Abstract

If there is any one point at which the ‘crisis of marxism’ can be said to have gone public, it was on 13 November 1977. There had of course been many symptoms of the crisis before that moment — most notably, perhaps, the sudden prominence of a group of young Parisian intellectuals who in 1976–7 produced a series of books and articles in which they proclaimed marxism a machine for the construction of concentration camps. The nouveaux philosophes, as one of their number dubbed them, achieved rapid prominence in the French media (after all, France was then in the lead-up to the legislative elections of March 1978, which the Communist—Socialist Union of the Left was then expected to win). They even made the cover of Time, which solemnly announced that Marx was dead (when had it ever thought otherwise?). But despite all the fuss and the fact that the nouveaux philosophes had mostly been active members of maoist groupescules in the immediate aftermath of 1968, their message carried little authority with those who preferred to remain on the left rather than succumb to the eager embraces of President Giscard d’Estaing.KeywordsCommunist PartyMarxist TheoryStudent MovementLegislative ElectionRevolutionary PartyThese keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.

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