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The mass protests that shook France in May 1968 were exciting,
dangerous, creative and influential, changing European politics to
this day. Students demonstrated, workers went on general strike,
factories and universities were occupied. At the height of its
fervour, it brought the entire national economy to a halt. The
protests reached such a point that political leaders feared civil
war or revolution. Fifty years later, here are the eye-opening oral
testimonies of those young rebels. By listening to the voices of
students and workers, as opposed to those of their leaders, May '68
appears not just as a mass event, but rather as an event driven by
millions of individuals, achieving a mosaic human portrait of
France at the time. This book reveals the legacy of the uprising:
how those explosive experiences changed both those who took part,
and the course of history. May Made Me will record these moments
before history moves on yet again.
'Tantalizing prose' - TLS Jean Jaures was the celebrated French
Socialist Party leader, assassinated in 1914 for trying to use
diplomacy and industrial action to prevent the outbreak of war.
Published just a few years before his death, his magisterial A
Socialist History of the French Revolution has endured for over a
century as one of the most influential accounts of the French
Revolution ever to be published. Written in the midst of his
activities as leader of the Socialist Party and editor of its
newspaper, L'Humanite, Jaures intended the book to serve as both a
guide and an inspiration to political activity; even now it can
serve to do just that. Jaures's verve, originality and willingness
to criticise all players in this epic drama make this a truly
moving addition to the shelf of great books on the French
Revolution. Now available for the first time in paperback, Mitchell
Abidor's abridged translation of Jaures's original six volumes
makes this exceptional work truly accessible to an Anglophone
audience.
"A Meteor of Intelligent Substance" "Something was Missing in our
Culture, and Here It Is" "Liberties sure is needed in these times."
In a short time since its launch, Liberties - A Journal of Culture
and Politics, a quarterly, has become essential reading for those
engaged in the cultural and political issues and causes of our
time. The writers in Liberties offer deep experience from across
borders, national identities, political affiliations and artistic
achievements. As the introductory essay in the inaugural edition
noted, "At this journal we are betting on what used to be called
the common reader, who would rather reflect than belong and asks of
our intellectual life more than a choice between orthodoxies." Each
issue of Liberties features original in-depth essays and compelling
new poetry from some of the world's most significant writers,
artists, and scholars, as well as introducing new talent, to
inspire and impact the intellectual and creative lifeblood of
today's culture and politics. This spring issue of Liberties
includes: Giles Kepel on the Murder of Samuel Paty; Ingrid
Rowland's Long Live the Classics!; Vladimir Kara-Murza Surviving
Putin's Poisons; Paul Starr on Reckoning with National Failure from
Covid; Becca Rothfeld on Today's Sanctimony Literature; Enrique
Krauze explores What is Latin America?; William Deresiewicz on Why
Great Visual Art Forces Us to Think; Benjamin Moser on
Rediscovering Frans Hals; David Nirenberg on What We Can Learn from
Earlier Plagues; Agnes Callard's view of Romance without Love, Love
without Romance; Mitchell Abidor looks back to "Social Media" in
1895 to Understand a Crowd's "Wisdom"; The Tallis Scholars' Peter
Phillips on the Secrets of Josquin; David Thomson on Movies' Poetic
Desire; Poetry from Henri Cole, Chaim Nachman Bialik, and Paul
Muldoon; and, Leon Wieseltier (editor) asks "Where Are the
Americans?" and Celeste Marcus (managing editor) writes for a
Pluralistic Heart.
The mass protests that shook France in May 1968 were exciting,
dangerous, creative and influential, changing European politics to
this day. Students demonstrated, workers went on general strike,
factories and universities were occupied. At the height of its
fervour, it brought the entire national economy to a halt. The
protests reached such a point that political leaders feared civil
war or revolution. Fifty years later, here are the eye-opening oral
testimonies of those young rebels. By listening to the voices of
students and workers, as opposed to those of their leaders, May '68
appears not just as a mass event, but rather as an event driven by
millions of individuals, achieving a mosaic human portrait of
France at the time. This book reveals the legacy of the uprising:
how those explosive experiences changed both those who took part,
and the course of history. May Made Me will record these moments
before history moves on yet again.
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