Mai-68... et après ? Une nouvelle donne politique. La France de 1962 à 1984

The French « moment 68 », is placed within a world-wide context which began in the early 1960s and was marked by multiple, strongly political, socio-cultural movements in which youth assumed a prominent position. Yet, at the same time, it also represented a specific event incommensurate with what ot...

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Main Author: Gilles Richard
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association Portugaise d'Etudes Françaises 2019-05-01
Series:Carnets
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/carnets/9599
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spelling doaj-cd597f935b3441a5b3cf86f141d3bf0a2020-11-24T22:16:03ZengAssociation Portugaise d'Etudes FrançaisesCarnets1646-76982019-05-011610.4000/carnets.9599Mai-68... et après ? Une nouvelle donne politique. La France de 1962 à 1984Gilles RichardThe French « moment 68 », is placed within a world-wide context which began in the early 1960s and was marked by multiple, strongly political, socio-cultural movements in which youth assumed a prominent position. Yet, at the same time, it also represented a specific event incommensurate with what other western countries experienced, with the exception of Italy. Indeed, May and June of 1968 were stage to a massive general strike (7 million strikers) along with the occupation of companies. This largely forgotten, atypical social movement had contradictory consequences. It led to an all-encompassing period of social struggle (women’s and migrants’ strikes, a second feminist wave, the development of environmentalism and antimilitarism), while communists and socialists struck up a political alliance as had occurred in 1936. However, the ruling classes, aware of the emerging threat to capitalism and to the organisation of civil society, strove to find countermeasures that safeguarded social order at the expense of a number of concessions implemented with V. Giscard d’Éstaing’s 1974 victorious presidential elections.http://journals.openedition.org/carnets/9599right-left divisioncounterculturegeneral strikeyouthsocial movements
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gilles Richard
spellingShingle Gilles Richard
Mai-68... et après ? Une nouvelle donne politique. La France de 1962 à 1984
Carnets
right-left division
counterculture
general strike
youth
social movements
author_facet Gilles Richard
author_sort Gilles Richard
title Mai-68... et après ? Une nouvelle donne politique. La France de 1962 à 1984
title_short Mai-68... et après ? Une nouvelle donne politique. La France de 1962 à 1984
title_full Mai-68... et après ? Une nouvelle donne politique. La France de 1962 à 1984
title_fullStr Mai-68... et après ? Une nouvelle donne politique. La France de 1962 à 1984
title_full_unstemmed Mai-68... et après ? Une nouvelle donne politique. La France de 1962 à 1984
title_sort mai-68... et après ? une nouvelle donne politique. la france de 1962 à 1984
publisher Association Portugaise d'Etudes Françaises
series Carnets
issn 1646-7698
publishDate 2019-05-01
description The French « moment 68 », is placed within a world-wide context which began in the early 1960s and was marked by multiple, strongly political, socio-cultural movements in which youth assumed a prominent position. Yet, at the same time, it also represented a specific event incommensurate with what other western countries experienced, with the exception of Italy. Indeed, May and June of 1968 were stage to a massive general strike (7 million strikers) along with the occupation of companies. This largely forgotten, atypical social movement had contradictory consequences. It led to an all-encompassing period of social struggle (women’s and migrants’ strikes, a second feminist wave, the development of environmentalism and antimilitarism), while communists and socialists struck up a political alliance as had occurred in 1936. However, the ruling classes, aware of the emerging threat to capitalism and to the organisation of civil society, strove to find countermeasures that safeguarded social order at the expense of a number of concessions implemented with V. Giscard d’Éstaing’s 1974 victorious presidential elections.
topic right-left division
counterculture
general strike
youth
social movements
url http://journals.openedition.org/carnets/9599
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