them to serve
a nuclear weapon? What ultimate control can it, then fuck them! No one could be more gener·
power hope to impose on all the gestures devel· ous. They should understand all this and above
oping against it? The stage is so crowded that all the fact that henceforth the revolt of nonrul·
only chaos reigns as master. "Order reigns and ing actors is linked to the revolt against the
doesn't govern" (IS #6). spectacle (see below the thesis on the SI and
To the extent that the specialist takes part in power).
the development of the instruments that condi­
tion and transform the world, he is preparing the
way for the revolt of the privileged. Until now
21 The generalised anathematisation of
the lumpenproletariat stems from the
such revolt has been called fascism. lt is essen• use to which it was put by the bourgeoisie,
which it served both as a regulating mechanism which, through a reversal of perspective, will
for power and as a source of recruits for the have ceased to be the priority sector, in order to
more dubious forces of order:. cops, informers, serve the priority of life over survival.
hired thugs, artists ... Nevertheless, the lumpen­
proletariat e mbodies a remarkably radical 22 Unitary power strove to dissolve indi-
implicit critique of the society of work. Its open vidual existence in a collective con­
contempt for both lackeys and bosses contains a sciousness so that each social unit subjectively
good critique of work as alienation, a critique defined itself as a particle with a clearly deter­
that has not been taken into consideration until mined W\!ight suspended as though in oil.
now because the lumpenproletariat was the sec­ Everyo ne had to feel overwhelmed by the
tor of ambiguities, but also because during the omnipresent evidence that everything was
nineteenth century and the beginning of the merely raw material in the. hands of God, who
twentieth the struggle against natural alienation used it for his own purposes, which were natu­
and the production of well-being still appeared rally beyond individual human comprehension.
as valid justific ations for work. All phenomena were seen as emanations of a
Once it became known that the abundance supreme will; any abnormal divergence signified
of consumer goods was nothing but the flip side some hidden meaning (any perturbation was
of alienation in production, the lumpenproletari­ merely an ascending or descending path toward
at acquired a new dimension: it liberated a con­ harmony: the Four Reigns, the Wheel of Fortune,
tempt for organised work which, in the age of trials sent by the gods). One can speak of a col­
the Welfare State, is gradually taking on the pro­ lective consciousness in the sense that it was
portions of a demand that only the rulers still simultaneously for each individual and for
refuse to acknowledge. In spite of the constant everyone: consciousness of myth and con­
attempts of power to recuperate it, every exper­ sciousness of particular-existence-within-myth.
iment carried out on everyday life, that is, every The power of the illusion was such that authen­
attempt to construct it (an illegal activity since tically lived life drew its meaning from what was
the destruction of feudal power, where it was not authentically lived; from this stems that
limited arid restricted to a minority), is concre­ priestly condemnation of life, the reduction of
tised today through the critique of alienating life to pure contingency, to sordid materiality, to
work and the refusal to submit to forced labour. vain appearance and to the lowest state of a
So much so that the new proletariat tends to transcendence that became increasingly
define itself negatively as a " Front Against degraded as it escaped mythical organisation.
Forced Labour" bringing together all those who God was the guarantor of space and time,
resist recuperation by power. This defines our whose coordinates defined unitary society. He
field of action; it is here that we are gambling on was the common reference point for all men;
the ruse of history against the ruse of power; it space and time came together in him just as in
is here that we back the worker (whether steel­ him all beings became one with their destiny. In
worker or artist) who - consciously or not - the era of fragmentation, man is torn between a
rejects organised work and life, against the time and a space that no transcendence can
worker who - consciously or not - accepts work­ unify through the mediation of any centralised
ing at the dictates of power. In this perspective, power. We are living in a space and time that are
it is not unreasonable to foresee a transitional out of joint, deprived of any reference point or
period during which automation and the will of coordinate, as though we were never going to be
the new proletariat leave work solely to special­ able to come into contact with ourselves,
ists, reducing managers and bureaucrats to the although everything invites us to.
rank of temporary slaves. In a generalised There is a place where you create yourself
automation the "workers," instead of supervis­ and a time in which you play yourself. The space
ing machines, could devote their attention to of everyday life, that of one's true realisation, is
watching over the cybernetic specialists, whose encircled by every form of conditioning. The nar­
sole task would be to increase a production row space of our true realisation defines us, yet
we define ourselves in the time. of the spectacle. us is to become spectators of the gangrene and
Or put another way: our consciousness is no decay, spectators of survival.
lo nger consciousness of myth and of part icu la r­ The drama of consciousness to which He gel
being-in-myth, but rather consciousness of the referred is actually the consciousness of drama.
spectacle and of particular-role-in-the"specta­ Romanticism resounds like the cry of the soul
cle. (I pointed out above the relationship torn from the body, a suffering all the more acute
between all ontology and unitary power; it as each of us finds himself alone in facing the
should be recalled here that the crisis of ontol­ fall of the sacred totality and of all the Houses of
ogy appears with the movement toward frag­ Usher.

2 1• . The totality is objective reality, in the


mentation.) Or to put it still another way: in the
space-time relation in which everyone and
everything . is situated, time has become the -r movement of which su bjectivity can
imaginary (the field of identifications) ; space participate only. in the form of realisation.
defines us, although we define ourselves in the Anything separate from the realisation of every­
imaginary and although the imaginary defines -day life rejoins the spectacle where survival is
us qua subjectivlties. frozen (hibernation) and served out in slices.
Our free d o m isthat of an abstract temporal­ There can be no authentic realisation except in
ity in which . we are .named in the language of objective reality, in the totality. All the rest is car­
power (these names are the roles assigned to icature. The objective realisation that functions
us), with a choice left to us to find officially in the mechanism of the spectacle is nothing but
recognised synonyms for ourselves. In contrast, the success of power-manipulated objects (the
the space ofour authentic realisation (the space "objective realisation in subjectivity" of famous
of our everyday life) is under the dominion of artists, stars, celebrities of Who's Who). On the
silence. There is no name to name the space of level of the organisation of appearance, every
lived experience except in poetry, in language success - and every failure - is inflated until it
liberating itself from the domination of power. becomes a ,stereotype, and is broadcast as

· By desacralising and fragmenting myth,


23
though it were the only possible success or fail­
ure. So far power has been t he only judge,
the bourgeoisie was led to demand first though its judgment has been subjected to vari­
of all independence of consciousness (demands plis pressures, Its criteria are the only valid ones
for freedom of thought, freedom of. the press, for those who accept the spectacle and are sat­
freedom of research; rejection of dogma). isfied to play a role in it. But there are no more
Conscioilsnes� thus ceased being more or less • artists on that stage, there are only extras.

25 The space.-time of private life was har-


consciousness- reflecting-myth. lt became con­
sciousness of successive roles played w ithin the
spectacle. What the bourgeoisie demanded monised in the space-time of myth.
· . above all was the freedom of actors and extras in
a. spectacle
Fourier's harmony responds to this perverted
harmony. As soon as myth no longer encom­
. no longer organised by God; his cops
and his priests, . but by natural and economic passes the individual and the partial in a totality
laws; "capricious and inexorable laws" defend­ dominated by the sacred, each fragment sets
ed by a . new team of cops and specialists. itself up a s a totality. The fragment set up as a
God has been torn off like a useless band- totality is, in fact, the totalitarian. In the dissoci­
age arid the wound has stay ed raw. The bandage ated space-time that constitutes . private life,
may have prevented the ·wound from . healing, time - made absolute in the form of abstract
but it justified suffering, it gave it a meaning well freedom, the freedom of the spectacle - consoli­
worth a few ·shots of morphine. Now-suffering dates by its very dissociation the spatial
has no justification whatsoever · and morphine is absolute of private life, its isolation and con­
far from cheap. Separa tion has become· con­ striction. The mechanism of the alienating spec­
crete. Anyone at all can put their finger on it,- and tacle wields such force that private life reaches
the only answer cybernetic society has to offer the point of being defined as that which is
deprived of spectacle; the fact that one escapes anything but facts emptied of their authentically
roles and spectacular categories is experienced lived content. lt is in this sense that hierarchical
as an additional privation, as a malaise which power, i m prisoning everyone in the objective
power uses as a pretext to reduce everyday life mechanism of privative appropriation (admis­
to insignificant gestures (sitting down; washing, sion/exclusion, see section 3), is also a dictator­
opening a door). ship over subjectivity. lt is as a dictator over sub­
jectivity that it strives, with limited chances of

26 The spectacle that imposes its norms


on lived experience itself arises out of
success, to force each individual s ubjectivity to
become objectivised, that is, to become an
lived experience. The time of the spectacle, lived object it can manipulate. This extremely inter­
in the form of successive roles, makes the space esting dialectic should be analysed in greater
of authentic experience the area of objective detail (objective realisation in subjectivity - the
i mpotence, while at the same time the objective realisation of power - and objective realisation in
i mpotence that stems from the conditioning of objectivity - which enters into the praxis of con­
privative appropriation makes the spectacle the structing eve·ryday life and destroying power).
ultimate of potential freedom. Facts are deprived of content in the name of the
Elements born of lived experience are comm u nicable, in the name of an abstract uni­
acl<nowledged only on the level of the spectacle, versality, in the name of a perverted harmony in
where they are expressed in the form of stereo­ which everyone realises himself in an inverted
types, although such expression is constantly perspective. In this context the SI is in the line of
contested and refuted in and by lived experi­ contestation that runs through Sade, Fourier,
ence. The composite portrait of the s urvivors - Lewis Carroll, Lautreamont, s urrealism, lettrism
whom Nietzsche referred to as the "little peo­ at least in its least known currents, which were
ple" or the "last men" - can be conceived only in the most extreme.
terms of the following dialectic of possibility Within a fragment set up as a totality, each
impossibility: further fragment is itself totalitarian. Sensitivity,
a) Possibility on the level of the spectacle desire, will, intelligence, good taste, the subcon­
(va riety of abstract roles) reinforces scious and all the categories of the ego were
impossibility on the level of authentic treated as absolutes by individualism. Today
experience; sociology is enriching the categories of psychol­
b) Impossibility (that is, limits imposed ogy, but the introduction of variety into the roles
on real experience by privative appropria­ merely accentuates the monotony of the identi·
tion) determines the field of abstract pos­ fication reflex. The freedom of the "survivor" will
sibilities. be to assume the abstract constituent to which
Survival is two-dimensional. Against such a he has "chosen" to reduce himself. Once any
reduction, what forces can bring out what con­ real realisation has been put out of the picture,
stitutes the daily problem of all human beings: all that remains is a psychosociological drama­
the dialectic of s u rvival and life? Either the spe­ tu rgy in which interiority functions as a safety­
cific forces the SI has counted on will make pos­ valve, as an overflow to drain off the effects one
sible the s upersession of these contraries, has worn for the daily exhi bition. S u rvival
reuniting space and time in the construction of becomes the ultimate stage of life organised as
everyday life; or life and survival will become the mechanical reproduction of memory.
locked in an antagonism growing weaker and
weaker until the point of ultimate confusion and
ultimate poverty is reached.
28 Until now the approach to the totality
has been falsified. Power has pai'asiti·

2 7 Lived
cally interposed itself as an indispensable medi·
reality is spectacularly fragment· ation between man and nature. But the relation
ed and labelled in biological,
. . sociologi­ between man and nature is based only on prax·
cal or other categories which, while being relat­ is. lt is praxis which constantly breaks through
ed to the communicable, never communicate the coherent veneer of lies that myth and its
substitutes try to maintain. it .is praxis, even Thus Manicheanism has found itself momentari­
alienated praxis, which maintains contact with ly revived. Why did St. Augustine attack the
the totality. By revealing its own fragmentary Manicheans so relentlessly? it was because he
character, praxis at the same time reveals the recognised the danger of a myth offering only
real totality (reality) : it is the totality being one solution, the victory of good over evil; he
realised by way of its opposite, the fragment. saw that this impossibility threatened to pro­
In the perspective of praxis, every fragment is · voke the collapse of all mythical structures and
totality. In the perspective of power, which alien­ bring into the open the contradiction between
ates praxis, every fragment is totalitarian. This mythical and authentic life. Christianity offered
should be enough to wreck the attempts cyber­ the third way, the way of sacred confusion. What
netic power will make to envelop praxis in a mys­ Christianity accomplished through the force of
tique, although the seriousness of these myth is accomplished today through the force of
attem pts should not be u n derestimated. things. There can no longer be any antagon ism
All praxis enters into our project; it enters between Soviet workers and capitalist workers
with its share of alienation, with the impurities or between the bomb of the Stalinist bureau­
of power: but we are capable of filtering them crats and the bomb of the non-Stalinist bureau­
out: We will elucidate the force and purity of acts crats; there is no longer anything but unity in the
of refusal as well as the manipulative maneou­ chaos of reified beings.
vres of power, not in a Manfchean perspective, Who is responsible? Who should be shot?
but as a means of developing, through our own We are dominated by a system, by an abstract
strategy, this combat in which everywhere, at form. Degrees of humanity and inhumanity are
every moment, the adversaries are seeking one measured by purely quantitative variations of
another but only clashing accidentally, lost in passivity. The q uality is the same everywhere:
irremediable darkness and uncertainty. we are all proletarianised or well on the way to

29
becoming so. What are the traditional "revolu­
Everyday life has always b�en drained tionaries" doing? They are eliminating certain
to the . advantage of apparent life, but distinctions, making sure that no proletarians
appearance, in its mythical cohesion, was pow­ are any more proletarian than all the others. But
erful enough to repress any mention of everyday what party is working for the end of the prole­
life. The poverty and emptiness of the spectacle, tariat?
revealed by all the varieties of capitalism and all The perspective of survival has become
the varieties of bourgeoisie, has revealed both intolerable. What is weighing us down is the
the existence of everyday life (a shelter life, but weight of things in a vacuum. That's what reifi­
a shelter for what and from what?) . and the cation is: everyone and everything falling at an
poverty of everyday life. As reification and equal speed, everyone and everyth ing stigma­
bureaucratisation grow stronger, the debility of tised with their equal value. The reign of equal
the spectacle and of everyday life is the Ot11Y values has realised the Christian project, but it
thing that remains clear. The conflict between · has realised it outside Christianity (as Pascal
the human and the inhuman has also been had supposed) and, above all, it has realised it
transferred to the plane of appearance. As soon over God's dead body, contrary to Pascal's
as Marxism became an ideology, Marx's struggle expectations.
against ideoJogy in the name of the richness of The spectacle and everyday life coexist in
life was transformed into an ideological antHde­ the reign of equal values. People and things are
ology, an antispectacle spectacle Gust as in interchangeable. The world of reification is a
avant-garde culture the antispectacular specta­ world without a centre, like the new prefabricat­
cle is restricted to actors alone, antiartistic art ed cities that are its decor. The present fades
being created and understood only by artists, so away before the promise of an eternal future
the relationship between this ideological anti­ that is nothing but a mechanical extension of the
ideology and the function of the professional past. Time itself is deprived of a centre. In this
revolutionary in Leninism should be examined). concentration-camp world, victims and torturers
wear the same mask and only the torture is real. Nevertheless we refuse both concentrat·
No new ideology can soothe the pain, neither ed power and the right of representation,
the ideology of the totality (Logos) nor that of conscious that we are now taking the only
nihilism - which will be the two crutches of the public attitude (for we cannot avoid being
cybernetic society. The tortures condemn all known to some extent in a spectacular
hierarchical power, however organised or dis­ manner) enabling those who find that
simu lated it may be. The antagonism the SI is they .share our theoretical and practical
going to revive is the oldest of all, it is radical positions to accede to revolutionary
antagonism and that is why it is taking up again power: power without mediation, power
and assimilating all that has been left by the entailing the direct action of everyone.
insu rrectionary movements and great individu­ Our guiding image could be the Durruti
als in the course of history. Column, moving from town to village, liq­

3 0 taken
uidating the bourgeois elements and
So many other banalities could be leaving the. workers to see to their own
up and reversed. The best things self-organisation.
never come to an end. Before rereading the b) The intelligentsia is power's hall of mir­
above - which even the most mediocre intelli­ rors. Contesting power, it never offers
gence will be able to understand by the third anything but passive cathartic identifica-
attempt - the reader would be well-advised to . tion to those whose every gesture grop­
concentrate carefully on the following text, for ingly expresses real contestation. The
these notes, as fragmentary as the preceding radicalism not of theory, obviously, but

ones, must be discussed in detail and imple­ of gesture · that could be glimpsed in the
mented. lt concerns a central question: the SI "Declaration of the 121," however, sug­
and revolutionary power. gests some different possibilities. We are
Being aware of the crises of both mass par­ capable of precipitating this crisis, but we
ties and "elites," the SI must embody the super­ can do so :only by entering the intelli­
session of both the Bolshevik Central Committee gentsia as a power against the intelli­
(supersession of the mass party) and of the gentsia. This phase - which must precede
Nietzschean project (supersession of the intelli· and be contained within the phase
gentsia). des.cribed in point a) - will put us in the
a) Every time a power has presented itself perspective of the Nietzschean project.
as directing a revolutionary upsurge, it We will form a small, almost alchemical,
has automatically undermined the power experimental group within which the real­
of the revolution. The Bolshevik C.C. isation of the total man can be started.
defined itself simultaneously as concen­ N ietzsche could conceive of such an
tration and as representation. undertaking only within the framework of
Concentration of a power antagonistic to the hierarchical principle. lt . is, in fact,
bourgeois power and representation of within such a framework that we find our­
the will of the masses. This duality led it selves. it is therefore of the utmost impor­
rapidly to become no more than an em pty tance that we present ourselves wit.hout
power, a power of empty representation, the slightest ambiguity (on the level of
and consequently to rejoin, in a common the ,group, the purification- of the nucleus
form (bureaucracy), a bourgeois power and the elimination of residues now
that was being forced (in response to the seems to be completed). We accept the.
very existence of the Bolshevik power) to hierarchical framework in which we are
. follow a similar evolution. The conditions placed only while im patiently working to
for a concentrated power and mass repre­ abolish our domination over those whom
sentation exist potentially in the SI when we cannot avoid dominating on the basis
it states that it holds the qualitative and of our criteria for mutual recognition.
that its ideas are in everyone's mind. c) Tactically our communication should
be a diffusion emanating from a more or
less hidden centre. We will establish non­
materialised networks (direct relation­
ships, episodic ones, contacts without
ties, development of embryonic relations
based on sympathy and understanding,
in the manner of the red agitators before
the arrival of the revolutionary armies).
We will claim radical gestures (actions,
writings, political attitudes, works) as our
own by analysing them, and we will con­
sider that our own acts and analyses are
supported by the majority of people.
J ust as God constituted the reference
point of past unitary society, we are
preparing to create the central reference
point for a unitary society now possible.
But this point cannot be fixed. As
opposed to the ever-renewed confusion
that cybernetic power draws from the
past of inhumanity, it stands for the game
that everyone will play, "the moving
order of the future."

Raou/ Vaneigem, lnternationa/e Situationniste 7


& 8, 1962 - 63

Le dcveloppcment meme
de la societe de classes
jusqu'a }'organisati on
spectaculaire de la non-vie
mene flonc le projct
rcvolntionnaire a devenir
visiblement
ce qu'il ct ait deja
essentiellement.
Paris: May 1968
Introduction understanding of modern society, it will never be
(Written for the original edition, published by possible consciously to change it. But this analy·
Solidarity in June 1968) sis will have to wait for a while until some of the
dust has settled. What can be said now is that, if
This is an eye-I,Nitness account of two weeks honestly carried out, such an analysis will corn·
spent in Paris d u ring May 1968. it is what one pel many 'orthodox' revolutionaries to discard a
person saw, heard or discovered during that mass of outdated ideas, slogans and myths to
short period. The account has no pretence at te-assess contemporary reality; particularly the
comprehensiveness. lt has been written and reality of modern bureaucratic capitalism, its
produced i n haste, its purpose bein'g to inform dynamic, its methods of control and manipula·
rather than to analyse and to inform quickly.
• tion, the reasons for both its resilience and its
The French events have a significance that brittleness and most important of all the
• •

extends far beyond the frontiers of modern nature of its crises. Concepts and organisations
France. They will leave their mar� on the history that have been fou nd wanting will have to be
of the second half of the 2oth century. French discarded. The new phenomena (new in them­
bourgeois society has just been shaken to its selves or new to traditional revolutionary theo­
foundations. Whatever the outcome of the pres­ ry) will have to be recognised for what they are
ent struggle, we must calmly take note of the and interpreted in all their implications. The real
fact that the political map of Western capitalist events of 1968 will then have to be integrated
society will never be the same again. A whole into a new framework of ideas, for without this
epoch has just come to an end: the epoch during development of revolutionary theory, there can
which people couldn't say, with a semblance of be no development of revolutionary practice •

verisimilitude, that 'it couldn't happen here'. and in the long run no transformation of society
Another epoch is starting: that in which people through the conscious actions of men.
know that revolution is possible under the con·
ditions of modern bureaucratic capitalism. Rue Gay Lussac
For Stalinism too, a whole period is ending:
the period during which Communist Parties i n Sunday 12 May
Western Europe could claim (admittedly with
dwindling credibility) that they remained revolu­ The rue Gay-Lussac still carries the scars of the
tionary organisations, but that revolutionary , ' night of the barricades'. Burnt out cars line the
opportunities had never really presented them· pavement, their carcasses a dirty grey under the
selves. This notion has now irrevocably been m issing paint. The cobbles, cleared from the
swept into the proverbial 'dustbin of h istory'. middle of the road, lie i n huge mounds on either
When t h e chips were down, the French side. A vague smell of tear gas still lingers in the
Comm unist Party and those workers under its air.
influence proved to be the final and most effec­ At the j unction with the rue des Ursulines
tive �brake' on the development of the revolu· lies a building site, its wire mesh fence breached
tionary self-activity of the working class. in several places. From here came material for at
A full analysis of the French events will even­ least a dozen barriCades: planks, wheelbarrows,
tually have to be attempted, for, without an metal drums, steel girders, cement m ixers,
blocks of stone. The site also yielded a pneu­ teachi h g staff (SNESup) called for an unlimited
matic drill. The students couldn't use it, of strike.' For a week the students held their
course not until a passing building worker
• ground, in ever bigger and more militant street
showed them how, perhaps the first worker demonstrations. On Tuesday 7 May so,ooo stu·
actively to support the student revolt. Once bro­ dents and teachers march('!d through the streets
ken, the road surface provided cobbles, soon behind a single banner: 'Vive La Commune', and
put to a variety of uses. sang the lnternationale at the Tom b of the
All that is already h istory. Unknown Soldier, at the Arc de Triomphe. On
People are walking up and down the street, Friday 10 May students and teachers decided to
.as if trying to convince themselves that it really occupy the Latin Quarter en masse. They felt
happened. They aren't students. The students they had more right to be there than the police,
themseiV('!S know what happened arid why it for whom barracks were provided elsewhere.
happened. They aren't local inhabitants either. The cohesion and sense of purpose of the
The local inhabitants saw what happened, the demonstrators terrified the Establishment.
viciousness of the CRS charges, the assaults on Power couldn't be allowed to lie with this rabble,
the wounded, the attacks on innocent who had even had the audacity to erect barri­
bystanders, the unleashed fury of the state cades.
machine against those who had challenged it. Another inept gesture was needed. Another
The people in the streets are the ordinary people administrative reflex duly materialised. Fouchet
of Paris, people from neighbouring districts, hor­ (Minister of the I nterior) and joxe (Deputy Prime
rified at what they have heard over the radio or Minister) ordered Grimaud (Superintendent of
read in their papers and who h ave come for a the Paris police) to clear the streets. The order
walk on a fine Sunday morning to see for th�m­ was confirmed in Writing, doubtless to be pre­
selves. They are talking in small clusters with served for posterity as an example of what not to
the inhabitants of the rue Gay-Lussac. The do i n · certain situations. The CRS charged...
Revolution, having for a week held the universi· clearing the rue Gay-Lussac and opening the
ty and the streets of the Latin Quarter, is begin­ doors to the second phase of the Revolution.
ning to take hold of the minds of men. In the rue Gay-Lussac and i n adjoining
On Friday 3 May the CRS had paid their his· streets, the battle-scarred walls carry a dual
toric visit to the Sorbonne. They had been invit· message. They bear testimony to the incredible
ed in by Paul Roche, Rector of Paris University. courage of those who held the area for several
The Rector had almost certainly acted in con· hours against a deluge of tear gas, phosphorous
nivance with Alain Peyrefitte, M i nister of grenades and repeated charges of dub-swing­
Education, if not with the Elysee itself. Many stu· ing CRS. But they also show something of what
dents had been arrested, beaten up, and several the defe nders were striving for...
were summarily convicted. Mural propaganda is an i ntegral part of the
The u nbelievable yet thoroughly pre­
• revolutionary Paris of May 1968. it has become a
dictable ineptitude of this bureaucratic 'solu· mass activity, part and parcel of the Revolution's
tion' to the 'problem' of student discontent trig­ method of self-expression. the walls of the Latin
gered off a chain reaction. lt provided the pent· Quarter are the depository of a new rationality;
up anger, resentment and frustration of tens of no longer confined to books, but democratically
thousands of young people with both a reason displayed at street level and made available to
for further action and with an attainable objec­ all. The trivial and the p rofound, the traditional
tive. The students, evicted from the university, and the esoteric, rub shoulders in this new fra­
took to the street, demanding the liberation of ternity, rapidly breaking down the rigid barriers
their comrades, the reopening of their faculties,
·
and compartments in people's minds.
the withdrawal of the cops. 'Desobeir d'abord: alors ecris sur \es murs
Layers upon layers of new people were soon (Loi d u 10 Mai 1968)' reads an obviously recent
drawn into the struggle. The student u nion inscription, clearly setting the tone. 'Si tout le
(UNEF) and the union representing university peuple faisait comme no us' (if everybody acted
like us ... ) wistfully dreams another in joyful main root of the student 'crisis' in the backward·
anticipation, I think, rather than in any spirit of ness of the university in relation to society's cur·
self-satisfied substitutionism. Most of the slo· rent needs, in the quantitative inadequacy of the
gans are straightforward, correct and fairly tuition provided, in the semi-feudal attitudes of
orthodox: 'Liberez nos camarades'; 'Fouchet, some professors, and in the general insufficien·
Grimaud, demission'; 'A bas l'Etat policier'; cy of job opportunities. They see the University
'Greve Generate Lundi'; 'Travailleurs, etudiants, as unadapted to the modern world. The remedy
soldaires'; 'Vive les Conseils Ouvriers'. Other for them is adaptation: a modernising reform
slogans reflect the new concerns: 'La publicite te which would sweep away the cobwebs, provide
manfpule'; 'Examens = hierarchie'; ' L'art .est more teachers, better lecture theatres, a bigger
mort, ne consommez pas son cadavre'; 'A bas la educational budget, perhaps a more liberal atti·
societe de consommation'; 'Debout les damnes tude on the campus and, at the end of it all, an
de Nanterre'. The slogan 'Baisses·toi et broute' assured job.
(Bend your head and chew the cud) is obviously The rebels (which include some but by no
aimed at those whose minds are still full of tra· means all of the 'old' revolutionaries) see this
ditional preoccupations. concern with adapting the university to modern
'Contre la fermentation groupusculaire' society as something of a diversion. For it is
moans a large scarlet inscription. This one is modern society itself which they reject. They
really out of touch. For everywhere there is a consider bourgeois life trivial and mediocre,
profusion of pasted up posters and journals: repressive and repressed. They have no yearn·
Voix Ouvriere, Avant·Garde and Revoltes (for the ing (but only contempt) for the administrative
Trotskyists), Servir le Peuple and Humanite and managerial careers it holds out for them.
Nouvel/e (for the devotees of Chairman Mao), Le They are not seeking integration into adult soci·
Libertaire (for the Anarchists), Tribune Socialiste ety. On the contrary, they are seeking a chance
(for the PSU). Even odd copies of /' Humanite are radically to contest its adulteration. The driving
pasted up. lt is difficult to read them, so covered force of their revolt is their own alienation, the
are they with critical comments. meaninglessness of life under modern bureau·
On a hoarding, I see a large advertisement cratic capitalism. lt is certainly not a purely eco·
for a new brand of cheese: a child biting into an nomic deterioration in their standard of living.
enormous sandwich. 'C'est bon le fromage So· lt is no accident that the 'revolution' started
and·So' runs the patter. Someone has covered i.n the Nanterre faculties of Sociology and
the last few words with red paint. The poster Psychology. The students saw that the sociology
reads 'C'est bon la Revolution'. People pass by, they were being taught was a means of control·
look, and smile. ling and manipulating society, not a means of
I talk to my companion, a man of about 45, understanding it in order to change it. In the
an 'old' revolutionary. We discuss the tremen· process they discovered revolutionary sociology.
dous possibilities now opening up. He suddenly They rejected the niche allocated to them in the
turns towards me and comes out with a memo· great bureaucratic pyramid, that of 'experts' in
rable phrase: "To think one had to have kids and the service of a technocratic Establishment, spe·
wait 20 years to see all this... .
" cialists of the 'human factor' in the modern
We talk to others in the street, to young and industrial equation. In the process they discov·
old, to the 'political' and the 'unpolitical', to peo· ered the importance of the working class. The
ple at all levels of understanding and commit· amazing thing is that, at least among the active
ment. Everyone is prepared to talk · in fact layers of the students, these 'sectarians' sud·
everyone wants to. They all seem remarkably denly seem to have become the majority: surely
articulate. We find no·one prepared to defend the best definition of any revolution.
the actions of the administration. The 'critics' fall The two types of 'criticism' of the modern
into two main groups: French educational system do not neutralise one
The 'progressive' university teachers, the another. On the contrary, each creates its own
Communists, and a number of students see the kind of problems for the University authorities
and for the officials at the Ministry of Education. or. supervisor in sight. The workers stream in. A
The real point is that one kind of criticism · what loud hailer tells them to proceed to their respec­
one might call the quantitative one - could i n tive shops, to refuse to start work and to. pro­
time b e coped with by modern bourgeois socie­ ceed, at Sa m, to their traditional meeting place,
ty. The other.- the qualitative one · never. This is an enormous shed-like structure in the middle of
what gives it its revolutionary potential. The the lle Seguin (an island in the Seine entirely
'trouble with the University', for the powers that co)lered by parts of the Renault plant).
be, isn't that money can't be found for more As each worker goes through the gates; the
teachers. lt can. The 'trouble' is that the pickets give him a leaflet, jointly produced by
University is full of students · and that the heads the three unions. Leaflets in Spanish are also
of the students are full of revolutionary Ideas. distributed (over 2000 Spanish workers are
Among those we speak to there is a deep employed at Renault). French and Spanish ora­
awareness that the problem cannot be solved i n tors succeed one another, in short spells, at the
the Latin Quarter, that isolation o f the revolt in a microphone. Although all the unions are sup­
student 'ghetto' (even an 'autonomous' one) porting the one-day strike, all the orators seem
would spell defeat. They realise that the salva­ to belong to the CGT. lt's their loudspeaker...
tion of the movement lies in its extension to 6:45am. H u n d reds of workers are · now
other sectors of the population. But here wide stream ing in. Many look as if they had come to
d ifferences appear. When some talk of the work rather than to participate in mass meetings
importance of the working class it is as a substi­ at the plant. The decision to call the strike was
tute for getting on with any kind of struggle only taken on the Saturday afternoon, after
themselves, an excuse for denigrating the stu­ many of the men had already dispersed for the
dents' struggle as 'adventurist'. Yet it is precise­ weekend. Many seem unaware of what it's all
ly because of its unparalleled militancy that the about. I am struck by the number of Algerian and
students' action has established that direct black workers.
action works, has begun to i nfluence the There are only a few posters at the gate,
younger workers and to rattle the established again mainly those of the CGT. Some pickets
organisations. Other students realise the rela­ carry CFDT posters. There isn't an FO poster in
tionship of these struggles more clearly. We will sight. The road and walls outside the factory
find them later. at Censier, animating the 'work­ have been well covered with slogans: 'One day
er-student' action committees. strike on Monday'; 'Unity in defence of our
But enough, for the time being, about the claims'; 'No to the monopolies'. ·

Latin Quarter. The movement has already spread The little cafe near the gates is packed.
beyond its narrow confines. People seem u nusually wide awake and commu­
nicative for so early an hour. A newspaper kiosk
May 1': From Renault to the streets is selling about three copies of I' Humanite for
of Par1s every copy of anything else. The local branch of
the Communist Party is distributing a leaflet
Monday 13 May calling for 'resolution; calm, vigilance and unity'
and warning against 'provocateurs'.
6:15am, Avenl!e Yves Kermen. A clear, cloudless The pickets make no attempt to argue with
day. Crowds begin to gather outside the gates of those pouring in. No-one seems to know
the giant Renault works at Bol!logne Billancourt. whether they will obey the strike call or not. Less
The main trade union 'centrales' (CGT, CFDT and than 25°/o of Renault workers belong to any
FO) have called a one day general strike. They ' union at all. This is the biggest car factory in
are protesting against police violence in the Europe.
Latin Quarter and in support of long-neglected The loud hailer hammers home its message:
claims concerning wages, hours, the age of "The CRS have recently assaulted peasants at
'
retirement and trade union rights in the plants. Quimper, and workers at Caen, Rhodiaceta
The factory gates are wide open. Not a cop (Lyon) and Dassault. Now they are turning on the
students. The regime will not tolerate opposi­ like rear car seats, corn plete with attached
tion. lt will not modernise the country. lt will not springs, from the ground to fi rst floor level.
grant us our basic wage demands. Our one day Some to,ooo workers are soon assembled
strike will show both Government and em ploy­ in the shed. The orators address them through a
ers our determination. We must compel them to loudspeaker from ·a narrow platform some 40
retreat." The message is repeated again and feet up. The platform runs in front of what looks
again, like a gramophone record. I wonder like an elevated inspection post but which I am
whether the speal<er believes what he says, told is a union office inside the factory.
whether he even senses what lies ahead. The CGT speaker deals with various section­
At 7am a dozen Trotskyists of the FER al wage claims. He denounces the resistance of
(Federation des Etudiants Revolutionaires) turn the government "in the hands of the monopo­
up to sell their paper Revoltes. They wear large lies". He produces facts and figures dealing with
red and white buttons proclaiming their identity. the wage structure. Many highly skilled men are
A little later another group arrives to sell Voix not getting enough. A CFDT sp·eaker follows him.
Ouvriere. The loudspeaker immediately switch­ He deals with the steady speed-up, with the
es from an attack on the Gaullist government worsening of working conditions, with accidents
and its CRS to an attack on "provocateurs" and and with the fate of man in production. "What
"disru ptive elements, alien to the working kind of life is this? Are we always to remain pup­
class". The Stalinist speaker hints that the sell­ pets, carrying out every whim of the manage­
ers are in the pay of the government. As they are ment?" He advocates uniform wage increases
here, "the police must be lurking in the neigh­ for all ('augmentations non-hierarchisees'). An
bourhood". Heated arguments break out FO speaker follows. He is technically the most
between sellers and CGT officials. The CFDT competent, but says the least. In flowery rheto­
pickets are refused the use of the loudh!'liler. ric he talks of 1936, but omits all reference to
They shout "democratie o uvriere" and defend Leon Blum. The record of FO is bad in the facto­
the right of the 'disruptive elements' to sell their ry and the speaker is heckled from time to time.
stuff. A rather abstract right, as not a sheet is The CGT speakers then ask the workers to
sold. The front page of Revoltes carries an eso­ participate en masse in the big rally planned for
teric article on Eastern Europe. · that afternoon. As the last speaker finishes, the
M uch invective (but no blows) are aowd spontaneously breaks out into a rousing
exchanged. In the course of a n argument I hear 'lnternationale'. The older men seem to know
Bro. Trigon (delegate to the second e lectoral most of the words. The younger workers only
'college' at Renau lt) describe Danny Cohn· know the chorus. A friend nearby assures me
Bend it as "un agent du pouvoir" (an agent of the that in 20 years this is the first time he has heard
authorities). A student takes him up on this the song sung inside Renault (he has attended
point. The Trots don't. Shortly before Sam they dozens of mass meetings in the lle Seguin);
walk off, . their 'act of presence' accomplished There is an atmosphere of excitement, particu­
and d uly recorded for history. larly among the younger workers.
At about the same time, hundreds of work­ The crowd then breaks up into several sec­
ers who had entered the factory leave their tions. Some walk back over the bridge and out of
shops and assemble i n the sunshine in an open the factory. Others proceed systematically
space a few hundred yards inside the main gate. through the shops where a few hundred blokes
From there they amble towards lie Seguin, are still at work. Some of these men argue but
crossing one arm of the river Seine on the way. most seem only too glad for an excuse 'to stop
Other processions leave other points of the fac­ and join in the p rocession. Gangs weave their
tory and converge on the same area. The metal· way, joking and singing, amid the giant presses
tic ceiling is nearly 200 feet above our heads. and tanks. Those remaining at work are ironical­
Enormous stocks of components are piled up ly cheered, clapped or exhorted to "step on it",
high right and left. Far away to the right an or "work harder". Occasional foremen look on
assembly line is still working, lifting what looks helplessly, as one assembly line after another i s
brought to a halt. doesn't have to continue alone. There is an
Many of the lathes have coloured pictures unquenchable thirst for information, ideas, liter­
plastered over them: pin·ups and green fields, ature, argument, polemic. The man just stands
sex and s unshine. Anyone still working i s there as people surround him and press forward
exhorted to get o u t into the daylight, not just to to get the leaflets. Dozens of demonstrators,
dream about it. In the main plant, over half a without even reading the leaflet, help him dis­
mile long, hardly 12 men remain in their overalls. tribute them. Some 6ooo copies get out in a few
Not an angry voice can be heard. There is much minutes. All seem to be assidiously read. People
good h u moured banter. By uam thousands of argue, laugh, joke. I witnessed such scenes
workers have poured out into the warmth of a again and again .
morning in May. An open-air beer and sandwich Sellers of revolutionary literature are doing
stall, outside the gate, is doing a roaring trade. well. An edict, signed by the organisers of the
1.15 pm. The streets are crowded. The demonstration, that "the only literature allowed
response to the call for a 24-hour general strike would be that of the organisations sponsoring
has exceeded the wildest hopes of the trade the demonstration" (see I' Humanite, 13 May
unions. Despite the short notice Paris is paral· t968) is being enthusiastically flouted. This
ysed. The strike was only decided 48 hours ago, b u reaucratic restriction (much criticised the pre­
after the 'night of the barricades'. lt is moreover vious evening when announced at Censier by the
'illegal'. The law of the land demands a five-day stud ent d e legates to the Co-ordinating
notice before an 'official' strike can be called. Committee) obviously cannot be enforced i n a
Too bad for legality. crowd of this size. The revolution is bigger than
A solid phalanx of young people is walking any organisation, more tolerant than any institu­
up the Boulevard de Sebastopol, towards the tion 'representing' the masses, more realistic
Gare de I' Est. They are proceeding to the student than any edict of any Central Committee.
rallying point for the giant demonstration called Demonstrators have climbed onto walls,
jointly by the unions, the students' organisation onto the roofs of bus stops, onto the railings in
(UN E F) and the teachers' associations (FEN and front of the station . Some have loud hailers and
SN ESup). make short speeches. All the 'politicos' seem to
There is not a bus or car in sight. The streets be in one part or other of this crowd. I can see
of Paris today belong to the demonstrators. the banner of the )eunesse Comm uniste
Thousands of them are already in the square in Revolutionaire, portraits of Castro and Che
front of the station. Thousands more are moving Guevara, the banner of the FER, several banners
in from every direction. The plan agreed by the of 'Servir le Peuple' (a Maoist group) and the
sponsoring organisations is for the different cat­ banner of the UJCML (Union de la ]eunesse
egories to assemble separately and then to con· Comm u n iste Marxiste-Leniniste), another
verge on the Place de la Republique, from where Maoist tendency. There are also banners from
the march will proceed across Paris, via the Latin many educational establishments now occupied
Quarter, to the Place Denfert-Rochereau. by those who work there. Large groups of
We are already packed like sardines for as lyceens (high school kids) m ingle with the stu·
far as the eye can see, yet there is more than an dents as do many thousands of teachers.
hour to go before we are d ue to proceed. The At about 2pm the student section sets off,
sun has been shining all day. The girls are in singing the 'lnternationale'. We march zo-30
summer dresses, the young men in shirt sleeves. abreast, arms linked. There is a row of red flags
A red flag is flying over the railway station. There in front of us, then a banner so feet wide carry­
are many red flags in the crowd and several ing four simple words: 'Etudiants, Enseignants,
black ones too. Travailleurs, Solidaires'. lt is an im pressive
A man suddenly appears carrying a s uitcase sight. .
full of duplicated leaflets. He belongs to some The whole Boulevard de Magenta is a solid
left 'groupuscule' or other. He opens his s uitcase seething mass of humanity. We can't enter the
CONSfll iU�RAL du REL and distributes perhaps a dozen leaflets, Sut he Place de la Republique, already packed full of
demonstrators. One can't even move along the double, and succeed in infiltrating groups of 100
pavements or through adjacent streets. Nothing or so into parts of the march ahead of them, or
but people, as far a s the eye can see. behind them. The Stalinist stewards walking
As we proceed slowly down the Boulevard hand in hand and hemming the march in on
de Magenta, we notice on a third floor balcony, either side are powerless to prevent these sud­
high on our right, an SFIO (Socialist Party) head· den influxes. The student demonstrators scatter
quarters. The balcony is bedecked with a few like fish in water as soon as they have entered a
decrepit-looking red flags and a banner pro· given contingent. The CGT marchers themselves
claiming 'Solidarity with the students'. A few are q u ite friendly and readily assimilate the
elderly characters wave at us, somewhat self· newcomers, not quite sure what it's all about.
consciously. Someone in the crowd starts chant· The students' appearance, dress and speech
ing "0-pur-tu·nistes". The slogan is taken up, does not enable them to be identified as readily
rhythmically roared by thousands, to the dis· as they would be in Britain.
comfiture of those on the. balcony who beat a The main student contingent proceeds as a
hasty retreat. The people have not forgotten the compact body. Now that we are past the bottle­
use of the CRS against the striking miners in neck of the Place de la Republique the pace i s
1958 by 'socialist' Minister of the Interior Jules quite rapid. The student group nevertheless
Moch. They remember the 'socialist' Prime takes at least half an hour to pass a given point.
Minister Guy Mollet and his role d uring the The slogans of the students contrast strikingly
Algerian War. Mercilessly, the crowd shows its with those of the CGT. The students shout "le
contempt for the discredited politicians now Pouvoir aux Ouvriers" (All Power to the
seeking to j u m p on the bandwagon. "Guy Workers); "le Pouvoir est dans la rue" (Power
Mollet, au musee", tliey shout, amid laughter. lt lies in the street); "liberez nos camarades". CGT
is truly the end of an epoch. members shout ,; Pompidou, de m i ssion"

E
At about 3Pm we at last reach the Place de (Pom pidou, resign). The students chant "de
la Republique, our point of departure. The crowd Gaulle, assassin", or "CRS·SS". The CGT: "Des
here is so dense that several people faint and sous, pas de matraques" (money, not police
have to be carried into neighbouring cafes. Here clubs) or "Defence du pouvoir d'achat" (Defend
people are packed almost as tight as in the our purchasing power). The students say "Non a
street, but can at least avoid being injured. The I'Universite de classe". The CGT and the Stalinist
window of one cafe gives way under the pres­ students, grouped around the banner of their
sure of the crowd outside. There is a genuine paper Clarte reply "Universite Democratique".
fear, in several parts of the crowd, of being Deep political differences lie behind the differ·
crushed to death. The first union contingents ences of e m phasis. Some slogans are taken u p
fortunately begin to leave the square. There isn't b y everyone, slogans such a s "Dix ans, c'est
a policeman in sight. assez", "A bas I'Etat poli c ier", or "Bon anniver­
Although the demonstration has been saire, mon General". Whole groups mournfully
announced as a joint one, the CGT leaders are entone a well-known refrain: "Adieu, de Gau\le".
still striving desperately to avoid a mixing-up, on They wave their hand kerchieves, to the great
·

the streets, of students and workers. In this they merriment of the bystanders.
are moderately successful. By about 4-3opm the As the main stui:lent contingent crosses tlie
students' and teachers' contingent, perhaps Pont St Michel to enter the Latin Quarter it sud·
8o,ooo strong, finally leaves the Place " de la denly stops, in silent tribute to its wounded. All
Republique. H undreds of thousands of demon· thoughts are for a moment switched to those
strators have preceded it, hundreds of thou· lying in hospital, their sight in danger through
sands follow it, butthe ' left' contingent has been too much tear gas or their skulls or ribs fractured
well and truly 'bottled-in'. Several groups, by the truncheons of the CRS. The sudden, angry
understanding at last the CGT's manoeuvre� silence of this noisiest part of the demonstration
break·loose once we are out of the square. They conveys a deep impression of strength and reso­
take short cuts via various side streets, at the lution. One senses massive accounts yet to be
settled. 'tierce' (horse-betting), in watching the telly, i n
At the top of the Boulevard St Michel l drop their annual 'conges' (holidays), a n d that the
out of the march, cli mb onto a parapet lining the worldng class cannot see beyond the problems
Luxembourg Gardens, and just watch. I remain of its everyday life. lt was so palpably untrue. I
there for two hours as row after row of demon­ also thought of those who say that only a narrow
strators marches past, 30 or more a breast, a and rotten leadership lies between the masses
human tidal wave of fantastic, inconceivable and the total transformation of society. lt was
size. How many are they? 6oo,ooo? 8oo,ooo? A equally u ntrue. Today the working class i s
million? t,soo,ooo? No-one can really number beco ming conscious of i t s strength. W i l l i t
· them. The first of the demonstrators reached the decide, tomo rrow, to u s e it?
final dispersal point hours before the last ranks I rejoin the march and we proceed towards
had left the Place de la Republique, at 7pm. Denfert Rochereau. We pass several statues,
There were banners of every kind: union sedate gentlemen now bedecked with red flags
banners, student . ban ners, political banners, or carrying slogans such as 'Liberez nos cama­
no n-political banners, reformist banners, revolu­ rades'. As we pass a hospital silence again
tionary banners, banners of the 'Mouvement descends on the endless crowd. Someone starts
contre i'Armement Atomiq ue', banners of vari­ whistling the 'lnternationale'. Others take it up.
ous Conseils de Parents d'Eleves, banners of Like a breeze rustling over an enormous field of
every conceivable size and shape, proclaiming a corn, the whistled tune ripples out in all direc­
common abhorrence at what had happened and tions, From the windows of the hospital some
a common will to struggle on. Some banners nurses wave at us.
were loudly applauded, such as the one saying At various intersectio n s we pass traffic
'Liberons !'information' (Let's have a free news lights which by some strange inertia still seem
service) carried by a group of employees from to be working. Red and green alternate, at fixed
the ORTF. Some banners indulged in vivid sym­ intervals, meaning as little as bourgeois educa­
bolism, such as the gruesome one carried by a tion, as work in modern society, as the lives of
group of a rtists, depicting human hands, heads those walking past. The reality of today, for a few
and eyes, each with its price tag, on display on hours, has submerged all of yesterday's pat­
the hooks and trays of a butcher's shop. terns.
Endlessly they filed past. There were whole The part of the march in which I find myself
sections of hospital personnel, in white· coats, is now rapidly approaching what the organisers
some carrying posters saying 'Ou sont les dis­ have decided should be the dispersal point. The
parus des hopitaux?' (where are the missing CGT is desperately keen that its hundreds o f
injured?). Every factory, every major workplace thousands o f supporters should disperse quiet�
seemed to be represented. There were numer­ ly. lt fears them, when they are together. lt wants
ous groups of railwaymen, postmen, printers, them nameless atoms again, scattered to the
Metro personnel, metal workers, airport work­ four corners of Paris, powerless in the context of
ers, marl<et men, electricians, lawyers, sewer­ their individual preoccupations. The CGT sees
men, bank em ployees, building workers, glass itself as the only possible link between them, as
and chemical workers, waiters, m u n icipal the divinely ordained vehicle for the expression
employees, painters and decorators, gas work­ of their collective will. The 'Mouvement du 22
ers, shop girls, insurance clerks, road sweepers, Mars', on the other hand, had issued a call to the
film studio operators, busmen, teachers, work­ students and workers, asking them to stick
ers from t h e new plastic industries, row upon together and to proceed to the lawns of the
row upon row of them, the flesh and blood of Champ de Mars (at the foot of the Eiffel Tower)
modern capitalist society, an unending mass, a for a massive collective discussion on the expe­
power that could sweep everything before it, if it riences of the day and on the problems that lie
but decided to do so. ahead.
My thoughts went to those who say that the At this stage I sample for the first time what
workers are only interested in football, in the a 'service d'ord.re' composed · of Stalinist stew-
ards really means. All day, the stewards have orders are immediately jumped on by the stew·
obviously been anticipating this particular ards, denounced as 'provocateurs' and often
moment. They are very tense, clearly expeCting man-handled. I saw several. comrades of the
'trouble'. Above all else they fear what they call 'Mouvement du 22 Mars' physic ally assaulted,
'debordement', ie being outflanked on fhe left. their portable loudhailers snatched from their
For the last half-mile of the march five or six hands and their leaflets torn from them and
solid rows of them line u p on either side of the thrown to the ground. I n some sections there
demonstrators. Arms linked, they form a mas­ seemed to be dozens, in others hundreds, i n
sive sheath around the marchers. CGT officials others thousands o f ' provocateurs'. A number of
address the bottled�up demonstrators through minor punch-ups take place as the stewards are
two powerful loudspeakers mounted on vans, swept aside by these particular contingents.
instructing them to d isperse q u ietly via the Heated arguments break out, the demonstrators
Boulevard Arago, ie to p roceed in precisely the denouncing the Stalinists as 'cops' and as 'the
opposite direction to the one leading to the last rampart of the bourgeoisie'.
Champ de Mars. Other exits from the Place A respect for facts compels me to admit that
Denfert Rochereau are blocked by lines of stew­ most contingents followed the orders of the
ards linking arms. trade union bureaucrats. The repeated slanders
On occasions like this, I am told, the by the CGT and Communist Party leaders had
Communist Party calls up thousands of its mem· had their effect. The students were "trouble·
bers from the Paris area. lt also summons mem­ makers", "adventurers", "dubious elements".
bers from miles around, bringing them up by the Their proposed action would "only lead to a
coachload from places as far away as Rennes, massive i ntervention by the CRS" (who had kept
Orleans, Sens, Lille and Limoges. The municipal­ well out of sight throughout the whole of the
ities under Communist Party control provide fur­ afternoon). "This was just a demonstration, not
ther hundreds of these 'stewards' not necessari­ a prelude to Revolution." Playing ruthlessly on
ly Party members, but people dependent on the the most backward sections of the crowd, and
goodwill of the Party for their jobs arid future. physically assaulting the more advanced sec­
Ever since its heyday of participation in the gov­ tions, the apparatchniks of the CGT succeeded in
ernment (1945-47) the Party has had this kind of getting the bulk of the demonstrators to dis·
mass base in the Paris suburbs. lt has invariably perse, often under protest. Thousands went to
used it in circumstances like today. On this the Champ de Mars. But h u ndreds of thousands
demonstration there must be at least 1o,ooo went home. The Stalinists won the day, but the
such stewards, possibly twice that number. arguments started will surely reverberate down
The exhortations of the stewards meet with the months to come.
a variable response. Whether they are success­ At about 8pm an episode took place which
ful in getting particular groups to d isperse via changed the temper of the last sectio"ns of the
the Boulevard Arago depends of course on the march, now approaching the dispersal point. A
composition of the groups. Most of those which polic e van suddenly came u p one of the streets
the students h ave not succeeded in infiltrating leading into the Place Denfert Rochereau. lt
obey, although even here some of the younger must have strayed from its intended route, or
militants protest: "We are a . million in the perhaps its driver had assumed that the demon­
streets. Why should we go home?" Other groups strators had already d ispersed: Seeing the
hesitate, vacillate, start arguing. Student speak· crowd ahead the two u niformed gendarmes in
ers climb on walls and shout: "All those who the front seat panicked. U nable to reverse in
want to return to the telly, turn down the time in order to retreat, the driver decided that
Boulevard Arago. Those who are for joint worker­ his life hinged on forcing a passage through the
student discussions and for developing the thinnest section of the crowd. The vehicle accel·
struggle, turn down the Boulevard Raspai i and erated, hurling itself into the demonstrators at
proceed to the Champ de Mars". . about so miles an hour. People scattered wildly
Those p rotesting against the dispersion in all directions. Several people were knocked
down and two were seriously inj ured. Many career. For the students, and for many others, it
more narrowly escaped. The van was finally sur­ was the l lving proof that direct action worked.
rounded. One. of the policemen in the front seat Concessions had been won through struggle
. was dragged out and repeatedly punched by the which had been unobtainable by other means.
infuriated crowd, determined to lynch him. He Early on the Monday morning the CRS pla­
was finally rescued, in the nick of time, by the toons guard ing the entrance to the Sorbonne
stewards. They more or less carried him, semi­ were d iscreetly withdrawn. The students moved
consciqus, down a side street where he was in, first in small groups, then in hundreds, later
passed horizontally, l i ke . a battered blood in thousands. By midday the occupation. was
sausage, through an open ground floor window. complete. Every 'tricolore' was promptly hauled
To do this, the stewards had had to engage down, every lecture theatre occupied. Red flags
in a running fight with several hundred very were hoisted from the official flagpoles and from
angry marchers. The crowd then started rocking improvised ones at many windows, some over­
the stranded police van. The remaining police­ looking the streets, others the big internal court­
man drew his revolver and fired. People ducked. yard. Hundreds of feet above the milling stu·
By a .miracle no-one was hit. A hundred yards dents, enormous red and black flags fluttered
away the bullet made a hole, about three feet side by side from the Chapel dome.
above ground level, in a window of ' le Belfort', a What happened over the next few days will
big can� at 297 Boulevard Raspail. The stewa rds leave a permanent mark on the French educa­
again rushed to the rescue, forming a barrier tional system, on the structure of French society
between the crowd and the police . van, which and most important of aH on the minds of
• •

was allowed to escape down a side street, driv­ those who lived and made history d u ring that
en by the policeman who had fired at the crowd. hectic first fortnight. The Sorbonne was sudden­
Hundreds of demonstrators then thronged ly transformed from the fusty precinct where
round the hole in the window of the cafe. Press French capitalism selected and moulded its hierc
photographers were summoned, arrived, d u ly archs, its technocrats and its administrative
took their close-ups - none of which, of course, bureaucracy into a revolutionary vol c ano in full
were ever published. (Two d ays later I' Humanite eruption whose lava was to spread far and wide,
carried a few lines about the episode, at the bot­ searing the social structure of modern France.
tom of a column on page s.) One effect of the The physical occupation of the Sorbonne
episode is that several thousand more demon­ was followed by an intellectual explosion of
. strators decided not to disperse. They turned unprecedented violence. Everything, literally
and marched down towards the Champ de Mars, everything, was suddenly and simultaneously ·
shouting "lls ont tire a Oenfert" (they've shot at up for discussion, for question, for challenge.
us at Oenfert). If the incident had taken place an There were no taboos. lt is easy to criticise the
hour earlier, the evening of 13 May might have chaotic upsurge of thoughts, ideas and propos­
had a very different complexion. als unleashed in . such c.ircu mstances.
'Professional revolutionaries' and petty bour­
The Sorbonne 'Soviet' geois philistines criticised to their heart's con­
tent. Butin so doing they only revealed �ow they
On Saturday 11 May, shortly before midnight, Mr themselves were trapped in the ideolpgy of a
Pompidou, Prime Minister of France, overruled previous epoch and were incapable of tran·
his Minister of the I nterior, his M inister of scending it. They failed to recognise the tremen­
Education, and issued orders to his 'independ­ dous significance of the new, of all that could
ent' Judiciary. He ·announced that the police not be apprehended within their own pre-estab­
would be withdrawn from the Latin Quarter, that lished intellectual categories. The phenomenon
the faculties would re-open on Monday 13 May, was witnessed again and agailil, as it dou btless
and that the law would 'reconsider' the question has been in every really great upheaval in histo­
of the students arrested the previous week. lt ry.
was the biggest political climb-down of his Day and night, every lecture theatre was
packed out, the seat of continuous, passionate (frowned on for a generation) took over with a
debate on every subject that ever preoccupied vengeance. Literature stalls sprouted up a \e ng
thinking h u man ity. No formal lecturer ever the whole inner perimeter. Enormo us. portraits
enjoyed so massive an audience, was ever lis· appeared on the internal walls: MarX;·· Lenin,
tened to with such rapt attention or given such
• Trotsky, Mao, Castro; G uevara, a revolutionary
short shrift if he talked nonsense. resurrection breaking the bounds of time and
A kind of order rapidly prevailed. By the sec­ place. Even Stalin put i n a transient appeai�nce
ond day a noticeboard had appeared near the (above a Maoist stall) until it was tactfully sug­
front entrance a n n o u ncing what was being gested to the comrades that he wasn't really at
talked about, and where. ! noted: 'Organisation home in such company.
of the struggle'; 'Political and trade u n ion rights On the stalls themselves every kind of liter­
in the Un iversity'; 'University crisis or social cri­ ature suddenly blossomed forth in the summer
sis?'; ' Dossier of police repression'; 'Self-man­ sunshine: leaflets and pamph lets by. anarchists,
agement'; 'Non-selection' (or how to open the Stalinists, Maoists, Trotskyists (t hree varieties),
doors of the U niversity to everyone); 'Methods the PSU and the non-committed. The yard of the
of teaching'; 'Exams', etc. Other lecture theatres Sorbonne had become a gigantic revolutionary
were given over to the students-workers liaison d rug-store, in which the most esoteric products
comm ittees, soon to assume great i mportance. no longer had to be kept beneath the counter
In yet other halls, discussions were under way but could now be prominently . displayed. Old
on 'sexual repression', on 'the colonial ques­ issues of jou rnals, yellowed by the years, were
tion', on 'ideo logy and mystification'. Any group unearthed a n d often sold as well as more recent
of people wishing to d i scuss anything under the material. Eve rywhere there were groups of 10 or
sun would just take over one of the lecture the· 20 people, in heated discussion, people talking
atres or smaller rooms. Fortunately there were about the barricades, about the CRS, about their
dozens of these. own. experiences, but also about the commune
The first impression was of a gigantic lid of 1871, about 1905 and 1917, about the Italian
suddenly lifted, of pent-up thoughts and aspira­ left in 1921 and about France in 1936. A fusion
tions · suddenly exploding, on being released was taking place between the consciousness of
from the realrrf of dreams into the realm of the the revolutionary minorities and the conscious­
real and the possible. In changing their environ­ ness of whole new layers of people, dragged day
ment people themselves were changed. Those by day into the maelstrom of political controver­
who had never dared say anything suddenly felt sy. The students were learning within days what
their thoughts to be the most i mportant thing in it had taken others a lifetime to learn. Many
the world and said so. The shy became com­
• lyceens came to see what it was all about. They
municative. The helpless and isolated suddenly too got sucked into the vortex. I remember a boy
discovered that collective power lay in their of 14 explaining to an i ncred ulous man of 6o why
hands. The traditionally apathetic suddenly students should h ave the right to depose pro­
realised the intensity of their involvement. A fessors.
t remendous su rge of commu nity and cohesion Other things also happened. A large piano
gripped those who had previously seen them­ suddenly appeared i n the great central yard and
selves as iso lated and im potent puppets, domi­ • remained there for several days. People would
nated by institutions that they could neither come and play on it, surrounded by enthusiastic
control nor understand. People just went up and supporters. As people talked in the lecture the­
tall,ed to one another without a trace of self-con· atres of neo-capitalism and of its techniques of
sciousness. This state of euphoria lasted manipulation, strands ·Of Chopin and bars of
throughout the whole .fortnight I was there. An jazi:, bits of La Carmagnole and atonal composi­
inscription scrawled on a wall sums it up per­ tiQnS wafted through the air. One evening there
fectly: 'Deja dix jours de bonheur' (ten days of was a drum .recital, then some clarinet players
happiness already). took over. These 'diversions' may have infuriated
In the yard of the Sorbonne, politics some of the more single-minded revolutionaries,
but theY were as much part and parcel of the moning their courage, actually entered the erst·
total transformation of the Sorbonne as were the while sacrosanct premises,- as they were being
revolutionary doctrine� being proclaimed in the exhorted to by numerous posters proclaiming
lecture hails. that the Sorbonne was now open to all. Young
An exhibition of huge photographs of the workers who 'wouldn't have been seen in that
'night of the barricades' (in beautiful half-tones) place' a month ago now walked in in groups, at
appeared one morning, mounted on stands. No­ first rather self-consciously, later as if they
one .knew who had .put it up. Everyone agreed owned the place, which of course they did.
that it succinctly summarised the horror and As the days went by, another kind of inva·
glamour, the anger and promise of that fateful si on took place · the invasion by the cynical and
night. Even the doors of the Chapel giving on to the unbelieving, or · more charitably · by those
the yard were soon covered with inscriptions: who 'had only come to see'. lt gradually gained
'Open this door • Finis, les tabernacles'. momentum. At certain stages it threatened to
-' Religion is the last mystification'. Or more pro· paralyse the serious work being done, part of
saically: 'We want somewhere to piss, not some· which had to be hived off to the Fatuity. of
where to pray'. Letters, at Censier, also occupied by the stu·
The massive outer walls of the Sorbonne dents. lt was felt necessary, however, for the
were likewise soon plastered with posters • doors to be kept open, 24 hours a day. The mes·
posters announcing the first sit-in strikes, sage certainly spread: Deputations came first
posters describing the wage rates of whole sec· from other universities, then from high schools,
tions of Paris workers, posters announcing the later from factories and offices, to look, to ques·
next demonstrations, posters describing the sol· tion, to argue, to study.
idarity marches in Peking, posters denouncing The most telling sign, however, of the new
the. police repression and the use of CS gas (as and heady climate was to be found on the walls
well as ofordinary tear-gas) against the demon· of the Sorbonne corridors; Around the main lee·
strator's. There were posters, dozens of them, tu re theatres there is a maze of such corridors:
warning students against the Communist Party's dark, d usty, depressing, and hitherto unnoticed
band-wagon -jumping tactics, telling them how it passageways leading from nowhere in particular
had attacked their movement and how it was to nowhere else. Suddenly these corridors
now. seeking to assume its leadership. Political sprang to life in a firework of luminous mural
posters in plenty. But also others, proclaiming wisd'o in much of it of Situationist inspiration.

the new ethos; A big one for instance near the Hundreds of people suddenly stopped to read
main entrance, boldly proclaimed 'Defence d'in· such pearls as: 'Do not consume Marx. Live it';
terdire' .(Forbidding forbidden). And others, 'The future will only contain what we put into it
equally .to the point: 'Only the truth is. revolu­ now'; 'When examined, we will answer with
tionary', 'Our revolution · is greater than our· questions'; 'Professors, you make us feel old':
selves', 'We refuse the role assigned to us, we 'One doesn't compose with a society in decom·
will not be trained as police dogs'. People's con· position'; 'We m ust remain the u nadapted
cerns varied but converged. The posters reflect· ones'; 'Workers of all lands, enjoy yourselves';
ed tlie deeply libertarian prevailing philosophy: 'Those who carry out a revolution only half-way
'Humanity will only be happy when the last cap· • through merely dig themselves a tomb (St Just)';
italist has been strangled with the guts of the 'Please leave the PC (Comm unist Party) as clean
last bureaucrat'; 'Culture is disintegrating: on leaving as you would like to find it on enter·
Create!;; 'l take my wishes for reality for I believe ing'; 'The tears of the philistiiles are the nectar
in the reality of my wishes'; or more simply, of the gods'; 'Go and die in Naples, with the Club
'Creativity, spontaneity, life'. Mediterranee'; 'Long live communication, down
In street outside, hundreds of passers· with telecom m unication'; 'Masochism today
by read these improvised wall· dresses up as reformism'; 'We will claim noth·
gaped. Some sniggered. ing. We will ask for nothing. We will take. We will
loaae:a cassE�m. Some argued. Some, sum· occupy'; :'The only outrage to -the Tomb of the
Unknown Soldier was the outrage that put him I' Humanite had carried paragraphs either
there'; 'No, we won't be picked up by the Great attacking the students or making slimy innuen­
Party of the Working Class'. And a big inscrip­ d oes about them. Now the line suddenly
tion, well displayed: 'Since 1936 I have fought changed.
for wage increases. My father, before me, also The Party sent dozens of its best agitators
fought for wage increases. Now I have a telly, a into the Sorbonne to 'explain' its case. The case
fridge, a Volkswagen. Yet all in all, my life has was a simple one. The Party 'supported the stu­
always been a dog's life. Don't discuss with the dents' - even if there were a few 'dubious ele­
bosses. Eliminate them.' ments' in their leadership. lt 'always .had'. lt
Day after day the courtyard and corridors always would.
are crammed, the scene of an incessant bi-d irec­ Amazing scenes followed . Every Stalinist
tional flow to every conceivable part of the enor­ 'agitator' would immediately be surrounded by a
mous building. lt may look like chaos, but it is large group of well-informed young people,
the chaos of a beehive or of an anthill. A new denouncing the Party's counter-revolutionary
structure is gradually being evolved. A canteen role. A wall-paper had been put u p by the com­
has been organised in one big hall. People pay rades of Voix Ouvriere on which had been post­
what they can afford for glasses of orange juice, ed, day by day, every statement attacking the
'menthe', or 'grenadine' - and for h a m or stud ents to have appeared iri /' Humanite or i n
sausage rolls. I enquire whether costs are cov­ any o f a dozen Party leaflets. The 'agitators'
ered and am told they more o r less break even. couldn't get a word in edgeways. They would be
I n another part of the b4ilding a children's jumped on (non-violently). "The evidence was
creche has been set up, elsewhere a first-aid over there, comrade. Would the Party comrades
station, elsewhere a dormitory. Regular sweep­ like to come and read just exactly what the Party
ing-up rotas are organised. Rooms are allocated had been saying not a week ago? Perhaps
to the Occupation Committee, to the Press I' Humanite would like to grant the students
Committee, to the Propaganda Committee, to space to reply to some of the accusations made
the student/worker liaison committees, to the against them?" Others in the audience would
committees dealing with foreign students, to the then bring u p the Party's role d uring the Algerian
action committees of Lyceens, to the commit­ War, during the miners' stril<e of 1958, d u ring the
tees dealing with the allocation of premises, and years of 'tripartisme' (1945-1947). Wriggle as
to the numerous commissions undertaking spe­ they tried, the 'agitators' just could not escape
cial projects such as the compiling of a dossier this kind of 'instant education'. lt was interest­
on police atrocities, the study of the implications ing to note that the Party could not entrust this
of autonomy, of the examination system, etc. 'salvaging' operation to its younger, student
Anyone seeking work can readily find it. members. Only the 'older comrades' could safe·
The composition of the committees was very ly venture into this hornets' nest. So much so
variable. lt often changed from day to day, as the that people would say that anyone in the
committees gradually found their feet. To those Sorbonne ov�r the age of 40 was.either a cop­
who pressed for instant solutions to every prob­ per's nark or � stalinist stooge.
lem it would be answered: "Patience, comrade. The most dramatic periods of the occupa­
Give us a chance to evolve an alternative. The tion were !undoubtedly the 'Assemblees
bourgeoisie has controlled this u niversity for Generales', or plenary sessions, held every night
nearly two centuries. lt has solved nothing. We in the giant amphitheatre. This was the soviet,
are building from rock bottom. We need a month the ultimate ,source of all decisions, the fount
or two... .
" and origin of direct democracy. The amphithe­
Confronted with this tremendous explosion atre could seat u p to 5000 people in its enor­
which it had neither foreseen nor been able to mous hemicyde, surmounted by three balcony
control the Communist Party tried desperately tiers. As ofte � as not every seat was taken and
to salvage what it could of its shattered reputa­ the crowd would flow u p the aisles and onto the
tion. Between 3 May and 13 May every issue of podium. A black flag and a red one hung over the
simple wooden table at which the chairman sat. Students in front of the packed auditorium. The
Having seen meetings of so break up in chaos it scene remains printed in my mind.
is an amazing experience to see a meeting of "Explain to us", Cohn-Bendit said, "why the
sooo get down to business. Real events d eter­ Communist Party and the CGT told their mili·
mined the themes and ensured that most of the tants to disperse · at Denfert Rochereau, why it
talk was down to earth. prevented them joining up with u s for a discus­
The topic having been decided, everyone sion at the Champ de Mars?".
was allowed to speak. Most speeches were "Simple, really", sneered Catala. "The
made from the podium but some from the body agreement concluded between the CGT, the
of the hall or from the balconies. The loudspeak­ CFDT, the U N EF and the other sponsoring organ·
er equipment usually worked but sometimes isations stipulated that dispersal would take
didn't. Some speakers could command immedi­ place at a predetermined place. The Joint
ate attention, without even raising their voices. Sponsoring Committee had not sanctioned any
Others would instantly p rovoke a hostile further developments... "
response by the stridency of their tone, their "A revealing answer", replied Cohn-Bendit,
insincerity or their more or less obvious "the organisations hadn't foreseen that we
attempts at manoeuvring the assembly. Anyone would be a million in the streets. But life is big­
who waffled, or reminisced, or came to recite a ger than the organisations. With a million people
set-piece, or talked in terms of slogans, was almost anything is possible. You say the
given short shrift by the audience, politically the Committee hadn't sanctioned anything further.
most sophisticated I have ever seen. Anyone On the day of the Revolution, comrade, you will
making practical · suggestions was listened to doubtless tell us to forego it 'because it hasn't
attentively. So were those who sought to inter­ been sanctioned by the appropriate sponsoring
pret the movement in terms of its own experi­ committee' ... .
"

ence or to point the way ahead. This brought the house down. The only ones
Most s peakers were granted three minutes. who didn't rise to cheer were a few dozen
Some were allowed much more by popular Stalinists. Also, revealingly, those Trotskyists
acclaim. The crowd itself exerted a tremendous who tacitly accepted the Stalinist conceptions
control on the platform and on the speakers. A and whose only quarrel with the CP is that it had
two-way relationship emerged very quickly. The excluded them from being one of the 'sponsor·
political maturity of the Assembly was shown ing organisations'.
most stril<ingly in its rapid realisation that boo­ That same night the Assembly took three
ing or cheering during speeches slowed down
the Assembly's own deliberations. Positive · important decisions. From now on t h e Sorbonne
would constitute itself as a revolutionary head­
speeches were loudly cheered • at the end. q uarters ('Smolny' someone shouted). Those
Demagogic or useless ones were impatiently who worked there would devote their main
swept aside. Conscious revolutionary minorities efforts not to a mere re-organisation of the edu­
played an important catalytic role in these delib­ cational system, but to a total subversion of
erations, but never sought at least the more
• bourgeois society. From now on the University
intelligent ones to impose their will · on the
• would be .open to all those who subscribed to
mass body. Although in the early stages the these aims. The proposals having been accepted
Assembly had its fair share of exhibitionists, the audience rose to a man and sang the loud·
provocateurs and nuts, the overhead costs of est, most i m passioned 'lnternationale' I have
direct democracy were not as heavy as one ever heard. The echoes must have reverberated
might have expected. as far as the Elysee Palace on the other side of
There were moments of excitement and the River Seine ...
moments of exhalation. On the night of 13 May,
after the massive march through the streets of The Censler Revolutionaries
Paris, Daniel Cohn-Bendit confronted J M Catala.
General secretary of the Union of Communist Atthe same time as the students occupied the
'
- -

Sorbonne, they als o took over the 'Centre edge that they had no time to waste. They allfelt
Censier' (the new Paris University Faculty of the pressing need for direct action propaganda,
Letters). and that the u rgency of the situation required of
Censier is an enormous, ultra-modern, them that they transcend any doctrinal differ­
steel-concrete-and-glass affair situated at the ences they might have with one another. They
south-east corner of the Latin Quarter. Its occu­ were all intensely political people. By and large,
pation attracted less attention than did that of their politics were those of the new and increas­
the Sorbonne. lt was to prove, however, just as ingly important historical species: the ex-mem­
significant an event. For while the Sorbonne was bers of one or other revolutionary organisation.
the shop window ofrevolutionary Paris .:., with all What were their views? Basically they boiled
that that implies in terms of garish display down to a few simple propositions. What was
Censier was its dynamo, the place where things needed just now was a rapid, a utonomous
really got done. development of the working class struggle, the
To many, the Paris May Days must have seen setting up of elected strike committees which
an essentially nocturnal affair: nocturnal battles would link union and non-union members in all
with the CRS, nocturnal barricades, nocturnal strike-bound plants and enterprises, regular
debates in the great amphitheatres. But this was meetings of the strikers so that fundamental
but one side of the coin. While some argued late decisions remained in the hands of the rank and
into the Sorbonne night, others went to bed file, workers' defence committees to defend
early for in the mornings they would be handing pickets from police intimidatio n , a constant diac
out leaflets at factory gates or in the suburbs, logue with the revolutionary students aimed at
·
leaflets that had to be drafted, typed, du plicat­ restoring to the working class its own tradition
ed, and the distribution of which had to be care· of direct democracy and its own aspiration to
fully organised. This patient, systematic work self-management (auto-gestion), usurped by
was done at Censier. lt contributed in no small the bureaucracies of the trade unions and the
measure to giving new revolutionary conscious­ political parties.
ness articulate expression. For a whole week the various Trotskyist and
Soon after Censier had been occupied a Maoist factions didn't even notice what was
group of activists commandeered a large part of going on at Censier. They spent their time in
the third floor. This space was to be the head­ public and often acrimonious debates at the
q uarters of their proposed 'worker-student Sorbonne as to who could provide the best lead­
action committees'. The general idea was to ership. Meanwhile, the comrades at Censier
establish links with groups of workers, however were steadily getting on with the work. The
small, who shared the general libertarian-revo­ majority of them had 'been through' either
lutionary outlook of this group .of students. Stalinist or Trotsl<yist organisations. They had
Contact having been made, workers and stu­ left behind them all ideas to the effect that
dents would co-operate in the joint drafting of 'intervention' was meaningful only in terms of
leaflets. The leaflets would discuss the immedi­ potential recruitment to their own particular
ate problems of particular groups of workers, group. All recognised the need for a widely­
but in the light of What the students had shown based and moderately structured revo iutionary
to be possible. A given leaflet would then be movement, but none of them saw the building of
jointly distributed by workers and students, out· such a movement as an immediate, all important
side the particular factory or office to which it task, on which propaganda should immediately
referred. In some instances the distribution be centred.
would have to be undertaken by students alone, Duplicators belonging to 'subversive ele·
in others hardly a single student would be need­ ments' were brought in. U niversity duplicators
ed. were commandeered. Stocks of paper and ink
What brought the Censier comrades togeth­ were obtained from various sources and by vari­
er was a deeply-felt sense of the revolutionary ous means. Leaflets began to pour out, first in
potentialities of the situation. and the know!- hundreds! then in thousands, then in te�s of
thousands as linl<s were established with one our health, to our nervous system and an
group of rani< and file workers after another. On insult to our status of human beings ... We
the first day alone, Renault, Citroen, Air France, refuse to entrust our demands any longer
Boussac, the Nouvelles Messagerires de Presse, to professional trade union leaders. lil<e
Rhone-Poulenc and the RATP (Metro) were con­ the students, we must take the control of
tacted. The movement then snowballed. our affairs into our own hands".
Every evening at Censier, the action commit· Renault leaflet "If we want our wage
tees reported bacl< to an 'Assemblee Generate' increases and our claims concerning con­
devoted exclusively to this kind of work. The ditions of work to be secure, if we don't
reactions to the distribution were assessed, the want them constantly threatened, we
content of future leaflets discussed. These dis­ must now struggle for a fundamental
cussions would usually be led off by the worker change in society As workers we should
.•.

contact who would describe the im pact of the ourselves seek to control the operation of
leaflet on his workmates. The most heated dis­ our enterprises. Our objectives are simi­
cussion centred on whether d i rect attacks lar to those of the students. The manage­
should be m a de on the leaders of the CGT or ment (gestion) of industry and the man­
whether mere suggestions as to what was need­ agement of the university should be dem­
ed to win would be sufficient to expose every­ ocratically ensured by those who work
thing the union leaders had (or hadn't) done and there..."

everything they stood for. The second viewpoint Rhone-Poulenc leaflet "Up till now we
prevailed. tried to solve our problems through peti­
The leaflets were usually very short, never tions, partial struggles, the election of
more than 200 or 300 words. They nearly all better leaders. This has led us nowhere.
started by listing the workers grievances - or The action · of the students has shown us
just by describing their conditions of worl<. They that only rank and file action could com­
would end by inviting workers to call at Censier pel the authorities to retreat ...the stu­
or at the Sorbonne. "These places are now dents are challenging the whole purpose
yours. Come there to discuss your problems with of bourgeois education. They want to
others. Tal<e a hand yourselves in mal<ing l< nown tal<e the fundamental decisions them­
your problems and demands to those around selves. So should we. We should decide
you". Between this kind of opening and this kind the purpose of production, and at whose
of conclusion, most leaflets contained one or cost production will be carried out".
two key political points. District leaflet (distributed in the streets
The response was instantaneous. More and at Boulogne Billancourt) "The govern­
more wo'rkers dropped in to draft joint leaflets ment fears the extension of the move­
with the students. Soon there was no lecture ment. lt fears the developing un ity
room big enough for the d a i ly 'Assem blee between workers and students.
Generate'. The students learned a great deal Pompidou has announced that 'the gov­
from the worl<ers' self-discipline and from the ernment will defend the Republic'. The
systematic way in which they presented their Army and police are being prepared. De
reports. it was all so different from the 'in-fight­ Gaulle will speak on the 24th. Will he
ing' of the political sects. There was agreement send the CRS to · clear pickets out of
that these were the finest lectures held at strikebound plants? Be prepared. In
Censier! workshops and faculties, think in terms of
Among the more telling lines of these self-defence ..."

leaflets, I noted the following: Every day dozens of such leaflets were dis­
Air France .leaflet "We refuse to accept a cussed, typed, · duplicated, distributed. Every
degrading 'modernisation' which means evening we heard ofthe response: "The b lol<es
we are constantly watched and have to think it's tremendous. it's just what they are
submit to conditions which are harmful to ·, thinking. The union officials never tall< like this".
"The blokes liked the leaflet. They are sceptical a kind no modern city has ever had pushed into
about the 12%. They say prices will go up and it before. This kind of activity had transformed
that we'll lose it all in a few months. Some say these students and had contributed to trans­
let's push all together now and take on the lot". forming the environment around them. They
"The leaflet certainly started · the lads talking. were simultaneously disrupting the social struc­
They've never had so much to say. The officials ture and having the time of their . lives. In the
had to wait their turn to speak..." words of a slogan scrawled on the wall: 'On n'est
I vividly remember a young printing worker pas la pour s'emmerder' (you'll have to look this
who said one night that these meetings were the one up in the dictionary).
most exciting thing that had ever happened to
him. All his life he had dreamed of meeting peo� Getting Together
pie who thought and spoke like this. But every
time he thought he had met one all they were When the news of the first factory occupation
· interested in was what they could get out of him. (that of the Sud Aviation plant at N a ntes)
This was the first time he had been offered dis­ reached the Sorbonne late .d uring the night of

i nterested help. Tuesday 14 May - there were scenes of inde­


I don't know what has happened at Censier scribable enthusiasm. Sessions were interrupt·
since the end of May. When I left, sundry Trots ed for the announcement. Everyone seemed fo
were beginning to move in, "to politicise the sense the significance of what had just hap­
leaflets·" (by which I presume they meant that pened. After a full minute of continuous, deliri­
the leaflets should now talk about "the need to ous cheering, the audience broke into a syn­
build the revolutionary Party"). If they succeed ­ chronous, rhythmical clapping, apparently
which I doubt, knowing the calibre of the Censier reserved for great occasions.
comrades - it will be a tragedy. On Thursday 16 May the Renault factories at
The leaflets were in fact political. During the Cleon (near Rouen) and at Flins (North West of
whole of my short stay in France I saw nothing Paris) were occupied. Exc .ited groups in the
more intensely and relevantly political (in the Sorbonne yard remained glued to their transis­
best sense of the term) than the sustained cam­ tors as hour by hour news came over of further
paign emanating from Censier, a campaign for occupations. Enormous posters were put up,
constant control of the struggle from below, for both inside and outside the Sorbonne, with the
self-defence, for worl<ers' management of pro· most up-to-date information of which factories
duction, for popularising the concept of workers' had been occupied: the Nouvelles Messageries
councils, for explaining to one and all the de Presse in Paris, Kleber Colombes at
tremendous relevance, in a revolutionary situa· Caudebec, Dresser-Dujardin at Le Havre, the
tion, of revolutionary demands, of organised naval shipyard at Le Trait... and finally the
self-activity, of collective self-reliance. Renault works at Soulogne B illancouit. Within
As I left Censier I could not help thinking 48 hours the task had to be abandoned. No
how the place epitomised the crisis of modern noticeboard - or panel of noticeboards - was
bureaucratic capitalism. Censier is no educa­ large enough. At last the students felt that the
·
tional slum. it is an ultra-modern building, one battle had really been /oined.
of the showpieces of Gaullist 'grandeur'. lt has Early on Friday afternoon an e mergency
dosed circuit television in the lecture theatres, 'General Assembly' was held. The meeting
modern plumbing, and slot machines distribut· decided to send a big student deputation to the
ing 24 different kinds of food - in sterilised con­ occupied Renault works. Its aim was to establish
tainers - and 10 different kinds of drink. Over contact, express student solidarity and, if possi­
90% of the students there are of petty bourgeois ble, discuss common problems. The march was
or bourgeois backgrounds. Yet such is their scheduled to leave the Place de la Sorbonne at
rejection of the society that nurtured them that 6pm.
they were working duplicators 24 hours a day, At about spm thousands of leaflets were
turning out a flood of revolutionary literature of suddenly distributed in the amphitheatres, in
the Sorbonne yard and in the streets around. Many joined the march who were not Maoists
They were signed by the Renault Bureau of the and who did n't necessarily agree with this par­
CGT. The Communist Party had been working... ticular formulation of its objectives.
fast. The leaflets read: Although small when com pared to other
"We have just heard that students and marches, this was certainly a most political one.
teachers are proposing to set out this afternoon Practically everyone on it belonged to one or
in the direction of Renault. This decision was other of the 'grou puscules': a spontaneous unit­
taken without consulting the appropriate trade ed fro nt of Maoists, Trotskyists, anarchists, the
union sections of the CGT, CFDT and FO. comrades of the Mouvement d u 22 Mars and
"We greatly appreciate the solidarity of the various othe.rs. Everyone knew exactly what he
students and teachers in the common struggle was doing. lt was this that i n furiated the
against the 'pouvoir personnel' Oe de Gau lle) Communist Party.
and the employers, but are opposed to any ill­ The march set off noisi ly, crosses the
judged initiative. which might threaten our devel­ Boulevard St Michel, and passes in front of the
oping movement and facilitate a provocation occupied Odeon Theatre (where several hundred
which would lead to a diversion by the govern­ more joyfully join it). lt then proceeds at a very
ment. brisk pace down the rue de Va ugirard, the
"We strongly advise the organisers of this longest street in Paris, towards the working
demonstration against proceed ing with their class d istricts to the South West of the city,
plans. growing steadily in size and militancy as it
"We intend, together with the workers now advances. lt is important to reach the factory
struggling for thei r claims, to lead our own before the Stalinists have time to mobilise their
strike. We refuse any external intervention, in big battalions ....
conformity with the declaration jointly signed by Slogans such as "Avec nous, chez Renault"
the CGT, CFDT and FO union, and app,roved this (co me with us to Renault) , "le pouvoir est dans
morning by 23,000 workers belonging to the fac­ la rue" (power lies i n the street), "Le pouvoir aux
tory". ouvriers" (power to the workers) are shouted
The distortion and dishonesty of this leaflet lustily, again and again. The Maoists shout "A
defy description. No-one intended to instruct the bas le gouvernement gaulliste anti-populaire de
workers how to run the strike and no student chomage et de mise re" - a long and politically
would have the presumption to seek to assume equivocal slogan, but one eminently suited to
its leadership. All the students wanted was to collective shouting. The lnternationale bursts
express solidarity with the workers in what was out repeatedly, sung this time by people who
now a . common struggle against the state and seem to know the words even the second
the employing class. verse!
The CGT leaflet came like any icy shower to By the time we have marched the five miles
the less political students and to all those who to lssy-les-MoulineaulX. it i s already dark. Way
still had illusions about Stalinism. "They won't behind us now are the bright lights of the Latin
let us get through". "The workers don't want to Quarter and of the fashionable Paris known to
talk with us". The identification of workers with tourists. We go through small, poorly-lit streets,
'their' organisation is very hard to break down. the uncollected rubbish piled high in places.
Several hundred who had intended to march to Dozens of young people join us en route, attract­
Billancourt were probably put off. The U N E F vac­ ed by the noise and the singing of revolutionary
illated, reluctant to lead the march in direct vio­ songs such as 'La )eune Garde', 'Z i m merwa l d'
lation of the wishes of the CGT. and the songs of the Parisians. "Chez Renau lt,
Finally some 1500 people set out, under a chez Renault" the marchers shout. People con­
single banner, hastily prepared by some Maoist gregate in the doors of the bistros, or peer out of
students. The banner proclaimed: 'The strong the windows of crowded flats to watch us pass.
hands ofthe working class must now take over Some look on in amazement but many- possibly
the torch from thefragite hands ofthe students'. a majority- now clap or wave encouragement. I n
some streets many Algerians line the pavement. An interesting exchange takes place. A
Some join in the shouting of "CRS· - SS"; group of demonstrators starts shouting "Les
"Charonne"; "A bas l'Etat police". They have not usines aux ouvriers", (the factories to the work­
forgotten. Most look on shyly or smile in an ers). The slo.gan spreads like wildfire through
embarrassed way. Very few join the march. the crowd. The Maoists, now in a definite minor­
On we go, a few miles more. There isn't a ity, are rather annoyed. (According to Chairman
gendarme in sight. We cross the Seine and even­ Mao, workers' control is a petty-bourgeois, anar­
tually slow down as we approach a square cho-syndicalist deviation). "Les usines aux
beyond which lie the Renault works. The streets ouvriers" ... to, 20 times the slogan reverberates
here are very badly-lit. There is a sense of round the Place Nationale, taken up by a crowd
intense excitement in the air. now some 3000 strong.
We suddenly come up against a lorry, As the shouting subsides, a lone voice from
parked across most of the road, and fitted with one of the Renault roofs shouts back: "La
loudspeaker equipment. The march stops. On Sorbonne aux Etudiants". Other workers on the
the lorry stands a CGT official. He speaks for five same roof take it up. Then those on the other
minutes. In somewhat chilly tones he says how roof. By the volume of their voices there must be
pleased he is to see us. "Thank you for coming, at least too of them, on top of each building.
comrades. We appreciate your solidarity. But There is then a moment of silence. Everyone
please no provocations. Don't go too near the thinks that the exchange has come to an end.
gates as the management would use it an But one of the demonstrators starts chanting:
excuse to call the police. And go home soon. it's "La Sorbonne aux ouvriers". Amidst general
cold and you'll need all your strength in the days laughter, everyone joins in.
to come". We start talking. A rope is q uickly passed
The students have brought their own loud­ down from the window, a bucket at the end of it.

