The Paris Commune: Worker Self-Management as a Memory and a Promise

Many radicals have fought with each other over whose legacy the Paris Commune was. Both Marx and the anarchists claimed it as their own. For ten weeks in 1871 the workers of Paris ran the city without a state government and without capitalists. This interview with the author, Kristen Ross, of her recent book, Communal Luxury: The Political Imaginary of the Paris Commune (Verso, 2015), provides inspiration not only for what had been, but for what we need to do as capitalism collapses.

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Photo courtesy of Radical Modernisms

About Bruce Lerro

Bruce Lerro has taught for 25 years as an adjunct college professor of psychology at Golden Gate University, Dominican University and Diablo Valley College. He has applied a Vygotskian socio-historical perspective to his five books: "From Earth-Spirits to Sky-Gods: the Socio-ecological Origins of Monotheism, Individualism and Hyper-Abstract Reasoning", "Power in Eden: The Emergence of Gender Hierarchies in the Ancient World" (co-authored with Christopher Chase-Dunn), "Social Change: Globalization from the Stone Age to the Present", "Lucifer's Labyrinth: Individualism, Hyper-Abstract Thinking and the Process of Becoming Civilized", and "The Magickal Enchantment of Materialism: Why Marxists Need Neopaganism". He is also a representational artist specializing in pen-and-ink drawings. Bruce is a libertarian communist and lives in Olympia, WA.

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