The Blanqui Reader
By (Author) Louis Auguste Blanqui
Verso Books
Verso Books
1st July 2018
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Political science and theory
Political control and freedoms
Social and political philosophy
140
Hardback
384
Width 156mm, Height 235mm, Spine 35mm
728g
Louis-Auguste Blanqui (1805-1881) was one of the most important and controversial figures in nineteenth-century French revolutionary politics, and he played a major role in all of the great upheavals that punctuated his life the insurrections of 1830, 1848 and 1870-71. Adamant that a just and egalitarian society can only be established by revolutionary means, he recognised that no revolution can succeed if it fails to overcome the coercive resources of the state, and no revolutionary government can endure if it betrays the principles that alone earn and deserve mass support. At odds with followers of Proudhon on the one hand and of Marx on the other, while Blanqui commanded unrivalled authority in French revolutionary circles during parts of his own lifetime he was quickly forgotten (if not derided) after his death. This is the first collection of Blanqui's political writings ever published in English, and it includes new and complete translations of his best known texts: Instructions for an Armed Uprising, and Eternity by the Stars. With material drawn from all his main publications and speeches, as well as from the full sweep of his voluminous manuscripts and correspondence, this wide-ranging anthology will enable anglophone readers and political activists to arrive at their own critical assessment of Blanqui's thought and legacy for the first time.
Neither god, nor master! -- Louis Auguste Blanqui
Peter Hallward teaches Philosophy at Kingston University,and has written books on Alain Badiou, Gilles Deleuze, postcolonial literature,and contemporary Haitian politics. His books The Will of the People and Blanqui and Political Will are also forthcoming from Verso. Philippe Le Goff teaches French at Kingston University, where he was previously a postdoctoral research fellow in the Centre for Research in Modern European Philosophy. He completed a PhD on Auguste Blanqui at the University of Warwick in 2015.