1968 and all that.....

Submitted by playinghob on 20 February, 2008 - 21:58.

Be Realistic Demand the Impossible!

International Conference and bookfair celebrating the hopes and dreams of May 1968 - 40 years on.

Saturday May 10th,10am to 10pm.

Conway Hall
Red Lion Sq
London WC1

For further info

www.1968andallthat.net

4 March, 2008 - 09:13

Blurb for the meeting the ICC is holding on the day:

May 68: the return of the working class after 40 years of counter-revolution
Submitted by Andrew on Wed, 30/01/2008 - 12:22. Talk
Author: The International Communist Current

May 68 The student riots. Ah, the idealistic 60s, all that talk about class struggle and revolution - it's all a bit out of date now, no?.

No: May 68 in France was not a student riot. The brutal repression handed out to the students in the Latin Quarter was just the spark that lit a far wider movement a movement of the working class, the most massive unplanned general strike in history.

It was an event of historic importance. For over four decades the international working class had been dragged through the depths of defeat and counter-revolution as the bourgeoisie attempted to wipe out all remnants of the international revolutionary wave which shook the world in the wake of October 1917 in Russia. Stalinism, fascism, the 'war for democracy' of 1939-45, the cold war between the eastern and western imperialist blocs, the propaganda about the alleged integration of the working class into 'consumer society' All these were the difference faces of that counter-revolution.

May 68 marked a dramatic break with this dark period and opened the way to an international wave of workers? struggles that included the Hot Autumn in Italy in 69, the Cordiba uprising in Argentina in the same year, the massive strikes in Poland in 1970, the struggles of dockers, transport workers, miners and many others in Britain in 1972-4.

Far from being integrated into capitalist society, the working class in the late 60s and 70s showed its capacity to respond to the first stirrings of the underlying economic crisis of the system. This crisis has never gone away but has got deeper and more widespread in the 40 years since 68. And despite many set-backs, difficulties, and changes in shape and experience, the working class has not been defeated, a fact demonstrated by the development of a new series of struggles around the world since 2003 and the emergence of a new generation of young people asking fundamental questions about the future that capitalism has in store for humanity.

That is the true heritage of 68: the renewal of the class struggle as the only basis for challenging the present system of society ? a system which is still guarded by the same forces that helped to sabotage the movement forty years ago: parliament and elections, the trade unions, and the parties of the ?left?. The heritage of 68s is above all the whole experience of self-organisation through action committees, of passionate debates in general assemblies, the revival of the idea of the workers councils and the rediscovery of buried revolutionary political traditions: in sum, the perspective of proletarian revolution as the only realistic alternative to a capitalist society in utter decay.

Come to this meeting and discuss this analysis and the perspectives for activity that follow from it.

Visit our website: www. internationalism.org.

19 April, 2008 - 20:57

Just to remind folk that this event is still happening. There will also be a fairly sizable anarchist representation at the bookfair, with stalls from the Anarchist Federation, Class War, Freedom Press and Black Flag Magazine as well as a wide range of anarchist titles from Housmans Bookshop.
For further info www.1968andallthat.net black star red star red n black star

19 April, 2008 - 21:04

Hey playinghob

You might want to correct the OP re the start and finish times - if it both starts and finishes at 10am that doesn't allow much time for the day's activities. tongue

19 April, 2008 - 21:24

Thanks Lone Wolf! It should of course read 10pm

19 April, 2008 - 21:25

My pleasure cool

26 April, 2008 - 07:29

The ICC's meeting will be at 2pm in the Artists' room. Meetings are only an hour long so don't be late. All welcome, including, of course, members of the AF.

30 April, 2008 - 15:12

Just to add what Housmans are up to, in conjunction with All That...

Quote:
ALL POWER TO THE IMAGINATION![/FONT]

As an official partner to the ‘1968 and All That’ conference and book fair, and as a fellow traveller in the wider ‘All Power to the Imagination’ series of ’68 events happening across the country, Housmans is hosting a number of talks and book events throughout May to help explore 1968 and its legacies.
For more information on the range of ’68 related events taking place, please visit:
1968.org.uk
nationalpsychogeographic.com
1968andallthat.net
Refreshments are served at all events in Housmans Bookshop.

1. (book launch/talk)
Saturday 3rd May – 5pm
Lou Rowan - Fiction for Justice

Housmans are very proud to welcome celebrated American author Lou Rowan to London for the UK launch of two new pieces of fiction, the novel ‘My Last Days’ and short story collection ‘Sweet Potatoes’, as part of the Housmans ‘1968 and All That’ season.