-�
hailers. One or two speak, briefly. They take note Bottles of beer and packets of fags are passed
of the comments of the comrade from the CGT. up. Also revolutionary leaflets. Also bundles of
They have no intention of provoking anyone, no papers, (mainly copies of Servir Le Peuple - a
wish to usurp anyone's functions. We then slow­ Maoist journal carrying a big title 'Vive la CGT').
ly but q uite deliberately move forwards into the At street level there are a number of gaps in the
square, on each side of the lorry, drowning the metal fa�ade of the building. Groups of students
protests of about a hundred Stalinists in a pow­ cluster at these half dozen openings and talk to
erful 'lnternationale'. Workers in neighbouring groups of workers on the other side. They dis­
cafes come out and join us. This time the Party cuss wages, conditions, the CRS, what the lads
had not had time to mobilise its militants. lt inside need most, how the students can help.
could not physically isolate us. The men talk freely. They are not Party members.
Part of the factory now looms up right ahead They think the constant talk of provocateurs a
of us, three storeys high on our left, two storeys bit far fetched. Butthe machines must be pro­
high on our right. In front of us, there is a giant tected. We point out that two or three students
metal gate, closed and bolted. A large first floor inside the factory, escorted by the strike com­
window to our right is crowded with workers. mittee, couldn't possibly damage the machines.
The front row sit with their legs dangling over They agree. We contrast the widely open doors
the sill. Several seem in their teens, one of them of the Sorbonne with the heavy locks and bolts
waves a big red flag. There are no 'tricolores' in on the Renault gates - closed by the CGT offi­
sight - no 'dual allegiance' as in other occupied cials to prevent the ideological contamination of
places I had seen. Several dozen more workers 'their militants'. How silly, we say, to have to talk
are on the roofs of the two buildings. through these stupid little slits in the wall. Again
We wave. They wave back. We sing the they agree. They will put it to their 'dirigieants'
'lnternationale'. They join in. We give the (leaders). No-one seems, as yet, to think beyond
clenched fist salute. They do likewise. this.
Everybody cheers. Contact has been made. There is then a diversion. A hundred yards
away a member of the FER gets up on a parked Sylvain, a CGT secretary, had arrived with loud­
car and starts making a speech through a loud­ speaker equipment to tell them "they weren't
hailer. The intervention is completely out of tune numerous enough, to start work again, that they
with the dialogue that is just starting. it's the would see tomorrow about a one day strike". H e
same gramophone record that we have been is absolutely by-passed. At spm Halbeher, gen­
hearing all week at the Sorbonne. "Call on the . eral secretary of the Renault CGT, announces,
union leaders to organise the election of strike pale as a sheet, that the "CGT has called for the
committees in every factory. Force the union occupation of the factory". "Tell your friends",
leaders to federate the strike committees. Force the lads say. " We startedit. But will we be able
the union leaders to set up a national strike to keeJll it in our hands? Ca, c'est un autre prob­
committee. Force them to call a general strike leme...
"

throughout the whole of the country" (this at a Students? Well, hats off to anyone who can
time when millions of workers are already on thump the cops that hard! The lads tell us two of
strike without �my call whatsoever!). The tone is their mates had disappeared from the factory
strident, almost hysterical, the misjudging of the altogether 10 days ago "to help the Revolution".
mood monumental. The demonstrators them­ Left family, jobs, everything. And good luck to
selves d rown the speaker in a loud them. "A chance like this comes once in a life­
'l nternationale'. As the last bar fades the time". We discuss plans, how to develop the
Trotskyist tries again. Again the demonstrators movement. The occupied factory could be a
drown him. ghetto, 'isolant les d u rs' (isolating the most mil­
Groups stroll up the Avenue Yves Kermen, to itant). We talk about camping, the cinema, the
the other entrances to the factory. Real contact Sorbonne, the future. Almost, until sunrise...
is here more difficult to establish. There is a
crowd outside the gate but most of them are
Party members. Some won't talk at aiL Other 'Attention Aux Provocateurs'
just talk slogans.
We walk back to the sq uare. lt is now well Social upheavals, such as the one France has
past midnight. The crowd thins. Groups drop just been through, leave behind them a trail of
into a couple of cafes which are still open. Here shattered reputations. The image of Gaullism as
we meet a whole group of young workers, aged a meaningful way of life, 'accepted' by the
about 18. They had been in the factory earlier in French people, has taken a tremendous knock.
the day. But so has the image of the Communist Party as
They tell us that at any given time, just over a viable challenge to the French establishment.
1ooo workers are engaged in the occupation. As far as the students a re concerned the
The strike started on the Thursday afternoon, at recent actions of the PCF (Parti Communiste
about 2pm, when the group of youngsters from Francais) are such that the Party has probably
shop 70 decided to down tools and spread into sealed its fate in this milieu for a generation to
all parts of the factory asking their mates to do come. Among the workers the effects are more
likewise. That same morning they had heard of difficult to assess and it would be premature to
the occupation of Cleon and that the red flag attempt this assessment. All that can be said is
was floating over the factory at Flins. There had that the effects are sure to be profound although
been a lot of talk about what to do. At a midday they will probably take some time to express
meeting the CGT had spoken vaguely of a series themselves. The proletarian condition itself was
of rotating strikes, shop by shop, to be i nit iated for a moment questioned. Prisoners who have
the following day. had a glimpse of freedom do not readily resume
The movement spread at an incredible pace. a life sentence.
The youngsters went . round shouting The full implications of the role of the PCF
"Occupation! Occupation!". Half the factory had and of the CGT have yet to be appreciated by
stopped working before the union officials British revolutionaries. They need above all else
realised what was happening. At about 4pm, to be informed. In this section we will document
the role of the PCF to be best of o u r ability. lt is numbe rs (lt the gates of factories and in .places
important to realise that for every ounce of shit where immigrant workers live, distributing
thrown at the students in its official publication, leaflets and other propaganda. These false revo­
the Party poured tons more over them at meet­ . lutionaries must be unmasked, for objectively
ings or in private conversations. In the nature of they are serving the interests of the Gaullist
things it i s more difficult to document this kind power and of the big capitalist monopolies."
of slander.
I Monday 6 May
Friday3 Mdy
The police have been occupying the Latin
A meeting was called in the yard of the Sorbonne Quarter over the weekend. There have been big
by U N E F, JCR, MAU and FER to protest at the clo­ student street demonstrations. At the call of
sure of the Nanterre faculty. lt was attended by U N EF and SNESup 2o,ooo students marched
militants of the Mouvement du 22 Mars. The from Denfert Rochereau to St Germain des Pres
police were called in. by Rector Roche and calling for the liberation of the arrested workers
activists from all these groups were arrested. and students. Repeated police assaults on the
The UEC (Union des Etudiants demonstrators: 422 arrested, Boo wounded.
Communistes) . didn't participate in this cam­ L' Humanite states: "One can dearly see
paign. But it d i stributed a leaflet i n the today the outcome of the adventurist actions of
Sorbonne denouncing the activity of the 'grou­ the leftist, anarchist, Trotskyist and other
puscules' (abbreviation for 'groupes miniscu\es',
·
groups. Objectively they are playing into the
tl� group�. hands of the government... The discredit into
"The leaders of the leftist groups are taking which they are bringing the student movement
advantage of the shortcomings of the govern­ is helping feed the violent campaigns of the
ment. They are exploiting student discontent reactionary press and of the ORTF, who by iden­
and trying to stop the functioning of the facul­ tifying the actions of these groups with those of
ties. They are seeking to prevent the mass of the mass of the students are seeking to isolate
students from working and from passing their the students from the mass of the population... . "

exams. These false revolutionaries are acting


objectively as allies of the Gaultist power. They Tuesday 7 May
are acting as supporters of its policies, which
are harmful to the mass of the students and in U N E F and S N ESup call on their supporters to
particular to those of modest origin". start an unlimited strike. Before discussions
On the same day /' Humanite had written with the authorities begin they insist on:
"Certain small groups (anarchists, Trotskyists, a) a stop to all legal action against
Maoists) composed mainly of the sons of the big the students and workers who have been
bourgeoisie and led by the German anarchist questioned, arrested or convicted in the
Cohn-Bendit, are taking advantage of the short­ course of the demonstrations of the last
comings of the government ... " etc ... (see above) . few days,
The same issue of I' Humanite had published an b) the withdrawal of the police from
article by Marchais, a member of the Party's the Latin Quarter and from all University
Central Committee. This article was to be widely premises,
distributed, as a leaflet, in factories and offices: c) a reopening of the closed faculties.
"Not satisfied with the agitation they are In a statement showing how comparatively
conducting in the student milieu - 13nd agitation out of touch they were with the deep motives of
which is against the interests of the mass of the the student revolt, the 'Elected Com m u nist
students and favou rs fascist p rovocateurs - Representatives of the.Paris Region' declared (in
these pseudo:revolutionaries now have the I' Humanite):
nerve to seek to give lessons to the working "The shortage of credits, of premises, of
class movement. We find them in increasing equipment, of teachers ... prevent three students
out of four from completing their studies, with­ sponsible groups are assisting ·the
out mentioning all those. who never have access Establishment in its aims... What we must do is
to higher education This situation has caused
•••• ask for a bigger educational budget whith would
profound and legitimate discontent among both ensure bigger student grants, the appointment
students and teachers. lt has also favoured the of more and better qualified teachers, the build­
activity .of irresponsible groups whose concep­ ing of new faculties• • •"

tions can offer no solution to the students' prob­ The UJCF (Union , des )eunesses
lems. lt is intolerable that the government Communistes de France) and the UJFF (Union
should take advantage of the behaviour of an des ]eunes Filles Francaises) distribute a leaflet
infinitesimal minority to stop the studies of tens in a n umber of lycees. L' Humanite quotes it
of thousands of students a few days from their approvingly: "We protest against police violence ·
exams••• .
" unleashed against the students. We demand the
The same issue of I' Humanite carried .. a reopening of the Nanterre and of the Sorbonne
statement from the 'Sorbonne-L.e ttres' (teach­ and the liberation of all those a rrested. We
ers) branch of the Com m u n i st Party: "The denounce the Gaullist poweras being mainly (!)
Communist teachers demand the liberation of responsible for this situation. We also denounce
the arrested students and the reopening of the the adventurism of certain irresponsible groups
Sorbonne. Conscious of our responsibilities, we and call on the lyceens to fight side by side with
specify that this solidarity does · not mean that the working <;lass and its Communist Party •••"

We agree with or support the slogans emanating


from certain student organisations. We disap­ Monday 13 May
prove of unrealistic, demagogic and anti-com­
munist slogans and of the unwarranted methods Over the weekend Pompidou has climbed down.
of action advocated by various leftist groups". But the unions, the U N E F and the teachers have
On the same day Georges Seguy, general decided to maintain their call for a one day gen­
secretary of the CGT, spoke to the Press about eral strike.
the programme of the Festival of Working Class On its front page I' Humanite publishes, in
Youth (sched uled for May 17-19, but subse­ enormous headlines, a call for the 24 hour strike
quently cancelled): "The solidarity between stu­ followed by a statement from the Political
dents, teachers and the working class is a famil­ Bureau:
iar notion to the militants of the CGT lt is pre­
••• "The unity of the working class and of the
cisely this tradition that compels us not to toler­ students threatens the regime This creates an
•••

ate any dubious or provocative elements, ele­ enormous problem. lt is essential that no provo­
ments which criticise the working class organi­ cation, .no diversion should be allowed to d ivert
sations ••." any of the forces struggling against the regime
or should give the government the flimsiest pre­
Wednesday 8 May text to distort the meaning of this great fight.
The Communist Party associates itself without
A big students demonstration called by the reservation with the just struggle of the stu:
U N E F has taken place in the streets of Paris the dents•••"

previous evening. The front page of l' Humanite


carries a statement from the Party Secretariat: Wednesday 15 May
"The discontent of the . students is legitimate.
But the situation favours adventurist activities, The enormous Monday demonstrations in Paris
whose conception offers no perspective to the and other towns which incidentally prevented
students and has nothing in common with a real, I' Humanite as well as other papers from a ppearc
ly progressive and forward-looking policy... " ing on the Tuesday - were a tremendous suc­
In the same issue, J M Catala, general secre­ cess. In a sense they triggered off the 'sponta­
tary of the U EC (Union des Etu diants neous' wave of strikes which followed within a
, Communistes) writes that: "the actions of irrl:!- day or two. L' Humanite publishes, on its front
page, a statement issued the day before by the opment of the movement ... "

Party's Political Bureau. After taking all the cred­ The same issue of the paper devoted a
it for May 13, the statement continues: whole page to warning students of the fallacy of
"The People of Paris marched for hours in any notions of 'student power' en passant
- -

the streets of the capital showing a power which attributing to the 'Mouvement du 2 2 Mars' a
made any provocation impossible. The Party whole series of political positions they never
organisations worked day and night to ensure held.
that this great demonstration of workers, teach­
ers and students should take place in maximum Monday 20 May
unity, strength an d discipline... lt is now clear
that the Establishment confronted with the The whole country is totally paralysed. The
protests and collective action of all the main sec­ Communist Party is still warning about 'provoca­
tions of the population, will seek to divide us in tions'. The top right hand corner of I' Humanite
the hope of beating us. lt will resort to all meth­ contains a box labelled "WARNING". "Leaflets
ods, including provocation. The Political Bureau have been distributed in the Paris area calling
warns workers and students against any adven­ for an insurrectionary general strike. lt goes
turist endeavours which might, in the present without saying that such appeals have not been
circumstances, dislocate the broad front of the issued by our democratic trade union organisa�
struggle which is in the process of developing, tions. They are the work of provocateurs seeking
and provide the Gaullist power with an unex­ to provide the government with a pretext for
pected weapon with which to consolidate its intervE!ntion ... The workers must be vigilant to
shaky rule ...
" defeat all such manoeuvres ..."
In the same issue, Etienne Fajon of the
Saturday 18 May Central Committee, continues the warnings:
"The Establishment's main preoccupation at the
Over the past 48 hours, strikes with factory moment is to divide the ranks of the working
occupations have spread like a trail of gunpow­ class and to divide it from other sections of the
der, from one corner of the country to the other. population ... Our political Bureau has warned
The railways are paralysed, civil airports fly the workers and students, from the very beginning,
red flag. (Provocateurs have obviously been at against adventurist slogans capable of dislocat­
world) ing the broad front of the struggle. Several
L' Humanite publishes on its front page a provocations have thus been prevented. Our
declaration from the National Committee of the political vigilance must clearly be maintained...
"

CGT: "From hour to hour strikes and factory The same issue devoted its central pages to
occupations are spreading. This action, started an interview of Mr Georges Seguy, general sec­
on the initiative of the CGT and of other trade retary of the CGT, conducted over the Europe No.
union organisations (sic!), creates a new situa­ 1 radio network. In these live interviews, various
tion of exceptional importance .... Long-accumu­ listeners phoned q uestions in directly. The fol­
lated popular discontent is now finding expres­ lowing exchanges are worth recording:
sion. The q u estions being asked m ust be Question "Mr Seguy, the workers on strike
answered seriously and full notice taken of their are everywhere saying that they will go the
importance. The evolution of the situation is giv­ whole hog. What do you mean by this? What are
ing a new dimension to the struggle ... While mul­ your objectives?"
tiplying its efforts to raise the struggle to the Answer "The strike is so powerful that the
needed level, the National Committee warns all workers obviously mean to obtain the maximum
CGT militants and local groups against any concessions at the end of such a movement. The
attempts by outside groups 'to meddle in the whole hog for us trade unionists, means winning
conduct of the struggle, and against all acts of the demands for which we have always fought,
provocation which might assist the forces of but which the government and the employers
repression in their attempts to thwart the devel- have always refused to consider. They have
opposed an obtuse intransigence to the propos­ These political "Organisations are not your busi·
als for negotiations which we have repeatedly ness, of course, but the CGT is a revolutionary
made. organisation. You must bring out your revolu­
The whole hog means a general rise in tionary flag. The workers are astounded to see
wages (no wages less than 6oo francs per you so timid".
month), guaranteed employment, an earlier Answer "While you were bathing in the
retirement age, reduction of working hours with­ Odeon fever, I was in the factories. Amongst
out loss of wages and the defence and extension workers. I assure you that the answer I am giving
of trade union rights within the factory. I am not you is the answer of a leader of a great trade
putting these demands in any particular order union, which claims to have assumed all its
because we attach the same importance to all of responsibilities, but which does not confuse its
them". wishes with reality".
Question "If I am not mistaken the statutes A caller "I would like to speak to Mr Seguy.
of the CGT declare its aims to be the overthrow My name is Duvauchel. I am the director of the
of capitalism and its replacement by socialism. Sud Aviation factory at Nantes".
In the present circumstances, that you have Seguy "Good morning, sir".
yourself referred to as 'exceptional' and 'impor· Duvauchel "Good morning, Mr G en eral
tant', why doesn't the CGT seize this unique Secretary. I would like to know what you think of
chance 10f calling for its fundamental objec­ the fact that for the last four d ays I have been
tives?" sequestrated, together with about 20 other
Answer "This is a very interesting question. managerial staff, inside the Sud Aviation factory
I like it very much. lt is true that the CGT offers at Nantes".
the workers a concept of trade unionism that we Seguy "Has anyone raised a hand against
consider the most revolutionary insofar as its you?"

E
final objective is the end of the employing class Duvauche/ "No. But I am prevented from
and of wage labour. lt is true that this is the first leaving, despite the fact that the general manag­
of our statutes. it remains fundamentally the er of the firm has intimated that the firm was
CGT's objective. But can the present movement prepared to make positive proposals as soon as
reach this objective? If it became obvious that it free access to its factories could be resumed,
could, we would be ready to assume our respon­ and first of all to its managerial staff".
sibilities. lt remains to be seen whether all the Seguy "Have you asked to leave the facto-
social strata involved in the present movement ry?"
are ready to go that far". Duvauche/ "Yes!"
Question "Since last week's events I have Seguy "Was permission refused?"
gone everywhere where people are arguing. I Duvauchel "Yes!"
went this afternoon to the Odeon Theatre. Seg uy "Then I must refer you to the declara­
Masses of people were discussing there. I can tion that I made yesterday at the CGT's press
assure you that all the classes who suffer from conference. I stated that I disapproved of such
the present regime were represented there. activities. We are taking the necessary steps to
When I asked whether people thought that the see that they are not repeated".
movement should go further than the small But enough is enough. The Revolution itself
demands put forwards by the trade unions for will doubtless be denounced by the Stalinists as
the last 10 or 20 years, I brought the house a provocation! By way of an epilogue it is worth
down. I therefore think that it would be criminal recording that at a packed meeting of revolu·
to miss the present opportunity. lt would be tionary students, h e ld at the Mutualite o n
criminal because sooner or later this will have to Thursday 9 May, a spokesman o f the Trotskyist
done. The conditions of today might allow u s to organisation Comm u niste lnternationaliste
do it peacefully and calmly and will perhaps could think of nothing better to do than call a
never come back. I think this call must be made meeting to pass a resolution calling on Seguy to
by you and the other political organisations. call a general strike!!!
France, 1968 argued, applied. Language, rendered stale by
decades of b u reaucratic mumbo-jumbo, eviscer­
This has undoubtedly been the greatest revolu­ ated by those who manipu late it for advertising
tionary upheaval in Western Europe since the purposes, suddenly reappeared as something
days of the Paris Commune. Hundreds of thou­ new and fresh . People reappropriated it in all its
sands of students have fought pitched battles fullness. Magnificently apposite and poetic slo­
with the police. Nine million workers have been gans emerged from the anonymous crowd.
on strike. The red flag of revolt has flown over Children explained to their elders what the func­
occupied factories, universities, building sites, tion of education should be. The ed ucators were
shipyards, primary and secondary schools, pit educated. Within a few days, young people of 20
heads, railway stations, department stores, attained a level of understanding and a political
docked transatlantic liners, theatres, hotels. The and tactical sense which many who had been in
Paris Opera, the Folies Bergeres and the build­ the revolutionary movement for 30 years or
ing of the National Council for Scientific more were still sadly lacking.
Research were taken over, as were the head­ The tumultuous development of the stu­
quarters of the French Football Federation - dents' struggle triggered off the first factory
whose aim was clearly perceived as being 'to occupations. lt transformed both the relation of
prevent ordinary footballers enjoying football'. forces in society and the image, in people's
Virtually every layer of French society has minds, of established institutions and of estab·
been involved to some extent or other. Hundreds lished leaders. it compelled the State to reveal
of thousands of people of all ages have dis­ both its oppressive nature and its fundamental
cussed every aspect of life in packed-out, non­ incoherence. lt exposed the utter emptiness of
stop meetings in every available schoolroom Government, Parliament, Administration and of

