Contenu du sommaire : L'Amérique latine en lutte

Revue Actuel Marx Mir@bel
Numéro no 42, octobre 2007
Titre du numéro L'Amérique latine en lutte
Texte intégral en ligne Accessible sur l'internet
  • Présentation - p. 7-8 accès libre
  • Luttes sociales et perspectives politiques en Amérique latine - Armando BOITO, Ana Esther CECEÑA, Guillermo Almeyra, Carlos Nelson COUTINHO p. 10-24 accès libre
  • Le marxisme en amérique latine de José Carlos Mariategui aux zapatistes du Chiapas - Michaël Löwy p. 25-35 accès libre avec résumé en anglais
    Le Marxism in Latin America. From José Carlos Mariategui to Chiapas and the Zapatists José Carlos Mariagegui, the first major Latin American Marxist thinker, who died in 1939, considered socialism to be the sole alternative to the domination of Latin American by US imperialism. He dreamt of an Indo-American socialism which would not be the mere carbon-copy of precedents elsewhere; which, on the contrary, would be the heroic creation of the peoples of the continent. Because of the hegemony of Stalinism within the Latin American left, it was in fact the « carbon-copy » which was to dominate thinking for many years. The renewal of Marxism was to come about in the 1960s, with the Cuban revolution and the rise of Guevarism, whose repercussions include the theology of liberation and movements such as the Mexican Zapatist movement of the 1990s.
  • Le mouvement féministe en Amérique latine et aux Caraïbes : Défis et espoirs face à la mondialisation néo-libérale - Jules Falquet p. 36-47 accès libre avec résumé en anglais
    The Feminist Movement in Latin America and in the Caribbean: Challenges and Hopes, in the Face of Neoliberal Globalisation Despite their diversity, Latin America and the Caribbean demonstrate a certain historical and political unity. The social movements which are rooted there are often deployed on a continental scale. They are, furthermore, often to the forefront in the questioning of neoliberal globalisation. The analysis of the South American feminist movement, one which is remarkable for its importance and for its innovative propositions, can help us gain a theoretical perspective on the articulation between social relations and gender relations, and also on the effects of globalisation on this articulation. After presenting a historical panorama of the “second wave” of Latin-American and Caribbean feminism, of its gradual institutionalisation and the persistent oppositions between the movement's “autonomous tendency” and its “institutional” tendency, the article addresses the current challenges facing Latin American feminism: the aggravation of the misery of the majority of women, faced with enforced migration and a disturbing growth of violence. The article ends with an inquiry into the way certain women and certain feminists, faced with poverty and/or racist exclusion, have been in the vanguard of new struggles and alliances which sketch the outlines of some of the most convincing political alternatives to neoliberalism.
  • L'expérience zapatiste, á treize ans du soulevement armé de 1994 - Jérôme Baschet p. 48-58 accès libre avec résumé en anglais
    The Zapatist Experiment : Thirteen Years of Armed Insurrecton since 1994 The article is an attempt to situate the zapatist struggle in relation to its Mexican and Latin American models, and to chart its trajectory since January 1 1994. The emphasis is on the conceptions of power proper to the zapatists, both from a theoretical perspective (their refusal to « take power ») and from a practical perspective (the precedent of the autonomy of the Councils of good government). In conclusion, the article addresses the question of the uncertainties surrounding the present phase of the struggle, a phase which began with the Sixth Declaration of Selva Lacandona (2005). It also examines the possible meaning of a new intercontinental meeting for humanity and against neoliberalism, for which the declaration calls.
  • La bataille d'Oaxaca : répression et résistance révolutionnaire - Eugene GOGOL p. 59-70 accès libre avec résumé en anglais
    The Battle of Oaxaca This article puts forward a description and analysis of the reality of the battle of Oaxaca, between June and November 2006. The strike and occupation of the main square of Oaxaca, the creation of the popular assembly of the peoples of Oaxaca (PAPO), the activities of native women and native communities, the authoritarian strategy of the State, the battle of ideas within the movement: these are the issues addressed in the article.
  • La révolution bolivarienne du Venezuela - Sébastien Ville p. 71-83 accès libre avec résumé en anglais
    The Bolivarian Revolution in Venezuela The roots of the « Bolivarian revolution » are located in the fall of the dictatorship in 1958. The role of the armed forces in the history of the Venezuelan left considerably predates Chavez's accession to power in 1998. If we are to understand the political process involved here, we must grasp the nature of the historical bonds between the radical left and certain sectors of the armed forces. The article reviews this history, examining the achievements of the Chavez governments in power since 1998; It then addresses certain current debates in the country, notably on the question of the construction of a socialism for the twenty-first century and the role of the armed forces in the struggles of the country.
