In June 1848, two irregular armies of the urban poor fought a
four-day battle in the streets of Paris that decided the fate of
the French Second Republic. The Parisian National Workshops and the
Parisian Mobile Guard-organizations newly created at the time of
the February Revolution-provided the bulk of the June combatants
associated with the insurrection and repression, respectively.
According to Marx's simple and compelling hypothesis, a nascent
French proletariat unsuccessfully attempted to assert its political
and social rights against a coalition of the bourgeoisie and
lumpenproletariat, represented by the Parisian Mobile Guard.
Through a detailed study of archival sources, Mark Traugott
challenges this interpretation of these events and proposes an
organizational explanation.
Research has consistently shown that skilled artisans and not
unskilled proletarians stood at the forefront of the revolutionary
struggles of the nineteenth century. Traugott compares the social
identities of the main participants on opposite sides of the
conflict and sorts out the reasons for the political alignments
observed. Drawing on work by Charles Tilly and Lynn Lees, Traugott
demonstrates that the insurgents were not highly proletarianized
workers, but rather members of the highly skilled trades
predominant in the Parisian economy. Meanwhile, those who
spearheaded the repression were little different in occupational
status, though they tended to be significantly younger. Traugott's
"organizational hypothesis" makes sense of the observed
configuration of forces. He accounts for the age differential as a
by-product of the recruitment criteria that Mobile Guard volunteers
were required to meet. Finally, he explains why class position
creates no more than a diffuse political predisposition that
remains subject to the influence of situation-specific factors such
as organizational affiliations.
Armies of the Poor helps clarify our understanding of the
dynamic at work in the insurrectionary turmoil of 1848 in
particular and in the great waves of early industrial revolutionism
in general. It now is a standard interpretation for subsequent
research on the French Revolution of 1848. Armies of the Poor will
be of interest to historians seeking a re-interpretation of a major
revolutionary episode and social scientists considering a
re-examination of Marx and Engels' hypotheses of the roots of
political mobilization and protest.
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