The European left seemed to be in rude health during the 1970s. Never
had so many political parties committed to representing the working
class been in power simultaneously across the continent. New forms of
mobilisation led by female, immigrant, and young wage-earners seemed
to reflect the growing strength of the workers' movement rather than
its pending obsolescence. Parties and trade unions grew rapidly as a
diverse new generation entered the ranks. Why did the left's forward
march halt so abruptly?
_The Halted March of the European Left_ shows how the left's defeats
after the mid-1970s were not the inevitable result of
deindustrialisation or, more precisely, the transition to a globalised
and post-Fordist world that abolished the working class as a great
historical actor. Choices that were made during a concentrated but
decisive historical moment contributed to the left's lost combats. The
British, French, and Italian left managed the shift to a new era by
marginalising those groups of workers who had invested it with hopes
of social and political transformation. Communist, socialist, and
social democratic parties helped disempower the new components of the
working class in workplaces, in society, in the political system, and
successfully disciplined their traditional working-class supporters.
The left encountered a crisis of purpose and identity, a sense of both
defeat and lost opportunities, and the dissolution of the idea of a
community of fate amongst workers. This book provides a comparative
analysis of the left's fragmenting relationship with the working class
and a “feel” for the culture of three leading industrial countries
during a traumatic transition of late twentieth-century history. It
concludes that decisions taken by the left during the 1970s
contributed to the tragic inversion of the expected outcome of that
hopeful decade.
Les mer
The Working Class in Britain, France, and Italy, 1968–1989
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780198944638
Publisert
2025
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Academic UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter