“The
Permanent Guillotine – Writings of the Sans-Culottes,” edited by Mitchell Abidor, 2018
The image of the French Revolution in the U.S. and Britain
has been colored by anti-revolutionary liberal novels like “Tale of Two Cities,” middle-class tales
like Marat/Sade and execrable films like “Marie
Antoinette” with Kirsten Dunst, which whitewashes Antoinette’s role in the repression
and counter-revolution. Tourists and the French are still treated to a diorama of poor Antoinette imprisoned in the Concierge on the Ile de la Cite. The celebration of kings and queens doesn't stop there. Netflix's "The Last Czar" ultimately paints a sympathetic portrait of the Romanovs, as does the "Marco Polo" series of Kublai Khan. The endless
movies about queens starring Hollywood royalty like Helen Mirren and the
idiotic coverage of the British royal family complete the picture. Monarchs are cool! No one talks about the sans-culottes (‘without
shoes’) in a nice way. So lets…
Slogan of the Sans-Culottes |
The sans-culottes were the left-wing of the Jacobins of
Marat, the Cordeliers Club and ‘The Mountain’ – a term for the whole French
left. They actually kept the Jacobins in
line for a time. The sans-culottes hated
the monarchists, the clergy, the large businessmen and bankers, the judges and
the ‘moderates’ – who were all in league together against the people and the French
Revolution (1789-1795). In other words,
the sans-culottes were quite modern! This
is a collection of original writings by authors most will be unfamiliar with – Jacques
Hébert, Jacques Roux, Jean Francois Varlet, Anacharsis Cloots, Sylvain
Maréchel. It includes revolutionary
songs and hilarious dialogs, along with writings by organizations like the
Brave Sans-Culottes, The Popular Society of Sans-Culottes of Nimes and The
Enragés. Writings of the Conspiracy of
Equals, a group expressing the beginnings of communism, are not included.
The sans-culottes were more progressive than the American
Revolution that came earlier. Their role
helped the French Revolution destroy the royal structure and inhibit the role
of religion, while taking aim at large businessmen. Benjamin Franklin, a
representative of the U.S. government, sided with the ‘moderate’ Girondin faction
on the issue of executing royalty. The sans-culottes opposed this view, as the
king and queen served as organizing forces and rallying points for
counter-revolution. The sans-culottes also advocated terminal punishment of
hoarders, capital strikers and price gougers, taking aim at the rich. Instead they wanted to institute civil
distribution and control of food and necessary goods.
Themes that run through their dialogs, speeches, articles
and submissions to the revolutionary National Convention:
1. A
hard-core anti-clericalism making fun of the priests, Jesus, the Catholic Church,
a ‘virgin’ Mary and the ‘sacrament.’ This
was because the clergy were one of the strongest legs of cruel support for the
last monarch of France, King Louis XVI and his cohort. Notre-Dame, the famous Parisian cathedral,
was rededicated to the ‘Cult of Reason’ by the sans-culottes during the
Revolution. This was part of a de-Christianization
program that sought to remove state funding for the Catholic Church and its
priests.
2. A
fierce hostility to large farmers and merchants, even bakers, who hoarded grain
and goods, drove up prices, stopping production of food and tried to starve the
people into submission. They wanted price-controls
and restrictions on how much the rich could own.
3. An
overwhelming anger against the so-called Girondin moderates – centrists who
protected Antoinette, royalty, corrupt businessmen and the reactionary
courts. The Girondins engaged in civil
war and encouraged a bloody military intervention by Austria to stop the French
revolution. As Lenin and Trotsky noted
in their writings on France, ‘reasonable’ centrism blocks with right politics,
not left. Watch the behavior of Democratic party ‘centrists’ like Biden,
Harris, Buttigieg, O’Rourke, Booker or Klobuchar to see this in action in a
modern U.S. context.
And of course, royalty.
And of course, royalty.
The Queen Meets Her Deserved Fate |
The editor, Mitchell Abador, says the sans-culottes were
mostly artisans and small merchants – a radical petit-bourgeois. However the Enrages mention ‘workers’ repeatedly
in their text and even Abador mentions ‘hired laborers.’ Abador seems to claim that the working-class
as a class did not really exist or play a role in the revolution or the sans-culottes. However any understanding of how artisans and
merchants go about their business would show that cart drivers, hod-carriers,
seamstresses, washer-women, clerks, stevedores, some peasants, soldiers, servants
and simple laborers existed in 1789. Perhaps not in the leadership, but certainly
playing a large role as the real base of the sans-culottes themselves. Comments about ‘hundreds of thousands’ of
sans-culottes in the various rural departments and cities like Marseilles and
Paris cannot just refer to artisans and merchants. And I would imagine most small merchants and
artisans actually could afford shoes! For
Abador to seem to disappear the working classes in the French Revolution is a
political act.
Certain Jacobins like Jean-Marie Collot d’Herbois crossed
the aisle as Bukharin did, and supported the Thermidorian counter-revolution
led by Napoleon in July 1794, which overthrew the Jacobins and Robespierre. Much
as Stalin destroyed the Bolshevik Party that led the Russian Revolution, along with a good proportion of the leadership of the Red Army in the
purges of the 1930s. But no
sans-culottes crossed the aisle. They stayed
true to their politics and were either executed or escaped.
Other
reviews on French politics below, use blog search box, upper left: “The
Coming Insurrection,” “Citizen Tom Paine,” “In the Crossfire,” “The Left and
Islamic Literalism,” “Thomas Piketty,” “The Beach Beneath the Street,”
“Deephan,” “Something in the Air,” “The Age of Uprising,” “The Conspiracy.”
And I
bought it at May Day Books!
Red
Frog
Commune di Cortona, Toscana, Italia
Commune di Cortona, Toscana, Italia
September
16, 2019
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