As well as introducing his latest work, Lou Rowan will be recalling his experiences of radical publishing in the late 60’s – work that he continues to do in editing the journal of experimental writing, ‘Golden Handcuffs Review’.
lourowan.com

2. (poetry readings)
Wednesday 7th May – 7pm
Torriano Poets for Peace

Keeping the spirit of ’68 alive, Torriano Poets for Peace will be hosting an evening of the best in peace poetry and song. This month’s session will feature contributions from Valeria Melchioretto, Hylda Sims, Dan Kennedy, and songs from Eric Levy.

3. (party)
Friday 9th May – 7pm ‘till late
The Official ‘1968 and All That’ launch party

We invite you and anyone you care to bring, to come down to the official ‘1968 and All That’ launch party. There will be plenty of ’68 music, film, drinks and guests.

In conjunction with the ‘1968 and All That’ conference and book fair. http://1968andallthat.net/

4. Sunday 11th May – from noon till 6pm
Housmans ‘1968 and All That’ after party

Housmans will open its doors for an informal chance to meet up with drifting guest speakers, and watch ’68 films, playing throughout the day. In conjunction with the ‘1968 and All That’ conference and book fair.

5. (book launch)
Tuesday 13th May – 7pm
Rebel, Rebel with Bibi van der Zee

Journalist and activist Bibi van der Zee launches ‘Rebel, Rebel – The Protestor’s Handbook’, an easy-to-use handbook designed to turn any concerned citizen into a successful activist. If all that’s holding you back is a feeling of “what difference can I make?”, then this book will shake you out of your apathy once and for all. But if all that’s holding you back is uncertainty about what you can do or say without landing yourself in jail, you’ll find jargon-free explanations of your legal rights, as well as inspiring interviews with veteran campaigners.

6. (talk)
Wednesday 14th May – 7pm
Psychogeography with Merlin Coverley

A chance to take part in an informal Q&A with Merlin Coverley, and explore the importance of psychogeography across the decades. Merlin is the author of the indispensable guide to the subject, ‘Psychogeography - the pocket essential guide’ (Pocket Essentials, £9.99), available at Housmans now. And also look out for Merlin in June when he will be back at Housmans talking about his latest book ‘Occult London’.

7. (book event/talk)
Thursday 15th May – 7pm
“We will not fight!” with Will Ellsworth-Jones

To mark International Conscientious Objectors' Day, Will Ellsworth-Jones will be talking about his WW1 book ‘We Will Not Fight’. Through the amazing story of the Brocklesby family, Will Ellsworth-Jones looks at the history of conscientious objection in World War I, recounting the experiences of the men who took a stand despite being stigmatised, vilified and even sentenced to death, although later reprieved. This book also considers the men's lasting legacy.

"A tragic story of how cruelly conscientious objectors were treated in the first world war." Alexander Chancellor, The Guardian

8. (zine launch)
Saturday 17th May – 5pm
Savage Messiah

Bringing the ’68 spirit of imagination, confrontation and psychogeography into the present, the Savage Messiah collective launch the latest issue of their cult zine. Savage Messiah launches are always a road block, so arrive early to avoid disappointment!
http://savagemessiahzine.com/

9. (talk)
Wednesday 21st May – 7pm
Esther Leslie on Walter Benjamin

Professor of Political Aesthetics at Brickbeck, Esther Leslie will be discussing the radical influence of Walter Benjamin on the activists and thinkers of 1968.

Esther has written a number of books on Benjamin including ‘Walter Benjamin, Overpowering Conformism’ (Pluto Press, £16.99), and ‘Walter Benjamin – Critical Lives’ (Reaktion, £10.95) as well as translating ‘Walter Benjamin: The Archives’ (Verso, £16.99).

10. (talk)
Wednesday 28th May – 7pm
Nick Heath on ‘68

Nick Heath will be giving us his take on the events of 1968 from an anarchist perspective.

11. (talk)
Friday 30th May 2008 - 7 pm
'68, '78, '88: From Women's Liberation to Feminism

In May 1988, this groundbreaking anthology of Women's Liberation history was published, to mark the 20th anniversary of the May events. To provide an antidote to the male domination of other commemoratives activities, the book gathered 35 feminists of different ages, classes, and cultural backgrounds to reflect on their journeys over the preceding two decades.
Tonight, Amanda Sebestyen, editor of the anthology, will be discussing with Rebecca Johnson, Jane Wibberly, and other contributors to the anthology, their thoughts on their original contributions and their personal and political developments of the subsequent 20 years.

