The Commune Form: The Transformation of Everyday Life
English
By (author): Kristin Ross
Rural struggles of the 1960s and 70s, like the Nantes Commune, the Larzac, and Sanrizuka in Japan, appear now as the defining battles of our era. In the defense of threatened territories against all manners of privatization, hoarding, and infrastructures of disaster, new ways of producing and inhabiting are devised that side-step the state and that give rise to unprecedented kinds of solidarity built on pleasurable, fruitful collaborations. These are the crucial elements in the present-day reworking of an archaic form: the commune-form that Marx once called the political form of social emancipation, and that Kropotkin deemed the necessary setting for revolution and the means of bringing it about. See more