and lecture hall. Boys of 14 have invaded a pri­ ALL political parties. Unarmed students had
mary school for girls shouting "Liberte pour \es forced the Establishment to drop its mask, to
filles". Even such traditionally reactionary sweat with fear, to resort to the police club and
enclaves as the Faculties of Medicine and Law to the gas grenade. Students finally compelled
have been shaken from top to bottom , their hal­ the b u reaucratic leaderships of the 'working
lowed procedures and institutions challenged class organisations' to reveal themselves as the
and found wanting. Millions have taken a hand ultimate custodians of the established order.
in making history. This is the stuff of revolution. But the revolutionary movement did still
Under the influence of the revolutionary stu­ more. lt fought its battles in Paris, not in some
dents, thousands began to query the whole prin­ under-developed country, exploited by imperial­
ciple of hierarchy. The students had questioned ism. In a glorious few weeks the actions of stu­
it ·where it seemed the most 'natural': in the dents and young workers dispelled the myth of
realms of teaching and knowledge. They pro­ the well-organised, well-oiled modern capitalist
claimed that democratic self-management was society, from which radical conflict had been
possible and to · prove it began to practice i t eliminated and in which only marginal problems
themselves. They denounced the monopoly of remained to be solved. Administrators who had
information and produced millions of leaflets to been administering everything were suddenly
break it. They attacked some of the main pillars shown to have had a grasp of nothing. Planners
of contemporary 'civilisation': the barriers who had planned everything showed them­
between manual workers and intellectuals, the selves incapable of ensuring the endorsement of
consumer so ciety, the 'sanctity' of the university their plans by those to whom they applied.
and of other founts of capitalist culture and wis­ This most modern movement should allow
dom. real revolutionaries to shed a number of the ide·
Within a matter of days the tremendous cre­ ological encumbrances which in the past ham·
ative potentialities of the people suddenly pered revolutionary activity. it wasn't hunger
erupted. The boldest and most realistic ideas w hich d rove the students to revolt. There wasn't
ahd they are usually the same · were advocated, an 'economic crisis' even in the loosest sense of
the word. The revolt had nothing to do with order. The functioning of bureauc�afic ca p italism
'under-consumption' or with . 'over-production'. creates the conditions within which revolution­
The 'falling rate of profit' just didn't come into ary consciousness may appear. These condi­
the picture. Moreover, the student movement tions are an integral part of the whole alienating
wasn't based on economic demands. On the hierarchical and oppressive social structure.
contrary, the movement only found its . real Whenever people struggle, sooner or later they
stature, and o n ly evoked its tremendous are compelled to question the whole of that
response, when it went beyond the economic social structure: .
demands within which official student unionism These are the ideas . which many of us in
had for so long soughtto contain it (incidentally Solidarity have. long subscribed to. They were
with the blessing of all the political parties and developed at length in some of Paul Card an's
'revolutionary' groups of the 'left'). And con­ pamphlets. Writing in Le Mon9e (20 May 1968) E
versely it was by confining the workers' struggle Morin admits that what is happening today in
to purely economic objectives that the trade France is "a blinding resurrection: the resurrec­
union bureaucrats have so far succeeded in tion of that libertarian strand which seeks con­
coming to the assistance of the re_gime. ciliation with marxism, in a formula of which
The present movement has shown that the Socialisme ou Barbarie had provided a first syn­
fundamental contradiction of modern bureau­ thesis a few years ago ... " As after every verifica­
cratic capitalism isn't the 'anarchy of the mar­ tion of basic concepts in the .crucible of real
ket'. lt isn't the 'contradiction between the events, many will proclaim that these had
forces of production and the property relations'. always been their views. This, of course isn't
The central conflict to which all others are relat­ true. 1 The point however i.s n't to lay claims to a
ed is the conflict between order-givers kind of copyright in the realm of correct revolu­
(dirigeants) and order-takers (executants). The tionary ideas. We welcome converts, from what-
·
insoluble contradiction which tearsthe guts out ever source and however belated.
of modern capitalist society is the one which We can't deal here at length with what is
compels it to exclude people from the manage­ now an i mportant problem in France, namely the
ment of their own activities and which at the creation of a new kind of revolutionary move­
same time compels it to solicit their participa­ ment. Things would indeed have been different
tion, without which .it would collapse. These ten­ if such a movement had existed, strong enough
dencies. find expression on the one hand ·in the to outwit the bureaucratic manoeuvres alert •.

attempt of the bureaucrats to convert men into enough day by day to expose the duplicity of the
objects (by violence, mystification, new manipu­ ' left' leaderships, deeply enough implanted to
lation techniques - or 'economic carrots') and, explain to the workers the real meaning .of the
on the other hand, in mankind's refusal to allow students' struggle, to propagate the idea . of
itself to be treated in this way. autonomous strike comm ittees (linking up union
The French events show clearly something and non-union members), of workers' manage­
that all revolutions have shown, .but which ment of production and of workers'. councils.
appc;trently has again and again to be learned Many things which could have been done
anew. There is no 'in-built revolutionary per­ weren't done because there wasn't S!Jch a move­
spective', no 'gradual increase of contrad.ic­ ment: The way the students' own struggle was
tions', no . 'progressive development of a revolu­ unleashed shows. that such an 'organ isation
tionary mass consciousness', What are given are could have played a most important catalytic
the contradictions and the conflicts we have role without automatically. becomi n g a bu reau­
described and the fact that modern bureaucratic cratic 'leadership'. But such regrets are futile.
society more or less inevitably produces period­ The non-existence of such a movement is no
ic 'accident s' which disrupt its functioning. accident. If it had been formed during the previ­
These both provoke · popular interventions and ous period it certainly wouldn't have b e en the
provide the people with opportunities for assert­ kind of movem�nt of which we are speaking.
ing themselves and for changing the social Even taking the 'best' of the small organisation -
and m u ltiplying its numbers a hundredfold - get beyond bureaucratic organisation by deny­
wouldn't have met the requirements of the cur­ ing all organisation. One doesn't challenge the
rent situation. When confronted with the test of sterile rigidity of finished programmes by refus­
events all the 'left' groups just continued playing ing to define oneself in terms of aims and meth­
their old gramophone records. Whatever their ods. One doesn't refute dead dogma by the con­
merits as depositories of the cold ashes of the demnation of all theoretical reflection. The stu�
revolution - a task they have now carried out for dents and young workers can't just stay where
several decades - they proved incapable of they are. To accept these 'contradictions' as valid
snapping out of their old ideas and routines, and as something which cannot be transcended
incapable of learning or forgetting anything. 2 is to accept the essence of bureaucratic capital­
The new revolutionary movement will have ist ideology. lt is to accept the prevailing philos­
to be built from the new elements (students and ophy and the prevailing reality. ltis to integrate
workers) who have understood the real signifi­ the revolution i nto an established historical
cance of current events. The revolution must order.
step into the great political void revealed by the If the revolution is only an explosion lasting
crisis of the old society. lt must develop a voice, a few days (or weeks), the established order -
a face, a paper - and it must do it soon. whether it knows it or not - will be able to cope.
We can understand the reluctance of some What is more - at a deep level - class society
students to form such an organisation. They feel even needs such jolts. This kind of 'revolution'
there is a contradiction between action and permits class society to survive by compelling it
thought, between spontaneity and organisation. to transform and adapt itself. This is the real
Their hesitation is fed by the whole of their pre­ danger today. Explosions which disrupt the
vious experience. They have seen how thought imaginary world in which alienated societies
could become sterilising dogma, organisation tend to live - and bring them momentarily down
become bureaucracy or lifeless ritual, speech to earth - help them eliminate outmoded meth­
become a means of mystification, a revolution­ ods of domin,ation and evolve new and more
ary idea become a rigid and stereotyped pro­ flexible ones.
gramme. Through their actions, their boldness, Action or thought? For revolutionary social­
their reluctance to consider long-term aims, they ists the problem is not to make a synthesis of
have broken out of this straight-jacket. But this these two preoccupations of the revolutionary
isn't enough. students. lt is to destroy the social context in
Moreover many of them had sampled the which such false alternatives find root.
traditional 'left' groups. In all their fundamental
aspects these groups remain trapped within the Solidarity, 1968
ideological and organisational frameworks of
bureaucratic capitalism. They have programmes
fixed once and for all, leaders who utter fixed 1 We recall for instance a long review of Modern
Capitalism and Revolution in International Socialism
speeches, whatever the changing reality around
(No 22) where, under the heading 'Return to Utopia',
them, organisational form which mirror those of Card an was deemed to have "nothing to say in relation
existing society. Such groups reproduce within to theory". His prediction that people would eventually
their own ranks the division between order-tak­ reject the emptiness of the consumer society were
ers and order-givers, between those who 'know' described as "mere moralising" and as "doing creditto
and those who don't, the separation between a Christian ascetic". The authors should perhaps visit
the new monastery at the Sorbonne.
scholastic pseudo-theory and real life. They
would even like to impose this division into the
working class, whom they aspire to lead, 2 We are not primarily referring to trotskyist groups
because (and I was told this again and again) such as the FER, which on the night of the barricades,
"the workers are only capable of developing a despite repeated appeals for help, refused to cancel
their mass meeting at the Mutualite or to send rein­
trade union consciousness".
forcements to assist students and workers already
But these students are wrong. One doesn't engaged in a bitter fight with the CRS on the barricades
. of the rue Gay lussac. We are not referring to their
leader Chisseray who claimed it was "necessary above
all to preserve the revolutionary vanguard from an
unnecessary massacre". Nor are we referring to the
repeated maoist criticisms of the students' struggle,
uttered as late as 7 May. What we are referring to is the
inability of any Trotskyist or Maoist group to raise the
real issues demanded in a revolutionary situation, ie to
call for workers' management of production and the
formation of workers' councils. None of these groups
even touched on the sort of question the revolutionary
students were discussing day and night: the relations
of production in the capitalist factory, alienation at
work whatever the level of wages, the division between
'
leaders and led within the factory hierarchy or within
the 'working class' organisations themselves. All that
Humanite Nouvel/e could counterpose to the constant­
ly demobilising activities of the CGT was the immense­
ly demystifying slogan: "Vive le CGT" ("The· CGT isn't
really what it appears to be, com rade"), All that Voix
Ouvriere could counterpose to the CGT's demand for a
minimum wage of 6oo francs was... a minimum wage of
1000 francs. This kind of revolutionary auction (in pure­
ly economic demands), after the workers had been
occupying the factories for several weeks, shows the
utter bankruptcy of revolutionaries who fail to recog­
nise a revolution. Avant Garde correctly attacked some
of the ambiguities of auto-gestion (self-management)
as advocated by the CFDT, but failed to point out the
deeply revolutionary implications of the slogan.
Workers Beware!
Text of a CGT poster, placarded all over Boulogne Billancourt:

For some months the most diverse publications have been distributed by elements recruit-
ed in a m ilieu foreign to the working class. .
The authors of these articles remain anonymous most of the time, a fact which . fully
illustrates their dishonesty. They give the most weird and tempting titles to their papers,
the better to mislead: Luttes Ouvrieres; Servir le Peuple; Unite et Travail*; Lutte ·

Communiste; Revoltes; Voix Ourriere; Un Groupe d' Ouvriers.


The titles may vary but the content has a common objective: to lead the workers away
from the CGT and to provoke divisions in their ranks, in order to weaken them.
At night, their commandos tear up our posters. Every time they distribute something
at the gates, the police are not far off, ready to protect their distribution, as was the case
recently at LMT. Recently they attempted to invade the offices of the Labour Exchange at
Boulogne. Their activities are given an exaggerated publicity on the Gaullist radio and in
the columns of the bourgeois press.
This warning is no doubt superfluous for the majority of Renault workers, who, in the
past, have got to know about this kind of agitation. On the other hand the younger work­
ers m ust be told that these elements are in the service of the bourgeoisie, who have
always made use of these pseudo-revolutionaries whenever the rise of united left forces
has presented a threat to its privileges.
lt is therefore important not to allow these people to come to the gates of our factory,
to sully our trade union organisation and our CGT m ilitants. who are tirelessly exerting
themselves in defence of o u r demands and to bring about unity. These elements always
reap a fat reward at the end of the day fo r their d irty work, and for the loyal services given
to the bosses (some now occupy high positions in the management of the factory).
This having been said, the CGT (Renault} Committee calls on the workers to continue
the fight for their demands, to intensify their efforts to ensure greater unity of the trade
union and democratic forces, and to strengthen the ranks of the CGT struggling for these
noble objectives:

The Trade Union Bureau, CGT, Renault

*This is a fascist publication; all the others are 'left' public'ations. A typical amalgam technique.
®
The Decline & Fall of the "Spectacular" Commodity- Economy

From the 13th to the 16th of August, 1965, the order", calling upon catholics to oppose the
blacks of Los Angeles revolted. An incident plundering and the apparently unjustified vio­
involving traffic police and pedestrians devel­ lence. All the theorists and "spokesmen" of the
oped into two days of spontaneous riots. The international Left (or, rather of its nothingness)
forces of order, despite repeated reinforcement, deplored the irresponsibility and disorder, the
were unable to gain control of the streets. By the pillaging and above all the fact that arms and
third day, the negroes had armed themselves by alcohol were the first targets for plunder; finally,
pillaging such arms shops as were accessible, that 2,ooo fires had been started by the Watts
and were so enabled to open fire on police heli­ gasoline throwers to light up their battle and
copters. Thousands of soldiers - the whole mili­ their ball. But who was there to defend the riot­
tary weight of an infantry division, supported by ers of Los Angeles in the terms they deserve?
tanks - had to be thrown into the struggle before Well, we shall. Let us leave the economists to
the Watts area could be surrounded, after which grieve over the 27 million dollars lost, and the
it took several days and much street fighting for town planners over one of their most beautiful
it to be brought under control. The rioters didn't supermarkets gone up in smoke, and Mclntyre
hesitate to plunder and burn the shops of the over his slain Deputy Sheriff; let the sociologists
area. The official figures testify to 32 dead, weep over the absurd ity and the intoxication of
including 27 negroes, plus Soo wounded and this rebellion. The job of a revolutionary journal
3,ooo arrested. is not only to justify the Los Angeles insurgents,
Reactions on all sides were invested with but to help u ncover their just reasons: to explain
clarity: the revolutionary act always discloses theoretically the truth for which such practical
the reality of existing problems, lending an action expresses the search.
u naccustomed and unconscious truth to the var­ In Algiers in J uly, 1965, following
ious postures of its opponents.Police Chief Boumedienne's coup d' etat, the situationists
William Parker, for example, refused all media­ published an Address to the Algerians and to
tion proposed by the main Negro organisations, revolutionaries all over the world, which inter- .
asserting correctly that the rioters had no preted conditions in Algeria and in the rest of the
leader. Evidently, as the blacks were without a world as a whole; among their examples, they
leader, this was the moment of truth for both evoked the American negroes, who if they could
parties. What did Roy Wilkins, general secretary "affirm themselves significantly" would unmask
of the NAACP, want at that moment ? He the contradictions of the most advanced of capi­
declared that the riots should be put down "with talist systems. Five weeks later, this significance
all the force necessary". And the Cardinal of Los found an expression on the street. Theoretical
Angeles, Mclntyre, who protested loudly; had criticism of modern society, in its advanced
not protested against the violence of the re pres­ forms, and criticism in actions of the same soci­
sion, which one would have supposed the subtle ety, co-exist at this moment: still separated but
thing to do, at the moment of the aggiornamen­ both advancing towards the same reality, both
to of the Roman church; instead, he protested in talking of the same thing. These two critiques
the most urgent tones about "a premeditated are mutually explanatory, each being incpmpre­
revolt against the rights of one's . neighbour; hensible without the other. Our theory of "sur­
respect for the law and the maintenance of vival" and the "spectacle" is illuminated and ver-
ified by these actions so unintelligible to the were in their path alone, attacking only the
American false cons,ciousness. One day these white policemen: similarly, black solidarity did
actions will in turn be illuminated by this theory. not extend to black shopkeepers, not even to
U p to this time the Negro "Civil Rights" black car-drivers. Even Luther King, in Paris last
demonstrations. had been kept by their leaders October, had to admit that the limits of his com­
within the limits of a legal system which over­ petence had been overshot: "They were not race
looked the most appaling violence on the part of riots," he said, "but one class."
the police and the racists: in Alabama the previ­ The Los Angeles rebellion was a rebellion
o us March for instance, at the time of the against commodities and of worker consumers
Montgomery March, and as if this scandal was hierarchically subordinated to commodity val­
not sufficient, a discreet agreement between the ues. The negroes of Los Angeles like the young

Federal gover n ment, Governor Wallace and delinquents of all advanced countries, but more
Pastor King had led the Selma Marchers of the radically because at the level of a class globally
1oth of March to stand back at the first request, deprived of a future, a sector of the proletariat
in dignity and prayer. Thus the confrontation unable to believe in significant chance of inte·
expected by the crowd had been reduced to the gration and promotion take modern capitalist

charade of a merely potential confrontation. I n propaganda literally, with its display of afflu­
that moment, Non-Violence reached the pitiful ence. They want to possess immediately all the
limit of its courage: first you expose yourself to objects shown and made abstractly accessible:
the enemies' blows, then force your mora l they want to make use of them. That is why they
grandeur t o t h e point o f sparing h i m the trouble reject the values of exchange, the commodity­
of using more force. But the basic fact is that the reality which is its mold, its purpose and its final
civil rights movement, by remaining within the goal, which has prese/ected everything. Through
law, only posed legal problems. lt is logical to theft and gift they retrieve a use which at once
make an appeal to the law legally. What is not gives the lie to · the oppressive rationality of
logical is to appeal legally against a patent ille­ commodities, disclosing their relations a n d
gality as if this contradiction would disappear if invention t o be arbitrary and u n necessary. The
pointed out. for it is clear that the superficial plunder of the Watts sector was the most simple
and outrageously visible illegality from which
• possible realisation of the hybrid principle: "To
the blacks still suffer in many American states - each according to his (false) needs" needs •

has its roots in a socio-ecoriomic contradiction determined and produced by the economic sys·
which existing laws simply cannot touch, and tem, which the act of pillaging rejects.
which n o future juridical law will be able to get But the fact that the vaunting of abundance
rid of in face of more basic cultural laws of the is taken at its face value and discovered in the
society: and it is against these that the negroes immediate instead of being eternally pursued in
are at last daring to raise their voices and. asking the course of alienated labour and in the face of
the right to live. In reality, the American negro increasing but unmet social needs this fact

wants the total subversion of that Society or • means that real needs are expressed in carnival,
nothing. playful affirmation and the potlatch of destruc·
The problem of this necessity for subversion tion. The man who destroys commodities shows
arises of its own accord the moment the blacks his h u man superiority over commodities. H e
start using subversive means: the changeover to frees himself from the arbitrary forms which
such methods happens on the level of their daily cloak his real needs. The flames of Watts con·
life, appearing at one and the same time as the sumed the system of consumption! The theft of
most accidental and the most objectively justi· large refrigerators by people with no electricity,
fied development. This issue is no longer the o r with their electricity cut off, gives the best
status of the American negro, but the status of possible metaphor for the life of affluence trans­
America, even if this happens to find its first formed into a truth in play. Once it is no longer
expression among the negroes. This was not a bought, the commodity lies open to criticism
racial conflict: the rioters left certain whites that and modification, and this under whichever of its
forms it may appear. Only so long as it is paid for is also here that they are furthest behind that
with money, as a status symbol of survival, can it high point of affluence which is California.
be worshiped fetishistically. Pillage is the natu­ Hollywood, the pole of the worldwide specta c le,
ral response to the affluent society: the afflu­ is in their immediate vicinity. They are promised
ence, however, is by rio means natural or h uman that, with patience, they will join in America's
- it is simply abundance of goods. Pillage, more­ prosperity, but they realise that this prosperity is
over, which instantly destroys commodities as not a static sphere but rather a ladder without
such, discloses the ultima ratio of commodities, end. The higher they climb, the further they get
namely, the army, the police imd the other spe­ from the top, because they don't have a fair
cialised detachments which have the monopoly start, because they are less qualified and thus
of armed force within the State. What is a police­ more numerous among the unemployed, and
man ? He is the active servant of commodities, finally because the hierarchy which crushes
the man in complete submission to commodi­ them is not one based simply on buying power
ties, whose job is to insure that a given product as a pure economic fact: an essential inferiority
of h uman labour remains a commodity with the is i mposed on them in every area of daily life by
magical property of having to be paid for instead the customs and prejudices of a society in which
of becoming a mere refrigerator or rifle - a mute, all human power is based on buying power. So
passive insensible thing, itself in submission to long as the h uman riches of the American negro
the first corner to make use of it. Over and above are despised and treated as criminal, monetary
the indignity of depending on a policeman, the riches will never make him acceptable to the
blacks reject the indignity of depending on com­ alienated society of America: individual wealth
modities. The Watts youth, having no future in may make a rich negro but the negroes as a
market terms, grasped another quality of the whole must represent poverty iri a society of
present, and the truth of that present was so hierarchised wealth. Every witness noted this
irresistible that it drew on the whole population, cry which proclaims the fundamental meaning of
women, children, and even sociologists who the rising: 'This is the Black Revolution, and we
happen e d to find themselves on the scene. A want the world to know it!" Freedom now! is the
young negro sociologist of the district, Bobbi password of all h istorical revolutions, but here
Hollon, had this to say to the Herald Tribune in for the first time it is not poverty but material
October: "Before, people were ashamed to say abundance which must be controlled according
they came from Watts. They'd m umble it. Now, to new laws. The control of abundance is not just
they say it with pride. Boys who always went changing the way it is shared out, but redefining
around with their shirts open to the waist, and its every orientation, superficial and profound
who'd have cut you into strips in half a second, alike. This is the first skirmish of an enormous
used to apply here every morning. They organ­ struggle, infinite in its implications.
ised the distribution of food. Of course it's no The blacks are not isolated in their struggle
good pretending the food wasn't plundered ... All because a new proletarian consciousness the -