12. (film screening)
Saturday 31st May 2008 – 6pm
Peace News presents ‘Investigation of a Flame: A Documentary Portrait of the Catonsville Nine’

Peace News will be introducing and screening ‘Investigation of a Flame’, an intimate, experimental documentary portrait of the Catonsville Nine, who on May 17, 1968 chose to break the law in a defiant, poetic act of civil disobedience by burning service cards with homemade napalm – a much celebrated action at the time. The film will be introduced by Martin Newell from the London Catholic Worker group.

_________________________________________

Event information

Housmans Bookshop
5 Caledonian Road
King's Cross
London N1 9DX
Tel: 020 7837 4473
Email: shop@housmans.com
Map: http://tinyurl.com/2oq9vv

Drinks will be available.

All events are free.
Nearest tube: King's Cross

To subscribe to the newsletter please email nik(at)housmans.com with “subscribe newsletter” in the subject field.

"Support the shop that supports your campaigns!"

We'll have a stall at the '68 conference at Conway Hall too... smile

2 May, 2008 - 10:43

Just to remind people that a key figure from May 68 will be speaking at May 68 all-dayer on May 10th at 2pm under the auspices of the Anarchist Federation. Jean Pierre Duteuil , member of the March 22nd Movement, alongside Dany Cohn-Bendit, and unlike him, still a revolutionary anarchist.
In addition Anarchist federation will be running a bookstall all day.

2 May, 2008 - 11:02
Battlescarred wrote:
...under the auspices of the Anarchist Federation. Jean Pierre Duteuil

He is in the OCL yeh?

Their wiki page doesnt realy tell me much about them.

Quote:
The OCL has remained relatively remote from the anarcho-syndicalism, focusing on autonomous struggles or national liberation struggles

2 May, 2008 - 15:23

Their main website is down at the moment...

If you read French heres a short description of their goals and motives by Duteuil himself :
http://www.plusloin.org/refractions/refractions7/ocl_dutheuil.htm

He explains the holy trinity around which the organization works. They are :
- Communists (opposed to private property, for a society collectively managed through councils)
- Liberatarians (this is not just about economics, but also about rejecting authoritarian aspects of the society, like patriarchy)
- Revolutionaries (they're within the tradition of the workers movement, about class-struggle, against parliamentarianism, against the state and about self-management, eg against union bureaucrats)

Amen...

They're also rejecting the myth of technological progress, and against the use of empty words such as democracy or citizenship that are fashionable among people stuck looking back to the French revolution.

Its still a rather general platform...

2 May, 2008 - 16:08

So, national liberation luddites? Cool!

7 May, 2008 - 22:08

Well we know Battlescarred will be around, although I don't know if i'm allowed to talk to him. Anyone else from libcom planning to go to this?

9 May, 2008 - 14:13
guydebordisdead wrote:
So, national liberation luddites? Cool!

National liberation? Hmm -from you? And hardly luddites

12 May, 2008 - 08:30

This turned out to be OK, though it was quieter and more sedate than I expected - perhaps because there were so many old farts like me around. We sold steadily from our stall despite being parked up on the stage and had a good meeting, with a few of the younger elements coming along to find out about our politics. One was Darren Poynton. Threats on urban75 by 'Attica' (Mayday) to "ruin the ICC meeting" proved to be hot air as we thought they would. We went to a few meetings - the one on surrealist influences on situationism and the SPGB meeting, where I got called 'al Qaida' by someone close to the SPGB for attacking elections. Some comrades also went to Lindsey German's Stop the War meeting where we were arguing forcefully against the leftist conception of imperialism (ie it's only the big guys so we need to support oppressed countries) when Ian Bone and cronies turned up shouting and screaming about direct action and destroyed any possibility of further discussion. Also the meeting on Prague 68 where the working class didn't get a single mention by the speaker. Apparently the leading SWP 'thinker' John Molyneux twice denounced people for being 'ICC' at meetings when we weren't there, one of them as 'the artistic equivalent of the ICC'. Also, I had a civil conversation with Battlescarred, which is definitely a first...

12 May, 2008 - 09:35

The end rally turned out to be a lot of wind and piss with the best speaker being Alain Krivine the leading French Trotskyist. And that's not saying much with his arguing for a new worker party that would forget about old differences ( he means between Leninists and libertarians, because he's trying to get Alternative Libertaire in on this) Sheila Rowbotham is a good historian but it was essentialy hippy stuff she came out with and after all these years she still seems to have very little understanding of revolutionary politics. Eamonn McCann was a demagogue essentially just spouting the current SWP orthodoxy, Astrid Proll rambled about how the British and Germans should love each other, Adrian Mitchell read out some poetry, one very good, but spouted his usual pacifist message
Still, pleasant atmosphere, and some fine beer and wine consumed and raw stood me a glass of wine.
Oh, and our public meeting was attended by about 100 people.

