Blanc, Louis

Blanc, Louis

▪ French politician
Introduction
in full  Jean-josephcharles-louis Blanc  
born Oct. 29, 1811, Madrid, Spain
died Dec. 6, 1882, Cannes, Fr.
 French utopian socialist, noted for his theory of worker-controlled “social workshops.”

Early life
      Louis Blanc was born while his father was serving as inspector general of finances in the Spanish regime of Joseph Bonaparte. When that regime collapsed in 1813, the Blancs returned to France. Louis studied at schools in Rodez and Paris. While working as a tutor in northern France, he came in contact with liberal political circles and found employment on a Republican newspaper. In 1837 he became a member of a committee for electoral reform directed by leaders of the opposition to King Louis-Philippe. In 1839 he founded the Revue du Progrès. It was in this newspaper that his most important work, L'Organisation du travail (“The Organization of Labour”), appeared serially in 1839. The principles laid down in that essay, which first brought him to public attention, formed the basis of his subsequent career.

Theory of socialism.
      Blanc believed that the competitive capitalism then developing in France tended to stunt the human personality, pitting one man against another and driving the weaker to the wall. The first step toward a better society would be to guarantee work for everyone by establishing “social workshops” financed by the state. These workshops, controlled by the workers themselves, would gradually take over most production until a socialist society would come into being. Blanc did not believe in human equality. But he did not agree with the followers of the socialist Henri de Saint-Simon, who held that workers should be paid according to their performance; he argued that justice would be satisfied only “when each one in accordance with the law written in some shape in his organization by God Himself, produces according to his faculties and consumes according to his wants.”

Politics.
      In 1843 Blanc joined the committee of La Réforme, the journal of the extreme left-wing Republicans. In 1847 he became prominent in the so-called banquets campaign for electoral reform, holding large audiences with his oratory. The culminating banquet, arranged to take place in Paris on Feb. 22, 1848 (1848, Revolutions of), was banned, but a riot on the following day led to an insurrection and the fall of the monarchy. Blanc became a member of the provisional government of the Second Republic. On Feb. 25, 1848, following a motion by Blanc, the government undertook “to guarantee the livelihood of the workers by work” and “to guarantee work for every citizen.” But the government was divided. For the majority the revolution represented a political change in which a monarchy with a restricted franchise was to be replaced by a free democratic republic based upon universal suffrage; for the minority, including Blanc, it also heralded a social and economic transformation.

      Although Blanc and his friends were a minority in the government, they had many supporters in the streets; and their colleagues made important concessions to their ideas by reducing working hours, proclaiming the right to work, appointing Blanc chairman of a permanent commission to investigate labour problems, and establishing national workshops to relieve the more acute unemployment. The national workshops were a travesty of those envisaged by Blanc; they were established by his opponents to discredit him and became little more than a gigantic system of outdoor relief. Meanwhile, unemployment grew from 6,100 on March 7 to 118,310 on June 15. The celebrated Luxembourg Commission, of which Blanc had been made chairman, became an arbiter in trade disputes and a centre of socialist propaganda; it was unable, however, to win acceptance of its recommendations for the reorganization of labour and industry.

Exile.
      Blanc was forced to flee to England after the workers unsuccessfully revolted in June 1848. He did not return to France until the fall of the Second Empire of Napoleon III in 1870. He supported himself during his exile by teaching and lecturing; he wrote a history of the Revolution of 1848 and a history of the French Revolution as well and also a series of books on British political and social conditions.

      When he returned to France after 22 years, he was still a famous man and was elected a deputy to the National Assembly. He refused to join in the revolutionary commune that seized control of Paris in the spring of 1871, but after the commune was crushed he sought to obtain a political amnesty for the communards. He remained a man of the left, although without much following. One of his last speeches in 1881 was in support of a proposal to reduce the length of the working day.

Jean Vidalenc

Additional Reading
Louis Blanc's principal works are Histoire de dix ans, 1830–1840, 5 vol. (1841–44; The History of Ten Years, 1830–1840, 2 vol., 1844–45, reprinted 1969), an attack on the government and person of King Louis-Philippe; and Histoire de la Révolution française, 12 vol. (1847–62), a political, economic, and social interpretation. Leo A. Loubère, Louis Blanc: His Life and His Contribution to French Jacobin-Socialism (1961, reprinted 1980), is a good study combining the biography with a history of socialism in France.

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Blanc,Louis — Blanc (bläɴ), Louis. 1811 1882. French political theorist whose writings, most notably Organization of Work (1839), are among the most influential early socialist treatises. * * * …   Universalium

  • Blanc, Louis — (1811 1882)    socialist and historian    Born in Madrid, spain, the son of the inspector general of finances for the king, Joseph Bonaparte, Louis Blanc was educated in Paris, where he soon became an advocate of socialism and socialist reform. A …   France. A reference guide from Renaissance to the Present

  • Louis BLANC — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Blanc (homonymie). Louis Blanc Louis Jean Joseph Blanc, né le 29 octobre  …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Louis Blanc — Louis Blanc. Louis Jean Joseph Charles Blanc (29 de octubre de 1811, Madrid – 6 de diciembre de 1882, Cannes, Alpes Marítimos) fue un político e historiador francés. Contenido …   Wikipedia Español

  • Louis César de La Baume Le Blanc — Louis César Duke of La Vallière Catalogue of the first part of the sale of his library, 1783 Spouse(s) Jeanne Julie Françoise de Crussol d Uzès …   Wikipedia

  • Louis Blanc (métro de Paris) — Louis Blanc …   Wikipédia en Français

  • BLANC (L.) — BLANC LOUIS (1811 1882) Né à Madrid, où son père est inspecteur général des Finances du roi Joseph Bonaparte, Louis Blanc se rend à Paris peu après la révolution de 1830, qui ruine sa famille. À Paris, un ami de son père lui donne des cours de… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Louis De Funès — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Funes. Louis de Funès Nom de naissance Louis Germain David de Funès de Galarza …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Louis Germain David de Funès de Galarza — Louis de Funès Pour les articles homonymes, voir Funes. Louis de Funès Nom de naissance Louis Germain David de Funès de Galarza …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Louis de Funes — Louis de Funès Pour les articles homonymes, voir Funes. Louis de Funès Nom de naissance Louis Germain David de Funès de Galarza …   Wikipédia en Français

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”