4.9 • 683 Ratings
🗓️ 31 July 2023
⏱️ 53 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
It’s Part Four this week, and things are really heating up. We’re bridging the gap between the “critique” years and the “praxis” years with a deep dive into the late 1800s. Mikhail Bakunin and Pierre-Joseph Proudhon make grand entrances into our narrative and bring some intrigue along with them. Part Four covers the pivotal year of 1870, the splinter between the anarchist and Democratic socialist wings of the party, and speaks to the variables present on the European continent at this critical juncture. The episode culminates with the Paris Commune of 1871 and lays the groundwork for Part Five where we’ll cover the rise of the Bolsheviks and the American labor movement. Are we having fun yet? (Don’t answer that.)
Chapters
Intro: 00:01:21
Chapter Eight: Socialist Fault Lines. 00:06:31
Coffee Break: 00:22:33
Chapter Nine: 1870. The year everything changed. 00:23:28
Bring It Home, Max: 00:36:33
Post Show Musings: 00:38:15
Outro: 00:51:39
Book Love
Joseph A. Schumpeter: Capitalism, Socialism, and Democracy
John M. Thompson: Revolutionary Russia, 1917
Bernard Harcourt: Critique and Praxis
Ray Ginger: The Bending Cross: A Biography of Eugene Victor Debs
Karl Marx: The Communist Manifesto
Karl Marx: Das Kapital
Michael Harrington: Socialism: Past and Future
Victor Serge + Natalia Ivanovna Sedova: Life and Death of Leon Trotsky
Anne Sebba: Ethel Rosenberg: An American Tragedy
Resources
The Collector: What do Hegel and Marx Have in Common?
Socialist Alternative: Robert Owen and Utopian Socialism
Marxists.org: Encyclopedia of Marxism: Events
Washington State University: Introduction to 19th-Century Socialism
Howard Zinn: Commemorating Emma Goldman: 'Living My Life'
Stanford: Hegel's Dialectics
The History of Economic Thought: Cesare Beccaria
Stanford: Jeremy Bentham
Foundation for Economic Education: Robert Owen: The Woolly-Minded Cotton Spinner
Stanford: Karl Marx
Central European Economic and Social History: Economic Development In Europe In The 19th Century
Marxists.org: Encyclopedia of Marxism
The New Yorker: Karl Marx, Yesterday and Today
Marxists.org: Glossary of Organisations
Northwestern Whitepaper: The Second Industrial Revolution
The Collector: Revolutions of 1848
Chemins de Mémoire: Franco-Prussian War of 1870
Journal of Modern History: 1870 in European History and Historiography
JSTOR: Paul Avrich: The Legacy of Bakunin
Marxists.org: Bakunin
The Anarchist Library: The Federative Principle
The Anarchist Library: Property Is Theft
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0:00.0 | Politics is a constant battle over values, and we are all inevitably in a state of competition to realize our ideals. |
0:08.5 | In such a contested space, it is possible to develop tactics only in a situated and contextualized way, |
0:15.7 | because there is no war to be won, but rather an endless series of struggles. |
0:21.5 | Critical theory must focus on strategies and tactics. |
0:25.7 | Bernard Harcourt from Critique and Praxis. |
0:32.9 | Listen to us talk. |
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0:58.9 | Past your ears and to your mind through the heart, all the facts. |
1:05.6 | On your podcasting app comes a basic white man with a rusty microphone in his red right hand. |
1:19.5 | We left off part three with somewhat of a cliffhanger. It's 1848. Marx just published the |
1:30.1 | Communist Manifesto to critical acclaim, with millions of copies sold throughout the world, |
1:34.8 | and governments toppled as a result, thereby ushering in the Russian Revolution. Something |
1:40.1 | Something Fidel Castro, China takes over the world and Hunter Biden sells uranium to the |
1:44.7 | Norwegians for a bag of cocaine, steals a fishing vessel, and blows up the Nord Stream pipeline. |
1:50.1 | For those of you following along at home, the only true part of that is that Marx published |
1:53.7 | the Communist Manifesto. Right you are, just making sure you paid attention to part three. |
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2:01.5 | by ChatGPT. Moving on. So that's right. Marx's seminal political work was published in a vacuum and |
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