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Struggle and Mutual Aid

The Age of Worker Solidarity

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A dynamic historian revisits the workers’ internationals, whose scope and significance are commonly overlooked.
In current debates about globalization, open and borderless elites are often set in opposition to the immobile and protectionist working classes. This view obscures a major historical fact: for around a century—from the 1860s to the 1970s—worker movements were at the cutting edge of internationalism.
    The creation in London of the International Workingmen’s Association in 1864 was a turning point. What would later be called the “First International” aspired to bring together European and American workers across languages, nationalities, and trades. It was a major undertaking in a context marked by opening borders, moving capital, and exploding inequalities.
    In this urgent, engaging work, historian Nicolas Delalande explores how international worker solidarity developed, what it accomplished in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, and why it collapsed over the past fifty years, to the point of disappearing from our memories.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 31, 2022
      Historian Delalande (coeditor, A World of Public Debts) delivers a scholarly take on the development and influence of the mid-19th-century international workers’ movement. The International Workingmen’s Association, founded in 1864 and later known as the First International, “pressed globalization into the service of those men and women who were busy creating it,” Delalande argues, forming a framework in which abstract concepts of solidarity could be expressed as collective actions, including labor strikes. The First International and other groups emerged alongside the modern state and global capitalism, and were riven by internal debates between socialist, anarchist, and moderate factions over the necessary degree of opposition to those institutions. British trade unions, with their regularized dues-paying and accounting, provided crucial financial support to other European workers’ groups, but were also criticized as too condescending and conservative, especially by refugees from the 1871 Paris Commune. Institutional dissolution and inefficacy are common threads: the First International self-destructed in 1872, strikes and work stoppages often failed to accomplish their goals, and international donations didn’t always arrive in time. However, Delalande argues that the “repertoire of actions of solidarity” developed by these organizations enabled the international solidarity of the mid-20th century. Though nonspecialists may find themselves adrift in a sea of names and events, this is a persuasive reinterpretation of a period of labor activism often viewed as “chaotic, conflictual, and contradictory.”

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  • English

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