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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The term Mao-spontex refers to a syncretic Marxist and libertarian political tendency in France that arose after the 1968 Mass Protests and lasted until around 1972.[1][2] The name is a portmanteau of Maoist and spontaneist,[3] while the reference to Spontex [fr], a French cleaning sponge brand, is a re-appropriation of name-calling which disparaged the movement's anti-authoritarian approach to revolution.[4]

Mao-spontex was inspired by both the spontaneous action of the Movement of March 22 in France and subsequent protest movement and the Cultural Revolution in China,[1] and came to represent an ideology promoting some aspects of Maoism, Marxism, and Leninism, but rejecting the total idea of Marxism–Leninism.[5] Lenin's work What Is To Be Done? was especially targeted for criticism since they rejected Lenin's critique of spontaneity.[6] The idea of democratic centralism was supported as a way to organize a party, but only if it stays in constant contact with a mass worker's movement to remain revolutionary.[1] The main party vehicles for Mao-spontex were the French political party Gauche prolétarienne and the group Vive la révolution.[2]

The tendency falls under the wider current of Western Maoism[7][8][9] that existed after the emergence of the New Left.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c "Investigation into the Maoists in France". Marxists.org. Retrieved 30 November 2016.
  2. ^ a b "Cahiers du cinéma's Maoist Turn and the Front Culturel Révolutionnaire". Zapruder World. Retrieved 2024-02-15.
  3. ^ Fields, Belden (1984). "French Maoism". Social Text (9/10): 148–177. doi:10.2307/466540. ISSN 0164-2472. JSTOR 466540.
  4. ^ Bourg, Julian (2017-11-28). From Revolution to Ethics, Second Edition. McGill-Queen's University Press. p. 86. ISBN 978-0-7735-5246-3. It did not take long for the GP-ists to become known as 'Mao-spontex', or Maoist-spontaneists. The name was originally an insult—Spontex was the brand name of a cleaning sponge—intended to belittle the group's embrace of anti-authoritarianism as an element of revolutionary contestation. The marxisant tradition had long criticized spontaneism as an anarchistic error.
  5. ^ "La Ligue Communiste S'en Prend Aux 'Mao Spontex'". Le Monde (in French). 1969-05-21. Retrieved 2023-12-07.
  6. ^ "Why has the ISO collapsed? | Workers' Liberty". www.workersliberty.org. Retrieved 2023-12-07.
  7. ^ Slobodian, Quinn (2018), "The meanings of Western Maoism in the global 1960s", The Routledge Handbook of the Global Sixties, Routledge, pp. 67–78, doi:10.4324/9781315150918-7, ISBN 978-1-315-15091-8, retrieved 2023-12-07
  8. ^ "'Imperialism runs deep': Interview with Robert Biel on British Maoism and its afterlives". Ebb. Retrieved 2023-12-07.
  9. ^ Graber, Lauren; Spaulding, Daniel (2019-11-18), Galimberti, Jacopo; de Haro García, Noemi; Scott, Victoria H. F. (eds.), "The Red Flag: The art and politics of West German Maoism", Art, Global Maoism and the Chinese Cultural Revolution, Manchester University Press, doi:10.7765/9781526117472.00011, ISBN 978-1-5261-1747-2, S2CID 209562552, retrieved 2023-12-24

Further reading

  • Ulrike Heider, Keine Ruhe nach dem Sturm, Rogner & Bernhard bei Zweitausendeins, Hamburg, 2001.

External links

This page was last edited on 5 April 2024, at 21:07
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