  • De la révolution nationale à la victoire d'Evo Morales : Retour sur un demi-siècle de luttes en Bolivie populaire (1952-2007) - Hervé Do Alto p. 84-96 accès libre avec résumé en anglais
    From the National Revolution to the Victory of Evo Morales. A Review of a Half Century of Struggles in Popular Bolivia (1952-2007) The « Bolivian democratic and cultural revolution », often presented as a symbol of the leftward turn of Latin America, and which is led by Evo Morales, is without doubt part of the country's nationalist and anti-oligarchic tradition, fruit of the revolution of 1952. The current revolutionary phase cannot however be entirely reduced to this tradition, insofar as it illustrates the profound upheavals which the popular movement has undergone since the 1980s, during a period marked by the brutality of neo-liberal reforms and by the emergence of the “native American peasant” as the exemplary agent of “Insurgent Bolivia”. Bolstered by the support of a rural and plebeian base, the Morales “revolution” differs from previous revolutionary experiences by way of the resolutely anti-imperialist nature of its politics. The current nationalist cycle thus takes on an innovative, unprecedented perspective of social emancipation.
  • Les luttes sociales dans la sphère du travail au Brésil : Quelques défis passés et présents - Ricardo Antunes p. 97-110 accès libre avec résumé en anglais
    Social Struggles in the Sphere of Work in Brazil: Challenges Past and Present. The aim of the article is to offer an inventory of labour and trade-union struggle in twentieth century Brazil. The article thus focuses on the principal phases of this struggle, on the major breakthroughs and the major setbacks encountered. It ends with an overview of the challenges characteristic of the current social struggles in Brazil.
  • Le progrès des gauches en Amérique latine : gouvernements, mouvements sociaux et luttes indigènes - Gérard Duménil, Michaël Löwy, Maurice Lemoine p. 111-125 accès libre avec résumé en anglais
    The Progress of the Left in Latin America: Governments, Social Movements, the Struggles of the Amerindian Populations Gérard Duménil and Michaël Löwy here interview Michel Lemoine about the nature of the governments currently in office in Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay, Bolivia and Venezuela. What contribution can these governments make to the task of establishing an anti-imperialist front? What are the specific features of the Latin American resistance to neo-liberalism, in view of the articulation between this resistance and the struggles of the Amerindian populations? How is one to assess the manner in which Chavez defines and attempts to implement his project of a “socialism for the twenty-first century”. These are the principal questions addressed here.
  • Journalisme et science : L'importance des travaux journalistiques de Marx pour la critique de l'économie politique. - Michael Krätke p. 128-163 accès libre avec résumé en anglais
    Journalism and Science: the Importance of Marx's Practice of Journalism for his Critique of Political Economy. Already in his lifetime, Marx earned himself a reputation, even fame, as a leading financial and economic journalist. From 1850 to 1868, he wrote nearly a hundred newspaper articles dealing with all sorts of economic and financial topics. His work as an economic journalist is closely related to his ongoing work on the “critique of political economy”: A lot of the material he collected and studied for his articles was used for his economic manuscripts as well. Many of the topics mentioned but not systematically treated in his many (unfinished) manuscripts pertaining to CAPITAL have been analyzed in his newspaper articles. Some of them are brilliant little essays on crises, on financial markets, on the capitalist world economy. The close links between Marx' journalism and his work on the critique of political economy are exemplified with respect to several topics: the impact of factory legislation, world market, world trade and colonialism (imperialism), monetary theory and monetary politics (bank legislation), the theory and history of crises and cycles and – last but not least – public finance (and its critique).
  • Adieu au salariat bipolaire ? - Gérard Duménil, Michel Vakaloulis, Jean Lojkine p. 164-180 accès libre avec résumé en anglais
    A Farewell to the Bipolar Class of Wage-Earners ? G. Duménil and M. Vakaloulis here interview J. Lojkine about his latest book, Farewell to the Middle Class. Lojkine's intention is to question and demystify the ideology of « the middle class », an ideology which is both political (propagated and relayed by social-democracy) and « erudite », insofar as it corresponds to the sociological thesis of the « generalisation of the middle class ». Lojkine here answers questions dealing with the economic and political presuppositions of his critique of the «generalisation of the middle class ». In what way are « managers » affected by the current social transformations? What are the alliances within which they find themselves enrolled? How is one to account for the fragmentation of the current class of wage-earners, and to what type of political unification might it eventually lead?
  • « le défi du forum social mondial »: l'autre monde au-delà du capitalisme - Gérard Duménil, Michaël Löwy, Carl A. Whitaker p. 181-196 accès libre
  • Livres - p. 198-216 accès libre