Émile Pouget (French: [emil puʒɛ]; 12 October 1860 – 21 July 1931) was a French journalist, pamphleteer and trade unionist. His combination of anarchist political theory and revolutionary syndicalist tactics has led several authors to identify Pouget as an early anarcho-syndicalist.[1][2]

Émile Pouget
1892 police mugshot of Émile Pouget, taken by Alphonse Bertillon
1892 police mugshot of Émile Pouget, taken by Alphonse Bertillon
Born(1860-10-12)12 October 1860
Pont-de-Salars, Aveyron, France
Died21 July 1931(1931-07-21) (aged 70)
Palaiseau, Seine-et-Oise, France
OccupationJournalist, writer, anarchist and syndicalist activist
NationalityFrench

An iconic pamphleteer, his newspaper Le Père Peinard represented a new direction in anarchist journalism, employing vernacular and urban slang.[3] Pouget was vice-secretary of the General Confederation of Labour from 1901 to 1908.[4][5][6] He was the first to promote the term "sabotage" in its current meaning.[7]

Early life edit

Émile Pouget was born on 12 October 1860 in Pont-de-Salars in the department of Aveyron.[8] His father, a notary, passed away at an early age in 1863. Shortly after his father's death, Pouget's mother remarried.[8] He grew up in a middle-class household with Republican and left-wing tendencies. Pouget's stepfather Philippe Vergely lost his position as a petty official because of his political writings in a small-scale journal that he had established titled L'Aveyron Republicain (The Aveyron Republican).[9][10] Vergely took the young Pouget to attend the trial of several members of the Narbonne Commune in nearby Rodez, which played a pivotal role in sparking Pouget's interest in politics.[11]

Studying high school in Rodez, Pouget developed a passion for journalism. In 1875, he launched his first newspaper, Le Lycéen républicain (The Republican High Schooler). That same year, his stepfather died and Pouget was forced to move to Paris in search of work. In 1877, he began working at Le Bon Marché, a department store in the city.[12] While employed there, he started following political gatherings and attended meetings of progressive groups in his free time.[9] In 1879, Pouget was a founder of the first shop assistants' union in Paris, through which he published his earliest antimilitarist texts.[10][9]

Anarchist movement edit

During the 1880s, before anarchists began to enter the organized labor movement in large numbers, they typically agitated among the unemployed. In March 1883, the chamber of the carpenters' union summoned the unemployed to protest at Les Invalides.[13] The protest split into two groups, with around 500 protesters, led by Pouget and former Communard Louise Michel, proceeding to march toward the Boulevard Saint-Germain.[9] It was at this protest that the emblematic anarchist black flag was flown for the first time.[13][10] The protesters pillaged three bakeries before being confronted by police at Place Maubert. Michel and Pouget were arrested and sentenced to six and eight years in prison respectively.[14] Pouget's case was complicated by the fact that revolutionary antimilitarist leaflets advocating mutiny were found in his room. Public opinion towards the trial was somewhat negative, leading to both activists' early release.[13] Pouget was granted amnesty after serving only three years of his sentence, thanks to pressure from Henri Rochefort.[15]

 
Portrait by Aristide Delannoy

After his release from prison, Pouget edited the anarchist bimonthly Ça ira from 27 May 1888 to 13 January 1889, in collaboration with former Communard Constant Martin.[16] He became a regular at meetings of the Cercle Anarchiste International, which gathered in Paris' 15th arrondissement to discuss tactics including the general strike and potential alliance with the Bourse du Travail labor councils.[17] On 24 February 1889, he established his iconic newspaper, Le Père Peinard.[16][10] Reminiscent of Rochefort's La Lanterne (The Lantern), the paper was published in small pamphlet form. It was written in working-class French slang and was inspired in tone by Jacques Hébert's Le Père Duchesne, popular during the Reign of Terror.[15][18] In a September 1889 edition of Le Père Peinard, Pouget praised the London dock strike, marking the first step in his evolution into syndicalism. However, at this time, he criticized the British workers' formal association into labor unions and especially the unions' parliamentary orientation and reformism.[19]

Following the promulgation of the Lois scélérates, a set of press laws outlawing the advocacy of any crime, in December 1893, the anarchist movement started a series of political assassinations.[20] This in turn led to a series of arrests of prominent anarchists, and on 21 February 1894, Pouget published his final issue of Le Père peinard and went into exile. Upon reaching London via Algiers, Pouget stayed at Giovanni Defendi's delicatessen, accompanied by his partner Marie.[21][22]

