National Democratic
Revolution, Part 1b
Barricade, Rue Soufflot, Paris, February 1848, painting by Horace Vernet
Origin
of the National Republic
The Great French Revolution that started in 1789 did not immediately
produce a lasting democratic republic in France. Napoleon Bonaparte’s Empire,
launched with a coup d’etat on 9
November 1799, had attacked feudal monarchs all over Europe. But these
events were followed during the next three decades by the restoration of weak
versions of the French monarchy, culminating in the “July Monarchy” of Louis
Philippe. Karl Marx and Frederick Engels anticipated a coming revolutionary
upsurge and published the Communist Manifesto at
the beginning of the revolutionary year of 1848.
The Manifesto’s first major section is called “Bourgeois and
Proletarians” and it says among other things that: “Society as a whole is more and more splitting up into two great
hostile camps, into two great classes directly facing each other - bourgeoisie
and proletariat.”
Karl Marx arrested in Brussels, March 1848, drawing, N Khukov
Yet it was Marx in particular, in two great books and one short Address
(see the attached and/or the links below), who described, better then anyone
else, the much less simple, more complex, permutations of class conflict at the
time. For example, in the following cut from “The
18th Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte” (find attached, or please download
your file via the link below) it is clear that the proletariat suffered an
almost immediate disaster, because it had no allies. The proletariat was
isolated and attacked by all the other classes together, and massacred, in June
of 1848 in Paris.
This is the situation that the proletariat must always avoid, and it is
one reason why the working class must always have allies. Here is the
cut from Marx’s outline of events, given in the “18th Brumaire”:
“a. May 4 to June 25, 1848. Struggle of all classes
against the proletariat. Defeat of the proletariat in the June days.
“b. June 25 to December 10, 1848. Dictatorship of the
pure bourgeois republicans. Drafting of the constitution. Proclamation of a
state of siege in Paris. The bourgeois dictatorship set aside on December
10 by the election of Bonaparte as President.”
In the “18th Brumaire”, not only do the contenders of the Great French
Revolution, the Aristocracy, the Peasantry (sometimes called the Montagne), the Bourgeoisie and the
Proletariat reappear. Also described are the clear contradictions within the
bourgeois class. Plus the classless, manipulative Bonaparte, who played the
four main classes off against each other for more than two decades until he
lost the plot. And notably the
“lumpen-proletariat” of idle adventurers who were Bonaparte’s willing, and paid
(with “whisky and sausages”) accomplices.
Berlin, March 1848, painting
In his March 1850 Address to the Central Committee of the Communist
League Marx spoke in particular of Germany, which had also caught the
revolutionary enthusiasm, again in terms of a precise and dynamic comprehension
of the patterns and permutations of class contradiction, and of who must ally
with whom at any particular moment.
Karl Marx and Frederick Engels were deeply, personally and very
effectively involved in these events as individuals and as organisers, and in
Engels’ case as a military combatant.
These events shaped the new form of democratic republic that was
consolidated in France after the eventual fall of Louis Bonaparte in
1871, and after the brief life of the Paris Commune.
Barricade, Paris, June 1848, photograph
That newly-formed kind of “democratic bourgeois republic” still remains
the standard form of nation-state in the world, and it is the same kind that
our republic has become, here in South Africa.
This historic understanding, as well as the unsurpassed clarity with
which Marx in particular describes the nature of practical multi-class
struggle, can serve to prepare us for a progressively more specific, historical
examination of the theory and practice of National Democratic Revolution (NDR)
through the 20th Century, in Africa, and in South Africa up to the present
time.
The NDR is nothing if it is not about class alliance, and about
democracy on the national scale.
Marx’s “The Class Struggles in France”
(please find attached or download the extract linked below) is also a study in
class alliance, and it complements the “18th Brumaire”. It is a
detailed account of the revolutionary events in France from 1848 onwards,
including the rise of Louis Bonaparte. Marx was frequently in Paris during this
period.
What “The Class Struggles in France” does for us here, early in our
course on the National Democratic Revolution, is to demonstrate the realities
and permutations of class conflict. It shows once again how the working class
must have allies, and it shows how treacherous, brutal and ruthless the
bourgeoisie can be. It also shows how lightning-fast revolutionary events can
be. The period covered by chapter 1 is only four months, from February to June,
and yet almost everything that can happen in a revolution, happened in that
time. The question of the republic arises, and the necessity of supporting it.
The revolutionary national democracy is crucial.
·
The above is to
introduce the original reading-text: The 18th Brumaire
of Louis Bonaparte, Chapters 1 and 7, Marx, Part 1 and Part 2, and Class
Struggles in France, Part 1, The Defeat of June 1848, Marx.
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