20 May, 2008 - 09:25
Alf wrote:
..One was Darren Poynton.

True! laugh out loud

20 May, 2008 - 12:20
Battlescarred wrote:
guydebordisdead wrote:
So, national liberation luddites? Cool!

National liberation? Hmm -from you? And hardly luddites

Comrade, its there in black and white. His main focus is supporting national liberation movements? WSM argued a critical support for the struggle in the North, what your comrade called for in the context of modern France is just plain embarrassing.

20 May, 2008 - 13:15
darren poynton wrote:
Alf wrote:
..One was Darren Poynton.

True! laugh out loud

hear that darren? you're a 'younger element'. and i always considered you to be an old codger wink

Battlescarred wrote:
Eamonn McCann

wall

Battlescarred wrote:
and our public meeting was attended by about 100 people.

nice one.

20 May, 2008 - 13:24

Whats wrong with Eamonn McCann? He barely ever hold the SWP line on anything, he is up on trial today for trashing Raytheons offices in Derry. Something which left the SWP with no choice but to completely change their stance on direct action against the war.

20 May, 2008 - 16:36

He was certainly upholding the SWP line at the May event. Didn't you read what I said he said??
It was the usual tail ending of the "Moslem struggle" with the general idea that that was where the action is now, in Palestine, Iraq, Afghanistan . A sort of third worldist crap you might expect of Maoists and totally uncritical of Islamist fundamentalism., completely devoid of class analysis

20 May, 2008 - 16:44

I don't intend to defend the OCL's line on national liberation, and I strongly disagree with it,but really I see very little difference between your "Critical support" for "the struggle in the north" from that of the Bretons and Basques in France.
Anyway, its hardly his main focus and really cheap point-scoring like that is hardly relevant in the context of the the important things he said about May 1968
I could of course raise the frightful spectre of your fraternal organisation Alternative Libertaire and its support for NATO intervention in ex-Yugoslavia, its support for left electoral lists in the past, etc, etc, Just plain embarassing, n'est-ce pas?
But I won't!

20 May, 2008 - 16:57
Battlescarred wrote:
He was certainly upholding the SWP line at the May event. Didn't you read what I said he said??

This?

Battlescarred wrote:
Eamonn McCann was a demagogue essentially just spouting the current SWP orthodoxy

20 May, 2008 - 19:56

Having had the dubious distinction to have listened to Eamon on numerous occasions(more than most living in Belfast) he consistently spouts the SWP line in relation to the 'war on terror' being deliberately waged against Islam. Dont dare to criticise Islam in this climate...............
Although I think the SWP are also changing their approach too

20 May, 2008 - 22:13
Battlescarred wrote:
I don't intend to defend the OCL's line on national liberation, and I strongly disagree with it,but really I see very little difference between your "Critical support" for "the struggle in the north" from that of the Bretons and Basques in France.

Hear, hear,...

Devrim

20 May, 2008 - 22:40
Quote:
arguing for a new worker party that would forget about old differences ( he means between Leninists and libertarians, because he's trying to get Alternative Libertaire in on this)

And are they considering it?

21 May, 2008 - 08:20

No, it appears.
See hear if you speak French it's from their January mag
http://www.alternativelibertaire.org/spip.php?article1697

21 May, 2008 - 12:31
Battlescarred wrote:
I could of course raise the frightful spectre of your fraternal organisation Alternative Libertaire and its support for NATO intervention in ex-Yugoslavia, its support for left electoral lists in the past, etc, etc, Just plain embarassing, n'est-ce pas?
But I won't!

I wasn't aware AL were any more or less of a fraternal organisation of WSM than AFed are...

21 May, 2008 - 12:55
vanilla.ice.baby wrote:
I wasn't aware AL were any more or less of a fraternal organisation of WSM than AFed are...

We were in SIL together if that counts for anything. I quite like AL myself.

22 May, 2008 - 17:48
guydebordisdead wrote:
vanilla.ice.baby wrote:
I wasn't aware AL were any more or less of a fraternal organisation of WSM than AFed are...

We were in SIL together if that counts for anything. I quite like AL myself.

Unfortunately I don't think SIL does count for much from what I've heard...

AL are alright, bit keen on the trots, but they seem sound enough to me. But then the AF seem sound enough to me as well.

9 July, 2008 - 22:33

We've written two articles about this event

A general one on the event, the meetings we went to and our own meeting
http://en.internationalism.org/wr/315/may68-meetings

And one on the presence, ghostly or otherwise, of situationism
http://en.internationalism.org/wr/316/situationism