that Christian blah has been used too long consciousness of not being the master of one's
against the negroes. These people could plun­ activity, of one's life, in the slightest degree - is
der for ten years and they wouldn't get back half taking form in America among strata whose
the money that has been stolen from them all refusal of modern capitalism resembles that of
these years. Myself, I'm just a little black girl." the negroes. Indeed, the first phase of the negro
Bobbi Hollon, who has sworn never to wash from struggle has been the signal to a movement of
her sandals the blood that splashed them during opposition which is spreading. In December,
the rioting, adds: "All the world looks to Watts 1964 the students of Berkeley, frustrated in their
now." participation in the civil rights movement, ended
How do 'men make history, starting from the u p by calling a strike to oppose the system of
conditions pre-established to persuade them California's "multiversity", and by extension the
not to take a hand in it? The Los Angeles negroes social system of the U.S., in which they are allot­
are better paid than any others in the U.S., but it ted such a passive role. Immediately, drinking
and drug orgies were uncovered among the siu­ to-be-desired is a colony of the white one, and
dents - the sam·e supposed activities for which thus they see through the lie c;>f this total eco­
the negroes have long been castigated. This nomico-cultural spectacle more q u ickly: By
generation of students has since invented a new wanting to participate really and immediately in
form of struggle against the dominant spectacle, affluence - and this is an official value of every
the teach-in, a form taken up by the Edinburgh American - they demand the equalitarian reali­
students on October 2oth apropos of the sation of the American spectacle of everyday
Rhodesian crisis.' This clearly . imperfect and life: they demand that the half-heaven ly, half­
· primitive type of opposition represents the terrestrial values of this spectacle be put to the
stage of discussion which refuses to be limited test. But'it is of the essence of the spectacle that .
in time (academically), arid in this its logical out­ it cannot be made real either immediately or
come is a progression to practical activity. Also eq ually; and this, not even for the whites. (In
in o.c tober, thousands of demonstrators fact, . the function of the negro in terms of the
appeared in the streets of . Berkeley and New spectacle is to serve as the perfect prod: in the
York, their cries echoing those. of the Watts riot: race for riches, such underprivilege is an incite­
ers: "Get out of our district and out of Vietnam!" ment to am bition.) ln taking the capiialist spec­
The whites, becoming more radical, have tacle at its face value the negroes are already
stepped· outside the law: "courses" are given on rejecting the spectacle itself. The spectacle is a
how to defraud the recruiting boards, draft cards d rug for slaves. it is not supposed to be taken l i t­
are burned and the act televised. ln the affluent erally, but followed at just a few paces' distance;
society, disgust for affluence and for its price is if it were not for this albeit tiny distance, it would
Onding expression. The spectacle is being .spat become total mystification. The fact is that in the
on by an· advanced sector whose autonomous U.S. today the whites are enslaved to commodi­
activity denies its values. The classical proletari­ ties while the negroes negate them. The blacks
at, to the extent to which it had been provision­ ask for more . than the whites - that is the core of
ally integrated into the capitalist system, had an insol u ble problem, or rather one only soluble
itself failed to integrate the negroes (several Los through the dissolution of the white social sys­
Angeles unions refused negroes until 1959); tem. This is why those whites who want· to
now, the negroes are the rallying point for all escape their own servitude must needs rally to
those who refuse the logic of integration into the negro cause, not in a solidarity based on
that system - integration into capitalism being of colour, obviously, but i n a global rejection of
course the ne plus ultra of all integration prom­ commodities and, in the last analysis, of the
ised. And comfort will never be comfortable State. The economic and social backwardness of
enough for those who seek what is not on the the negroes allows them to see what the white
market - or rather, that which the market elimi­ consumer is, and their justified contempt for the
nates. The level reached by the tech nology of white is nothing but contempt for any passive
the most privileged becomes an insult - and one consumer. Whites who cast off their role have no
more easily expressed than that . most basic chance unless they link their struggle more and
insult, which is reification. The Los Angeles more to the negro's struggle, uncovering his real
rebellion is the first in history able to justify and coherent reasons and supporting them until
itself by the argument that there was no air con­ the end. If such an accord were to be ruptured at
ditioning during a heatwave. a radical point in the battle, the result would be
The American negro has his own particular the. formation of a black nationalism.· and a con­
spectacle, his press, magazines, coloured film frontation between the two splinters exactly
stars, and if the blacks reaiise this, if they spew after the fashion of the prevailing system. A
out this spectacle for its phoneyness, as an phase of mutual extermination is the other pos­
expression of their unworthiness, it is because sible outcome of the present situation, once res­
they see it to tie a m_inority spectacle - nothing ignation is overcome.
butthe appendage of a general spectacle. They · The attempts to build a black nationalism,
recognise that-this parade of their consumption- separatist and p ro-African as, they are, are
dreams g1v1ng no answer to the reality of repulsive absurdity of certain hierarchies and
oppression The American negro has no father­ the fact that the whole world strength of com­
land. He is in his own country and he is alienat­ modities is directed blindly and automatically
ed: so is the rest of the population, but the towards their protection, leads us to see - the
blacks differ insofar as they are aware of it. ln moment we engage on a negating praxis - that
this sense, they are not the most backward sec­ every hierarchy is absurd.
tor of their society, but the most advanced. They The rational world produced by the industri­
are the negation at work, "the bad aspect pro­ al revolution has rationally liberated individuals
ducing the movement which makes history by from their local and national limitations, and
setting the struggle in motion". (Marx: The related them on a world scale; but denies reason
Poverty of Philosophy). Africa has nothing to do by separating them once more, according to a
with it. hidden logic which finds its expression in mad
The American negroes are the product of ideas and grotesque value-systems. Man,
modern industry, just as are electronics, adver­ estranged from his world, is everywhere sur­
tising or the cyclotron. And they carry within rounded by strangers. The barbarian is no longer
them its contradictions. These are the men at the ends of the earth, he is on the spot, made
whom the spectacle-paradise must integrate into a barbarian by this very same forced partic­
and repulse simultaneously, so that the antago­ ipation in hierarchised consumption. The
nism between the spectacle and the real activity humanism cloaking. all this is opposed to man,
of men surrenders completely to their enuncia­ and the negation of his activity and his desires;
tions. The spectacle is universal in the same way it is the humanism of commodities, expressing
as the commodities. But as the world of com­

the benevolence of the parasite, merchandise,
modities is based in class conflict, commodities towards the men off whom it feeds. For those
are themselves hierarchic. The necessity of com­ who reduce men to objects, objects seem to
modities · and hence of the spectacle whose job acquire human qualities, and manifestations of
it is to inform about commodities - to be at once real human activity appear as unconscious ani­
universal and hierarchic leads to a universal mal behaviour. Thus the chief humanist of Los
hierarchisation. But as this hierarchisation must Angeles, William Parker, can say: "They started
remain unavowed, it is expressed il'l the form of behaving like a bunch of monkeys in a zoo."
u nacknowledgeable hierarchic value judge­ When the state of emergency was declared
ments, in a world of reasonless rationalisation. by the California authorities, the insurance com­
lt is this process which creates racialisms every­ panies recalled that they do not cover risks at
where: the English Labour government has just that level: they guarantee nothing beyond sur­
restrained coloured immigration, while the vival. Overall, the American negroes can rest
industrially advanced countries of Europe are assured that, if they keep quiet, their survival is
once again becoming racialist as they import guaranteed; and capitalism has become suffi­
their sub-proletariat from the Mediterranean ciently centralised and entrenched in the State
area, so exerting a colonial exploitation within to distribute "welfare" to the poorest. But sim­
their borders. And if Russia continues to be anti­ ply because they are behind in the process of
semitic, it is because she is still a society of hier­ intensification of socially organised survival, the
archy and commodities, in which labour must be blacks present problems of life and what they
bought and sold as a commodity. Together, com­ demand is not to survive but to live. The blacks
modities and hierarchies are constantly renew­ have nothing to insure of their own; they have to
ing their alliance, which extends its influence by destroy all the forms of security and private
modifying its form: it is seen just as easily in the insurance known up to now. They appear as
relations between trade unionist and worker as what they really are: the irreconcilable enemies
between two car owners with artificially distin· · - not of the vast majority of Americans - but of
guished models. This is the original sin of com­ the alienated way of life of all modern society;
modity rationality, the sickness of bourgeois the most advanced country industrially only
reason, whose legacy is bureaucracy. But the shows us the road that will be everywhere fol-
!owed unless the system is overthrown.
Certain black .nationalist . extremists, in
showing why they could never accept less than a
separate State, have advanced the argu ment
that American society, even if it someday con·
cedes total civic and economic equality, will
never get around to accepting mixed marriages.
it is therefore this American society which must
disappear, not only in America but everywhere in
the world. The end of all racial prejudice (like the
end of so many other prejudices such as sexual
ones related to inhibitions) can only lie beyond
"marriage" itself: that is, beyond the bourgeois
family (which is q uestioned by the American
negroes). This is the rule as much in Russi11 as in
the United States, as a model of hierarchic re la·
tions and of the stability of an inherited power
(be it money or soda-bureaucratic status). lt is
now often said that American youth, after thirty
years of s ilence, is rising again as a force of
opposition, and that the black revolt is their
Spanish Civil War. This time, its " Lincoln
Battalions" must understand the full signifi·
cance of the struggle in which they engage, sup·
porting it up to the end of its universal implica·
tions. The "excesses" of Los Angeles are no
more a political error in the Black Revolt than the
armed resistance of the P.O.U.M in Barcelona,
May 1937, was a betrayal of the anti-Franquist
war. A rebellion against the spectacle is situated
on the level of the totality, because even were

it only to appear in a single d istrict, Watts it is


·

a protest by men against the inhuman life,


because it begins at the level of the real single
individual, and because com munity, from which
the individual in revolt is separated, is the true
social nature of man, human nature: the positive
transcendence of the spectacle.

Guy Debord
Situationist International, December 1965
Documents
Communique ING D U R I NG THE 6 MAY RIOT

Comrades, Occupation Committee of the Autonomous and


Considering that the Sud-Aviation factory at Popular Sorbonne University, 26 May 1968, 7 .oo
Nantes has been occupied' for two days by the pm
workers and students of that �ity, and thattoday
the movement is spreading to several factories
(Nouvelles Messageries de la Presse Parisienne Minimum definition of revolutionary
· in Paris, Renault in Cleon, etc), THE SORBO N N E organisations · .

OCCUPATION COMMITTEE calls for the immedi'


ate occupation of all the factories in France and Since the only purpose of a revolutionary organ­
the formation of Workers Councils. isation is the abolition 'of all existing classes.in a
Comrades, spread and reproduce this . way that does not bring about a new division of
· appeal as quickly as possible. society, we consider any organisation revolu­
tionary which consistent/yand effectively works
Sorbonne, 26 May 1968, J.JO pm toward the internatfonal ,realisation of the
.
absolute power of the workers co uncils, as pre­
figured in the experienc.e of the proletarian revo-
· ·
·

Slogans to be spread now by every lutions of this century,


.means Such an organisation makes a unitary cri'
· tique of the world, !>r is nothing. By unitary cri­
(Leaflets, announcements over microphones, tique we mean a comprehensive critique of all
comic strips, songs, graffiti, balloons on paint­ geographical areas where V�Jrious forms of sep­
ings in the Sorbonne, announcements in the­ arate socioeconomic powers exist, as well as a
atres during films or while disrupting them, bal­ comprehensive critique of all aspects of life. ·

loons on subway billboards,before making love, Such an · organisation sees the beginning
after making love, in elevators, each time you and end of its program in the complete decolohi­
raise your glass in a bar): sation of everyday life . . it thus aims not at the
mas�es' self-management of the existing world, ·

OCCUPY THE FACTO R I ES but at its U J1 i nterrupted transformation. it


POWER TO TH E WORKERS COU N CILS embodies the radical critique of political econo­
ABOLISH CLASS SOCI ETY my, the supersession of the commodity and of
DOWN WITH T H E SPECTACLE-COMMODITY wage labour.
SOCI ETY Such an <org<i!riisation refuses to reproduce
ABOLISH ALI ENATION within itself any of the hierarchical conditions of
ABOLISH THE U N IVERSITY the dominant wo.rld. The only liinit to participat­
. HU MANITY WON'T B� HAPPY TILL THE LAST ing in its total democracy is that each member
BU REAUCRAT IS HUNG WITH TH E GUTS OF TH E must have recognised and appropriated the
LAST CAPITALIST coherence of its critique. This coherence must
DEATH TO THE COPS be both in tlie critical the o ry proper and in the
FREE ALSO THE 4 GUYS CONVICTED FOR LOOT- relationship between this theory and practical
activity. The organisation radically criticises lous riots show that students, in struggle, are
every ideology as separate power of ideas and starting to gain a consciousness that they didn't
as ideas ofseparate power. lt is thus at the same have before: and where violence begins,
time the negation of any remnants of religion, reformism ends. The University Council which
and of the prevailing social spectacle which, met this morning will have its work cut out: this
from news media to mass culture, monopolizes obsolete form of repression can do nothing to
communication between people around their counter the violence in the streets. The banning
unilateral reception of images·of their alienated for Five years of our comrade Gerard Bigorgne
activity. The organisation dissolves any 'revolu­ from all the u niversities of France - quietly
tionary ideology' u n masking it as a sign of the ignored by the whole of the press, the political
failure of the revolutionary project, as the pri­ groups, and students' associations - and which
vate property of new specialists of power, as one now menaces our comrade Rene Riesel and six
more fraudulent representation setting itself other Nanterre students, is at the same time a
above real proletarianised life. way for the u niversity authorities to hand them
Since the ultimate criterion of the modern over to the police.
revolutionary organisation is its totalness, such Faced with repression, the struggle which
an organisation is u ltimately a critique of poli­ has begun must retain its method of violent
tics. lt must explicitly aim to dissolve itself as a action, which for the time being is its only
separate organisation at its moment of victory. streugth. But above all it must instigate a con­
-
sciousness amongst students who will lead the
Adopted by the 7th Conference of the 51, July movement forward.
1966 Because there aren't only the cops: there
are also the lies of the various political tenden­
cies - Trotskyists OCR, FER, VO), Maoists (UJCML,
A gu't of wind through the Japanese CP rank and file), and anarchists-a-la-Cohn­
apple tree Bendit. Let's settle our business ourselves!
The example shown by the comrades arrest­
Ladies and Gentlemen, ed at the Sorbonne on Friday, who escaped from
Henri Lefebvre, one of the most well-known the van they'd been taken to, is an example to
agents of recuperation of this half of the century follow. When there are only three cops in a
(it's well-known how the situationists well and police van, we'll know what to do. The case of
truly put him and the whole Arguments gang in Sergeant Brunet, done over yesterday, will set a
their place in their pamphlet Into the Dustbin of precedent: death to the pigs!
History!) proposes to add the Zengakuren to his Already violence has shut the mouths of the
trophies. The CNRS has its emissaries, PRAXIS petty bosses of the political groups; to chal­
has its researchers. lenge the bourgeois university alone is trivial
The metaphilosopher Lefebvre is less stupid when it's the whole of this sociey which is to be
than the pataphilosopher Morin. But the destroyed.
metastalinist ought to have the good grace to
shut up when it's a matter of class struggle. LONG LIVE THE ZENGAKUREN!
A word to the wise is enough. LONG LIVE. TH E VANDALIST COMMITTEE OF PUB­
LIC SAFETY (Bordeaux)!
The Enrages, Nanterre, March 19, �968 LONG LIVE TH E ENRAGES!
LONG LIVE TH E S.l.!
LONG LIVE TH E SOCIAL REVOLUTION!
Gut rage!
The Enrages, Paris, May 6, 1968
Comrades,
In spite of the proven collusion between U EC
Stalinists and reactionaries, last Friday's marvel-
The castle is burning! Coordinating Committee) see their work sabo­
taged by pseudo-spontaneous groups.
Address to the Council ofthe University of Paris All the debates on organisation, which peo­
ple wanted to argue about before any action, are
Relics of the past, pointless if we do nothing.
Your crass ignorance of life gives you no authoriy AT THIS RATE, TH E MOVEMENT WILL B E
to do anything. Do you want proof? If you can sit B U R I E D I N THE SORBO N N E! ·

today it will only be if you are backed up by a The prerequisite of direct democracy is the
cordon of police. minimum support that revolutionary students
In fact nobody respects you any more. So can give to revolutionary workers who are occu­
cry now over your old Sorbonne. pying their factories.
lt just makes me laugh that certain mod­ it is inexcusable that yesterday evening's
ernising old farts are getting touchy about incidents in the GA should pass without retalia­
defending me, supposing - wrongly - that after tion.
having spat in their faces, I might once more The priests are holding us back when anti­
become presentable enough for them to protect clerical posters are torn up.
me. Despite their perseverance in such The bureaucrats are holding us back when,
masochism, these opportunists wouldn't even without even giving their names, they paralyse
know how to patch up the Universly. Monsieur the revolutionary awareness that can take the
Lefebvre, I say to you, shit. movement forward from the barricades.
There will be more and more of those who Once again, it's the future that is sacrificed
take from the education system the best thing it to the re-establishment of the old unionism.
has: the grants. You've refused this to me, so I've Parliamentary cretinism wants to take over

1 107
had nothing to hide. I've got to bite the bullet. the rostrum, as it tries to put the old, patched-up
Today's trial is, of course, a ridiculous fairy system back on its feet again.
tale. The real trial took place on Monday on the Comrades,the reform of the university alone
streets, and secular justice has already detained is insignificant, when it is the whole of the old
about thirty riotes. For my comrades, what mat­ world which is to be destroyed.
ters is the unconditional release of all the pris­ The movement is nothing if it is not revolu­
oners (as well as the students). tionary.
Freedom is the crime which contains all
crimes. Woe betide feudal justice when the cas­ Occupation Committee of the Sorbonne, May 16,
tle is burning! 1968, 4.3opm.

