05.16.2008, 04:02 AM | #1 |
invito al cielo
Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 18,510
|
Forty years ago to the month that the French invented chic revolution.
Wiki says: May 1968 is the name given to a series of student protests and a general strike that caused the eventual collapse of the De Gaulle government in France. The vast majority of the protesters espoused left-wing causes, but the established leftist political institutions and labor unions distanced themselves from the movement. Many saw the events as an opportunity to shake up the "old society" and traditional morality, focusing especially on the education system and employment. It began as a series of student strikes that broke out at a number of universities and lycées in Paris, following confrontations with university administrators and the police. The de Gaulle administration's attempts to quash those strikes by further police action only inflamed the situation further, leading to street battles with the police in the Latin Quarter, followed by a general strike by students and strikes throughout France by ten million French workers, roughly two-thirds of the French workforce. The protests reached such a point that de Gaulle created a military operations headquarters to deal with the unrest, dissolved the National Assembly and called for new parliamentary elections for 23 June 1968. The government was close to collapse at that point (De Gaulle had even taken temporary refuge at an air force base in Germany), but the revolutionary situation evaporated almost as quickly as it arose. Workers went back to their jobs, after a series of deceptions carried out by the Confédération Générale du Travail, the leftist union federation, and the Parti Communiste Français (PCF), the French Communist Party. When the elections were finally held in June, the Gaullist party emerged even stronger than before. May '68 was a political failure for the protesters, but it had an enormous social impact. In France, it is considered to be the watershed moment that saw the replacement of conservative morality (religion, patriotism, respect for authority) with the liberal morality (equality, sexual liberation, human rights) that dominates French society today. Although this replacement did not take place solely in this one month, the term mai 68 is used to refer to the shift in values, especially when referring to its most idealistic aspects. It is difficult to identify precisely the politics of the students who sparked the events of May 1968, much less of the hundreds of thousands who participated in them. There was, however, a strong strain of anarchism, particularly in the students at Nanterre. While not exhaustive, the graffiti gave a sense of the millenarian and rebellious spirit, tempered with a good deal of verbal wit, of the strikers (the anti-work graffiti shows the considerable influence of the Situationist movement). Happy Birthmonth Mai 68. Many happy returns |
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
05.16.2008, 04:24 AM | #2 |
invito al cielo
Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 18,510
|
Not that it was just the French that were having all le fun:
Berkeley: London: Prague: |
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
05.16.2008, 04:31 AM | #3 |
invito al cielo
Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 18,510
|
Le Rolling Stones, 'Street Fighting Man', 1968.
Evrywhere I hear the sound of marching, charging feet, boy cause summers here and the time is right for fighting in the street, boy But what can a poor boy do Except to sing for a rock n roll band cause in sleepy london town Theres just no place for a street fighting man No Hey! think the time is right for a palace revolution But where I live the game to play is compromise solution Well, then what can a poor boy do Except to sing for a rock n roll band cause in sleepy london town Theres no place for a street fighting man No Hey! said my name is called disturbance Ill shout and scream, Ill kill the king, Ill rail at all his servants Well, what can a poor boy do Except to sing for a rock n roll band cause in sleepy london town Theres no place for a street fighting man No |
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |