Bataille, Georges. Toward Real Revolution
Bataille, Georges. Toward Real Revolution
Bataille, Georges. Toward Real Revolution
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Toward Real Revolution
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If we wish to continue the struggle undertaken in its name, we must con-
front this present powerlessness.
We must search out those conditions in the past which have favored the
effective uprising of proletarian minorities against the society of capitalism. We
must determine whether or not such conditions are ever again likely to exist. If
that seems unlikely, we must waste no time in looking back, but resolutely con-
sider forms of prerevolutionary activity appropriate to the real situation, the
present one.
It is only during the development of several classical liberal revolutions
that the proletariat's chances have come to the fore. Liberal revolutions are the
result of the crisis within autocratic regimes. The crisis within a democratic
regime will necessarily result in a revolution of a different type, preceded by a
different type of revolutionary situation. The basic error of traditional revolu-
tionary conceptions consists in the failure to recognize these essential dif-
ferences, to recognize wholly new conditions of struggle, which hold out ab-
solutely no possibility of movements similar to those of the Paris Commune or
the Russian Revolution.
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34 OCTOBER
Proletarian
of Autoc
In all libera
tribution, no
and meanin
rage, has on
who have ex
liberal insur
rections owe
The possibi
chance, the
founded on o
tion) and is
revolution th
the bourgeo
All example
some chance
them not ev
Crisis in
No democr
revolution.
No uprising has ever even called into question the existence of such a
regime. Not because the institutions of parliament and of the trade unions pro-
vide the oppressed with adequate means of pressure; rather because even a
general discontent results, in the best of cases, in the formation of two opposi-
* Proletarian attempts have not been numerous. In France, June 1848 and March 1871; in
Russia, October 1917; in Germany and Hungary, the postwar movements led by Kurt Eisner
and Bela Kuhn; in China, the various movements which developed during the still current period
of extreme instability; in Spain, the uprising in the Asturias. These experiences are cited, it must
be said, in support of my argument; the data I aim to set forth are not of an empirical nature, but
derive from an attempt at a general analysis of the social superstructure and its transformational
rules. The impossibility of proletarian insurrection outside certain conditions is a theoretical
given, confirmed by experience. I regret having to publish the general conclusions of analytic
work unpreceded by the analytical work itself. I consider, nonetheless, that these conclusions as
presented are sufficient in themselves.
I must for the moment be content with referring the reader concerned with method to the
study published in 1933-1934, in issues number ten and eleven of La critique sociale, under the title
"The Psychological Structure of Fascism," even though that text is merely a first presentation,
quite rudimentary and, unfortunately, difficult to follow, due to the new set of ideas which re-
quired succinct presentation.
To these general indications, I would add that analysis of the processes characteristic of the
superstructure does not imply that we take no account of the economic realities which condition
these processes.
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Toward Real Revolution 35
Anachronistic Character of M
* All clear-sighted observers in France are currently aware of the principal danger within the
Popular Front of the development of a purely negative force.
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36 OCTOBER
The leftist
in a crisis of
the forces of
The Anachro
Communist
The first of
democratic p
Commune in its time to the need for the reconstruction of a social structure
destroyed by confused activity, by the powerlessness of the masses and of social
revolutionary and Menshevik leaders of the Left.
The Bolsheviks' organizing of the proletariat, as it turned out, fitted the
decomposed state of authority immediately following the overthrow of the auto-
cratic institution of czarism. Its basic orientation, toward the extreme Left, al-
lowed it to contribute considerably to the destruction of all subsisting authority
Its capacities for discipline and coherence, its very radicalism on the social
level, placed it outside the other parties of the Left as the only force capable o
imposing its violence upon impotent turmoil. Its reconstitution of authority,
however, was possible only insofar as the general hatred unleashed against the
Right meant that the latter found themselves unable to direct that authority to
their own benefit.
The communist parties within the various capitalist countries were
formed, under Lenin's leadership, with a view to realizing throughout the rest
of Europe a revolution similar to that which had just taken place in Russia. It
must be said, moreover, that at the time of their founding, the decomposition
in process within many European countries was not so different from that
recently exploited by the Bolsheviks. The crowned heads of Germany and Italy
had been destroyed. Even in those countries in which nothing of this sort had
occurred, the war, by creating within the democracies a state of autocratic
force, had generated movements which recall those of the classical revolutions.
It seemed possible, after the war, to envisage an intensive, general dissolution
of society, and even in France and Italy a disoriented bourgeoisie was then
faced with the development of very broad proletarian movements. Neverthe-
less, the formation of communist parties in a relatively revolutionary situation
resulted, in France, in a calming of excitement and, in Italy, in precipitation
toward disaster. It must be understood that if a proletarian movement does
develop, it is essential that there be, at the same time, a true collapse of the so-
cial order; otherwise the repercussions within the right wing of opposition will
result in a reconstruction of oppressive forces in new forms.
It is time to declare openly and repeatedly that in a stabilized society in
which elements of the Right have not been discredited by a recent exercise of
power, the communist operation will not endure; for the Right will, on the con-
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Toward Real Revolution 37
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38 OCTOBER
We must fi
overthrow a
path is neces
movements s
indication of
constructed from them. We must learn how to use for the liberation of the ex-
ploited those weapons that were forged for their greater enslavement.
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Toward Real Revolution 39
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40 OCTOBER
A certain nu
(1) France ha
no humiliatio
latent rage to
inhabitants a
able for the
death- but w
tage. It is, th
this country
and necessary
play upon th
most active d
to use the an
(2) This con
Italy and Ge
fascism seem
tims of the i
France, long
further creat
(3) The recru
whole, of an
The slightest
the violent d
of the situat
cessive throu
(4) The pro
system of pr
even a certa
economy mu
(5) The mass
results of pr
Croix de Feu
than its pred
have as its base the desire for world economic transformation which cannot be
satisfied with symbolic measures.
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Toward Real Revolution 41
1936
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