Rene Riese/, Paris, May 10, 1968


Watch outl

Vigilance! The Press Committee situated on the second


floor, stair C, in the Gaston Azard library, repre­
Comrades, sents only itself. lt happens to be a case of a
The supremacy of the revolutionary assem­ dozen or so student journalists anxious to prove
bly can only mean something if it exercises its themselves straight away to their future employ­
power. 'ers and future censors.
For the last 48 hours even the capaciy of the This Committee, which is trying to monopo­
general assembly to make decisions has been lize all contact with the Press, refuses to trans­
challenged by a systematic o bstru cti o n of all m it the communiques of the regularly elected
proposals for action. bodies of the general assembly.
Up until now no motion could be voted on or TH IS PRESS COMMITTEE IS A CENSORS H I P
even discussed, and bodies elected by the gen­ COMMITTEE: don't have anything more t o d o
eral assembly (Occupation Committee and with it.
The varlous working parties can, while wait­ and in that case it is clear that it will no longer
ing for this evening's general assembly where want to concern itself with anything but · a
new decisions will be taken, address themselves Gaullist reform o f the university.
to the occupation committee and the coordinat­
ing committee elected by the GA yesterday Occupation Committee of the autonomous and
evening. popular Sorbonne University, 16 May 1968,
EVERYBODY COME TO THE G E N E RAL 6.Jopm
ASSEMBLY THIS EVE N I NG IN ORDER TO TH ROW
OUTTHE BUREAUCRATS!
Telegrams
Occupation Committee of the autonomous and
popular The Sorbonne, May 16, spm 17 MAY 1968 I PROFESSOR IVAN SVITAK
PRAG UE CZECHOSLOVAKIA I THE OCCUPATION
COMMITTEE OF THE AUTONOMOUS AND POPU­
Watch out for manipulators! LAR SORBON N E S EN DS FRATERNAL SALUTA·
Watch out for bureaucrats! TIONS TO COMRADE SVITAK AN D TO CZECHO­
SLOVAKIAN REVOLUTIONARIES STOP LONG LIVE
Comrades, THE I NTERNATIONAL POWER OF TH E WORKERS
No-one must be unaware of the Importance COU NCILS STOP H U MAN ITY WON'T BE HAPPY
of the GA this evening (Thursday 16 May). For TILL THE LAST CAPITALIST IS H U NG WITH THE
two days individuals one recognizes from having GUTS OF THE LAST B U REAUCRAT STOP LONG
seen them previously peddling their party lines LIVE REVOLUTIONARY MARXISM
have succeeded in sowing confusion and in
smothering the GAs under a barrage of bureau­ 17 MAY 1968 I ZENGAKU REN TOKYO JAPAN I
cratic manipulatlons whose clumsiness clearly LONG LIVE THE STRUGGLE OF TH E JAPANESE
demonstrates the contempt they have - for this COMRADES WHO HAV E OPEN E D COMBAT
a�emb� S I M U LTAN EOUSLY ON TH E FRONTS OF ANTI­
This assembly must learn to make itself STALI N ISM AN D ANTI-IMPERIALISM STOP LONG
respected, or disappear. Two points must be dis­ LIVE FACTORY OCCUPATIONS STOP LONG LIVE
cussed above all: THE G EN ERAL STR I KE STOP LONG LIVE THE
WHO IS IN CHARG E OF THE MARSHALS? I NTERNATIONAL POWER OF THE WO RKERS
whose disgusting role is intolerable. COU NCILS STOP H U MAN ITY WON'T B E HAPPY
WHY IS TH E PRESS COMMITTEE - which TILL THE LAST B U REAUCRAT IS H U NG WITH THE
dares to censor the communiques that it is Gl.JTS OF TH E LAST CAPITALIST STOP OCCU PA­
charged to transmit to the agencles - composed TION COMMITTEE OF THE AUTONOMO U S AND
of apprentice journalists who are careful not to ' POPULAR SORBON N E
disappoint the ORTF bosses or jeopardize their
future job possibilities? 1 7 MAY 1968 I POLITBURO OF TH E COMMUN IST
Apart from this: as the workers are begin­ PARTY OF TH E USSR THE KREML I N MOSCOW I
ning to occupy several factories in France, FOL­ SHAKE IN YOU R SHOES B U R EAUCRATS STOP
LOWING O U R EXAMPLE AN D WITH THE SAME TH E I NTERNATIONAL POWER OF THE WORKERS
RIGHT WE HAVE, the Sorbonne occupatlon com­ COU NCILS WI LL SOON WIPE YOU OUT STOP
mittee issued a statement approving of this H U MAN ITY WON'T BE HAPPY T I LL THE LAST
movement at 3 pm this afternoon. The central B U R EAUCRAT IS. H U NG WITH THE G UTS OF THE
problem of the present GA is therefore to declare LAST CAPITALIST STOP LONG LIVE THE STRUG­
itself by a clear vote supporting or disavowing G LE OF TH E KRONSTADT SAILORS AND OF TH E
this appeal of its occupation committee. In the MAKHNOVS H CH I NA AGAiNST TROTSKY A N D
case of a disavowal, this assembly will then have LEN I N STOP LONG LIVE THE 1956 (OUNCI LIST
taken the responsibility of reserving for the stu­ I N S U R R ECTION OF BUDAPEST STOP DOWN
dents a right that it refuses to the working class; WITH THE STATE STOP LONG LIVE REVOLUTION-
ARY MARXISM STOP OCCUPATION COMM ITTEE discuss their university problems. But the occu­
OF THE AUTONOMOUS A N D PO PU lAR piers immediately decided to open it to the pub­
SOBON N E lic to freely discuss the general problems of the
society. This was thus a prefiguration of a coun­
17 MAY 1968 / POliTBURO O F THE C H I N ESE cil, a council in which even the students broke
COMMUN IST PARTY GATE OF CElESTIAL PEACE out of their miserable studenthood and ceased
PEKING / SHAKE IN YOU R S HOES BUREAU· to be students.
CRATS STOP TH E I NTERNATIONAl POWER O F To be sure, the occupation has never been
T H E WORKERS COU NCILS Will SOON WIPE YOU total: a chapel and some remnants of adminis·
OUT STOP H UMANITYWON'T B E HAPPY Tlll TH E trative offices have been tolerated. The democ­
.
lAST BUREAUCRAT IS HUNG WITH THE GUTS OF racy has never been complete: future . teth·
THE lAST CAPITAliST STOP lONG LIVE FACTORY nocrats of the U N E F clai�d to be making them·
OCCUPATIONS STOP lONG liVE TH E GREAT C H I· selves useful and other political bureaucrats
.
N E S E PRO LETARIAN R EVOLUTION OF 1927 have also tried their manip1:1lations. Workers'
B ETRAYED BY TH E STAliN IST B U REAUCRATS participation has remained very limited and the
STOP LONG liVE TH E PROLETARIANS OF CAN· presence of nonstudents soon began to be
TON AND ELSEWHERE WHO HAVE TAKEN U P questioned. Many students; professors, journal­
ARMS AGAINSTTHE SO-CALLED PEOPLE'S ARMY ists and imbeciles of other occupations have
STOP LONG. liVE THE CHI N ESE WORKERS A N D come as spectators.
STU DENTS W H O HAVE ATTACK E D T H E SO­ In spite of all these deficiencies, which are
CALLED CULTU RAL REVOLUTION AN D TH E not surprising considering the contradiction
MAOIST . B U REAUCRATIC O R D E R STOP LONG between the scope of the project and the nar­
liVE REVOLUTIONARY MARXISM STOP DOWN rowness of the student milieu, the exemplary
WITH TH E STATE STOP OCCUPATION COMM IT­ nature of the best aspects nf this situation
TEE O F TH E AUTONOMOUS AND POPULAR SOR­ immediately took on an explosive sigmficance.
BON N E Workers could not fail to be inspired by seeing
free discussion, the striving for a radical critique
and d irect democracy in action. Even limited ta a
Report o n the occupation of the Sorbonne liberated from the state, this was a
SQrbonne revolutionary program developing its own forms.
The day after the occupation of the Sorbonne
The occupation of the Sorbonne that began the Sud·Aviation workers of Nantes occupied
Monday, 13 May, has inaugurated a new period their factory. On the third day, Thursday the 16th,
in the crisi s of modern society. The events now the Renault factories at Cleon and Flins were
taking place in France foreshadow the return of occupied and the movement began at the N M PP
the proletarian revolutionary movement in all and at Boulogne-Billancourt, starting at Shop
countries. The movement that had already 70. N ow, at the end of the week, 100 factories
advanced from theory to struggle in the streets have been occupied while the wave of strikes,
has now advanced to a struggle for power over acce p ted but never initiated by the union
the means of production. Modernized Ci'!Pitalisrn bureaucracies, is paralyzing the railroads and
thaught it had finished with class struggle it's
• developing toward a general strike.
started up again! The proletariat no longer exist-
·
The only power in the Sorbonne was the
ed - but here it is again. general assembly of its occupiers. At its first ses­
In surrendering the Sorbonne, the govern­ sion, on 14 May, amidst a certa in confusion, it
ment counted .on pacifying the student revolt, had elected an Occupation Committee of 15
which had already succeeded in holding a sec­ members revocable by it each day. Only one of
tion of Paris behind its barricades an entire night the delegates, belonging to the N anterre-Paris
before being recaptured with great difficulty by Enrages group, had set forth a program: defence
the police. The Sorbonne was given overto the of d irect . de m ocracy in the Sorboime and
students in the hop e that they would p eacefully absolute power of workers' councils as ultimate
goal. The next d ay's general assembly reelected Friday the 17th at 2pm the regular assembly
its entire Occupation Committee, which had not saw its rostrum occupied for a long time by self·
been able to accomplish anything by then. In appointed marshals belonging to the FER; and in
fact, all the specialised groupings that had set addition had to interrupt the session for the sec­
themselves up in the Sorbonne followed the ond march on Billancourt at 5 pm.
directives of a hidden "Coordination Committee" That evening at 9 p m , the Occu pation
composed of volunteer and very moderating Committee was finally able to present a report of
organizers responsible to no one. An hour after its activities. lt was cpmpletely unsuccessful,
the reelection of the Occupation Committee one however, in getting Its actions discussed and
of the "coordinators" privately tried to declare it voted on, in particular its appeal for the occupa­
dissolved. A direct appeal to the base in the tion of the factories, which .the assembly did not
courtyard of the Sorbonne aroused a movement tal<e the responsibility of either d isavowing or
of protests which obliged the manipulator to approving. Confronted with such indifference
retract himself. By the next day, Thursday the and confusion, the Occupation Com m ittee had ·

16th, thirteen mem bers of the Occupation no choice but to withdraw. The assembly
Committee had disappeared, leaving two com­ showed itself just as incapable of protesting
rades, including the Enrages member, vested against a new invasion oUhe rostru m by the FER
with the only delegation of power authorized by troops, whose putsch seemed to be aimed at
the general assembly and this at a time when
• countering the provisional alliance of ]CR and
the gravity of the moment necessitated immedi­ U N E F b u reaucrats. The partisans of d i rect
ate decisions: democracy was constantly being democracy immediately declared that they no
flouted in the Sorbonne and factory occupations longer had anything to do at the Sorbonn�.
were spreading. The Occupation Committee, ral­ At the very moment that the example of the

1 111
lying around it as many Sorbonne occupiers as it occupation is beginning to be taken up in the
could who were determined to maintain democ· factories it is collapsing at the Sorbonne. This is
racy there, at 3pm launched an appeal for "the all the more serious since the workers have
occupation of all the factories in France and the against them a b ureaucracy infinitely. more
formation of workers' councils." To disseminate entrenched than that of the student or leftist
this appeal, the Occupation Committee had at amateurs. In addition, the leftist bureaucrats,
the same time to restore the democratic func­ echoing the CGT in the hope of being accorded a
tioning of the Sorbonne. lt had to take over or little marginal role alongside it, abstractly sepa­
recreate from scratch all the services that were rate the workers from the students, whom "they
supposed to be under its authority: the loud­ don't need lessons from." But in fact the stu­
speaker system, printing facilities, i nterfaculty dents have already given a lesson to the workers
liaison, security. lt ignored the squawking com­ precisely by occupying the Sorbonne and briefly
plaints of the spokesmen of various political initiating a really democratic discussion. All the
groups OCR, Maoists, etc.), reminding them that bureaucrats tell us demogogically that the work­
it was responsible only to the general assembly. ing class is grown u p, in order to hide the fact
lt intended to report to it that very evening, but that it is. en,hained - first of all by them (now or
the Sorbonne occupiers' unanimous decision to in their future hopes, depending on which group
march on Renault·Billancourt (whose occupa· they're in). They counterpose their lying serious­
tion we had learned of in the meantime} post­ ness to "the festival�' in the Sorbonne, but it was
poned the session of the assembly unti1 2pm the precisely this festiveness that btire within itself
next day. the only thing that is serious: the radicat'critique .
During the night, while thousands of corn· of prevailing conditions.
· '

rades were at Billancourt, some · unidentified The student struggle is now left behind. ·

persons i mp rovised a general assembly, which Even more left behind are all the second-string
broke u p when the Occup ation Committee, hav� bureaucratic leaderships that think it's a gQod
ing learned of its existence, sent back two dele· idea to feign respect for the Stalinists at this
gates to call attention to its illegi timacy. very moment when the CGT and the so-called
"Communist" Party are trembling. The outcome right to negotiate in the name of the occupiers.
of the present crisis is in the hands of the work· These bureaucracies are not workers' organisa­
ers themselves if they succeed in accomplishing tions that have degenerated and betrayed the
in the occupation of their factories the goals workers, they are a mechanism for integrating
toward which the university occupation was only the workers i nto capitalist society. In the present
able to make a rough gesture. crisis they are the main protection of this shak­
The comrades who su pported the first en capitalism.
Sorbonne Occupation Committee - the Enrages­ The de Gaulle regime may negotiate - essen­
Situationist International Committee, a number tially (if only indirectly) with the PCF-CGT - for
of workers and a few students - have formed a the demobilization of the workers in exchange
Council for Maintaining. the Occupations: the for some economic advantages; after which the
maintaining of the occupations obviously being radical currents would be repressed. Or "the
conceivable only through their quantitative and left" may come to power and pursue the same
qualitative extension, which must not spare any policies, though from a weaker position. Or an
existing regime. armed repression may be attempted. Or, finally,
the workers may take the upper hand by speak­
· Council for maintaining the occupations, Paris, i ng for themselves and becoming conscious of
19 May 1968 goals as radical as the forms of struggle they
have already put into practice. Such a process
would lead to the formation of workers councils
For the power of the Workers making decisions democratically at the rank­
Councils and-file level, federating with each other by
means of delegates revocable at any moment,
In the space of ten days workers have occupied and becoming the sole deliberative and execu­
hundreds of factories, a spontaneous genl'!ral tive power over the entire country.
strike has totally interrupted the activity of the In what way could the prolongation of the
country, and de facto committees have taken present situation lead to such a prospect?
over many buildings belonging to the state. In Within a few days, perhaps, the necessity of
such a situation - which in any event cannot last starting certain sectors of the economy back up
but m ust either extend itself or d isappear again under workers' control could lay the bases
(through repression or defeatist negotiations) - for this new power, a power which everything is
all the old ideas are swept aside and all the rad­ already pushing to burst through the constraints
ical hypotheses on the return of the revolution­ of the unions and parties. The railroads ahd
ary, proletarian movement are confirmed. The printshops would have to be put back into oper­
fact that the whole movement was really trig­ ation for the needs of the workers' struggle. New
gered five months ago by a half dozen revolu­ de facto authorities would have to requisition
tionaries of the "Enrages" group reveals even and distribute food. If money becomes devalued
better how much the objective conditions were it might have to be replaced by vouchers backed
already present. At this very moment the French by those new authorities. lt is through such a
example is having repercussions in other coun­ practical process that the consciousness of the
tries and reviving the internationalism which is profound will of the proletariat can impose itself
indissociable fr.om the revolutions of our centu­ - the class consciousness that lays hold on his­
ry. tory and brings about the workers' domination
The fundamental struggle today is between, over all aspects of their own lives.
on the one hand, the mass of workers - who do
not have direct means of expressing themselves Council for maintaining the occupations, Paris,
- and on the other, the leftist political and union 22 May 1968

bureaucracies that (even if merely on the basis


of the 14°/o of the active population that is
unionised) control the factory gates and the
Address to all workers union demands regarding wages and pensions,
demands which were falsely presented as
Comrades, "social questions." lt is beyond politics: it is
What we have already done in France is posing the social question in its simple truth.
haunting Europe and will soon threaten all the The revolution that has been in the making for
ruling classes of the world, from the bureaucrats over a century is returning. lt can assert itself
of Moscow and· Peking to the millionaires of only in its own forms. lt is already too late for a
Washington and Tokyo. In the same way we have bureaucratic-revolutionary patching up. When a
made Paris dance, the international proletariat recently de-Stalinized Andre Barjonet calls for
will again take up its assault on the capitals of the formation of a common organisation that
all states, on all the citadels of alienation. The would bring together "all the authentic forces of
occupation of factories and public buildings revolution ... whether they march under the ban­
throughout the country has not only blocked the ner of Trotsky or Mao, of anarchy or situation ism
functioning of the economy, it has brought about (we have only to recall that those who today fol­
a general questioning of the society. A deep­ low Trotsky or Mao, to say nothing of the pitiful
seated movement is leading almost every sector "Anarchist Federation) have nothing to do with
of the population to seek a real change of life. lt the present revolution. The bureaucrats may
is now a revolutionary movement, a movement now change their m inds about what they call
which lacks nothing but the consciousness of "authentically revolutionary"; authentic revolu­
what it has already done in order to triumph. tion does not have to change its condemnation
What forces will try to save capitalism? The of bureaucracy.
regime will fall unless it threatens recourse to At the present moment, with the power they
arms (accompanied by the promise of new elec­ hold and with the parties and unions being what
tions, which could only take place after the they are, the workers have no other choice but to
capitulation of the movement) or even resorts to organise themselves in unitary rank-and-file
immediate armed repression. As for the possible committees directly seizing all aspects of the
coming to power of the left, it too will try to reconstruction of social life, asserting their
defend the old world through concessions and autonomy vis-a-vis any sort of politico-unionist
through force. In this event, the best defender of leadership, ensuring their self-defence and fed­
such a "popular government" would be the so­ erating with each other region ally and
called "Communist" Party, the party of Stalinist nationally. By taking this path they will become
bureaucrats, which has fought the movement the sole real power in the country, the power of
from the very beginning and which began to the workers councils. Otherwise the proletariat,
envisage the fall of the de Gaulle regime only because it is "either revolutionary or nothing"
when it realised it was no longer capable of will again become a passive object. lt will go
being that regime's main guardian. Such a tran­ back to watching television.
sitional government would really . . be What defines the power of the councils?
"Kerenskyist" only if the Stalinists were beaten. Dissolution of all external power; direct and
All this will depend essentially on the workers' total democracy; practical unification of decision
consciousness and capacities for autonomous and execution; delegates who can be revoked at
organisation: those who have already any moment by those who have mandated them;
rejected the ridiculous accords-that so gratified abolition of hierarchy and independent speciali­
the union leaders need only discover that they sations; conscious management and transfor­
cannot "win" much more within the framework mation of all the conditions of liberated life; per­
of the existing economy, but that they can take manent creative participation of the masses;
everything by transforming all the bases of the internationalist extension and coordination. The
economy on their own behalf. The bosses can present requirements are nothing less than this.
hardly pay more; but they can disappear. Self-management is nothing less. Beware of the
The present movement did not become recuperators of every modernist variety - includ­
"politicised" by going beyond the miserable ing even priests - who are beginning to talk of
self-management or even of workers councils
without acknowledging this minimum, because
they in fact want to save their b u reaucratic func­
tions, the privileges of their intellectual speciali­
sations or their future as petty bosses!
In reality what is necessary now has been
necessary since the beginning of the proletarian
revolutionary project. People struggled for the
abolition of wage labour, of commodity produc­
tion, of the state. lt was a matter of acceding to
conscious history, of suppressing all separations
and "everything that exists independently of
individuals." Proletarian revolution has sponta­
neously sketched out its adequate form in the
councils, in St. Petersburg in 1905 as in Turin in
1920, in Catalonia i n 1936 as in B udapest in
1956. The maintaining of the old society, o r the
formation of new exploiting classes, hi!s each
time been by way of the s u ppression of the
councils. Now the working class knows its ene­
mies and its own appropriate methods of action.
"Revolutionary organisation has had to learn
that it can no longer fight alienation with alien­
ated forms" (The Society of the Spectacle).
Workers councils are clearly the only solution,
since all the other forms of revolutionary strug­
gle have led to the opposite of what was aimed
at.

Enrages-Situationist International Committee

Council for maintaining the occupations, Paris,


30 May 1968
The struggle against alienation has to give the words their real meaning as well as to return to them their initial force

So, don't say anymore but say

society racket

professor
psychologist
poet
sociologist
militants (of an feathers) cops
conscientious objector
trade unionist
priest
family
(non-exhaustive list)

information deformation (at the level of the world racket and its mystifica·
tions)
work hard labour
art that's how much?
dialogue masturbation
culture shit that is used as a permanent gargle by an the pedantic
idiots (see professor)
my sister my Love
dear professor croak bastard
good night daddy croak bastard
excuse me officer croak bastard
thank you doctor croak croak bastard
legality trap for assholes
civilisation sterilisation
urbanism preventive police
village 1, 2, 3, 4, strategic hamlets
structuralism last chanceof neocapitalism whose glaring failures are covered
up by official lies, which are clumsily plastered over the most
obvious contradictions.

Students, you are impotent fools (we know that already),


but you will remain it as long as you will not have

-beaten up your professors


-buggered all your priests
, -set fire to the university

No the Commune is not dead.

Vandalist' s departfliJent for Public Welfare - Leaflet issued at Bordeaux (France) in April 1968
Further Reading
Debord, Guy Knabb, Ken
Society of the Spectacle Situationist International Anthology
Rebel Press/Black and Red Bureau of Publi(Secrets
£5.95 0939682001
f12.95
. .Debord, Guy
Society of the Spectacle and Other Films
·
King Mob
Rebel Press King Mob Echo - English Section of the Situationist
0946061068 International
£5.50 Dark Star /Vague 31
1871692075
Vaneigem, Raoul £6.oo
Tht;! Revolution of Everyday Life
Rebel Press For a comprehensive bibliography of Situationist and
0946061017 Situationist-inspirei:J texts consult:
£7.95
Ford, Simon
Vaneigem, Raoul The Realisation and Suppression of the Situationist
A Cavalier History of Surrealism International - An Annotated Bibliography 1972 - 1992
'
AK Press AK Press
1873176945 1873176821 .
£7·95 £7·95

Vienet, Rene
Enrages and Situationists in the Occupation Movement,
· ·
·. }

France, May 68
Rebel Press All of the abovMitlesare cu rr:ni
lyin prin t. Ifyou have any dif­
0946o66o5X ficulty .obtaining any of the titles. they are all available mail
£5.95 order from:

Gray, Chris AK Distribution


Leaving the 2oth Century: The Incomplete Work of the P 0 Box 12766
Situationist International Edinburgh
Rebel [lress Scotlan d
0946061157 EH8 9YE
£9.90 a k@J
akedin.demon.co.uk
www.akuk.com
Home, Stewart
The Assault on Culture - Utopian Currents from Lettrisme to Please setir.( a· large SAE for a full catalogue
Class War
AK Press They are also·stocked by:
1873176309 Housman's Bool<shop
£5·95 5 Caledonian Roac)
London
N1 9DX
.·�

®
Afterword
There is a tradition of denigrating certain political ideas and actions by
describing them as Utopian, u n realistic, naive etc. We have deliberately cho­
sen the ti'tle of this Anthology as we feel it sums up im portant aspects of the
events in May. The im portance that graffiti1 posters, pamph lets etc played
both in terms of practical comm u nication and inspirational agitation cannot
be denied. Some of the slogans may on one level appear Utopian but a clos­
er analysis shows that they partake of the great Surrealist tradition of the
imaginative transformation of the world, a transformation firmly rooted in,
not an escape from, reality. As Andre Breton observed, "The Imaginary is that
which tends tci become real." On one level a slogqn on a .Parisian wall refer­
ring to the beach appears a contradiction. The beach with its connotation of
seaside holidays, fun and leisure scrawled on an urban wall in the capital of
France. However, although the quality of o u r illustrations doesn't allow us to
show it too clearly, if you look carefully at photographs of Parisian streets
which have had their paving stones/ cobbles torn up what can you see? Sand,
· · ' · ·

of course.
For our records and for use in future editions of this book Dark Star would
welcome copies of the covers of the pamphlets reprinted in this book to
enable us to illustrate the widespread distribution of them both in terms of
time and geographical locations.

DARK STAR c/o AK Distribution


Dark Star would like to thank Chris Gray and
Ken Knabb, without whose translations this
anthology would not have been possible.
As Lautreamont observed, "Words expressing
evil are destined to take on a more positive
meaning. Ideas improve - the sense of words
takes part in this process. Plagiarism is neces­
sary. it is implied in the idea of progress. it
clasps an author's sentence tight, uses his
expressions, eliminates a false idea, replaces
it with the right idea.
To be well wrought, a maxim does not need to
be corrected. it needs to be developed. "

..
This anthology brings together the three most widely
translated, distributed and influential pamphlets of
the Situationist International available in the sixties,
along with an eyewitness account of the May Events
published in June 2968. Beneath The Paving Stones -
Sltuatlonlsts and the Beach in addition includes
numerous documents, photographs, poster art and
graffiti originating from Paris In 2968; It offers the
reader not only a concise introduction to the ideas of
the Situationists but also an insight into what
Situationist material was readily available in the late
sixties.

ISBN J."1025"1331!-3

DAF.:t-::: STAF.: £9.00 I $15.00 (USA) J,, ,, """ >

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