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(en) France, UCL AL #357 - Culture - Read Lucy Parson: My name is revolution, writings and words of an agitator (ca, de, fr, it, pt, tr)[machine translation]

Date Thu, 20 Mar 2025 08:30:55 +0200


Here is a collection of about forty articles and conference texts by Lucy Parson (1853-1942), a somewhat forgotten American anarchist, including by the history of labor movements, founding member of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), probably descended from slaves, widow of Albert Parson, one of the five martyrs of the Haymarket massacre. ---- Very educational in her interventions, she constantly presents the principles and interests of anarchism, explaining in particular why any government, anxious to maintain itself in power, will never be anything but at the service of a minority to the detriment of the majority whose opposition will be silenced. She considers that "the change to come can only occur through a revolution, because the possessing classes will not let society transform itself peacefully". To skeptics who believe it is impossible to do without an "organized authority," she responds that "experience has shown that human beings are gregarious animals who instinctively join forces with their peers to cooperate, because they work better in groups than alone. This tendency could lead to the formation of cooperative communities, of which the current unions are the embryos."

She denounces "wage slavery" and voting as "the most colossal[...]of all modern mystifications," the hypocrisy of "Christian civilization," the despotism of the United States government, which presents itself under the appearance of a republic and a democracy, but acts "against the will of the people, in the interest of the people who control it." She also shows herself to be very concerned about feminist issues, but unlike Emma Garldman, she defends "sexual exclusivity."

This copious sample, skillfully annotated by Francis Dupuis-Déri, gives a broad overview of his positions and will certainly contribute to his (re)discovery.

Ernest London (UCL Le Puy-en-Velay)

Lucy Parson, Je m'appelle révolution, écris et paroles d'une agitatrice, Lux, September 2024, 288 pages, 20 euros.

https://www.unioncommunistelibertaire.org/?Lire-Lucy-Parson-Je-m-appelle-revolution-ecris-et-paroles-d-une-agitatrice
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