Abstract
This article analyzes communication in and on the May 1968 movement in France as found in graffiti, slogans, and a committee’s newsletter, and contrasts it with a 1998 book on 1968 published by the Confédération Générale du Travail (CGT), a national trade union that played a questionable role in 1968. With freedom of expression and orality on the rise in 1968, French society was inventing new forms of speech that this book, composed under the CGT’s tight ideological control, does not generally reflect.
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