Pouget's period of exile in London led to a cross-pollination of ideas between anarchist militants from several countries around Europe.[23][22] During this time, he avoided the anarchist circle Club Autonomie, comprised mainly of French immigrants in London, but maintained contact with Louise Michel, Augustin Hamon and Fernand Pelloutier. Crucially, Pouget's tactical approach became heavily influenced by an international group of militants including Errico Malatesta and Olivia Rossetti Agresti, all of whom were contributors to the anarchist newspaper The Torch of Anarchy.[24][22]

In August 1894, Pouget was charged in absentia during the Trial of the Thirty, but was ultimately acquitted.[25][26] During his exile, he planned to start a newspaper called Le Droit à l’Aisance (The Right to Comfort) with the help of Malatesta, but in the end relaunched Le Père Peinard in September 1894 from London.[23][21] The London-based newspaper ran for six months and printed a total of eight issues.[20] In October 1894, the newspaper argued in favor of anarchists participating within the trade union movement, as a space in which to make contact with the wider working class outside of anarchist affinity groups and subcultures.[5][6]

Pouget had been in contact with Malatesta since 1893, but was influenced by him even more profoundly during his time in London; at some point they even shared dwellings at Defendi's delicatessen. Pouget's period in London led to his adoption of syndicalist tactics which would, together with Pelloutier's similar trajectory, prove instrumental in the eventual rise to dominance of revolutionary syndicalism in the French labor movement.[22][23]

Syndicalism and the CGT edit

After returning to France in 1895, Pouget resumed his political activities. On 11 May 1895, he started the newspaper La Sociale, through which he started promoting a more strategic and concrete form of anarchism which would work to influence the labor union movement from within.[27][28] During the publishing of La Sociale, Pouget collaborated closely with Fernand Pelloutier, advocating for revolutionary syndicalist ideas within the French labor movement and seeking to unite anarchists with antiparliamentarian socialists on a European scale.[29][30]

In July 1896, Pouget attended the fourth congress of the Second International in London. The congress witnessed the expulsion of antiparliamentarian delegates, the majority of whom were anarchists, from the international. This marked the culmination of the process which started with the exclusion of the anarchists at the Zürich Congress three years prior. The antiparliamentarians set up a debate in margin to the London Congress where, concurring with Malatesta's views, Pouget criticized the Marxists' economic determinism and argued against collectivizing agricultural land, as well as the notion of waiting in anticipation for the ostensibly inevitable proletarianization of the peasant class.[31][27][32][29]

 
Illustration on the cover of the 1894 Almanach du Père Peinard

In La Sociale, Pouget first argued for the tactic of "sabottage", as it was initially spelled. This tactic was inspired by the concept of "ca'canny", meaning slowdown, which he came into contact with in the British trade union movement. This was the first mention of the term "sabotage" in this context.[7] The newspaper continued until October 1896, when Pouget started publishing a renewed Le Père peinard in which his views became increasingly internationalist and militant. He passionately argued for sabotage as a tactic of the labor movement, leading to its adoption by the General Confederation of Labour (CGT) at its Toulouse Congress in September 1897.[33][34] His views on sabotage, as well as a nod to its origins in the British movement, were outlined in greater detail in his 1898 pamphlet "Le Sabotage".[27] For Pouget, sabotage would also entail physical damage against machines and property, but not persons.[35]

Despite his initial reluctance to support the Dreyfusard cause during the Dreyfus affair, proclaiming his lack of interest in defending a capitalist and even going so far as to employ antisemitic stereotypes, in 1898 Pouget began to change his views on the matter. In 1899, he was a contributor to Sébastien Faure's Dreyfusard Journal du peuple (The People's Journal), where he argued for a revolutionary defense of Dreyfus against the reactionary forces of the army and Catholic Church, and against relying on the impartiality of the legal system.[36][37]

In 1900, Le Père peinard was discontinued and Pouget became the editor of the CGT's daily newspaper La Voix du peuple (Voice of the People), its title a reference to Pierre-Joseph Proudhon.[28] The first issue was published on 1 December 1900.[34]

The year 1902 marked the culmination of the anarchist permeation of trade unions, with the merger of the CGT and the Fédération des Bourses de travail, a federation of local labor exchanges which had been another hotbed for proto-syndicalist ideas.[29] The Fédération had been headed by anarchist Georges Yvetot from March 1901, following the death of Fernand Pelloutier. The now enlarged CGT elected former Blanquist Victor Griffuelhes as general secretary, while Yvetot and his former assistant Paul Delesalle headed the section of Bourses du Travail and Pouget headed the section of national federations as vice-secretary and remained the editor of La Voix du peuple. Pouget, Griffuelhes, Yvetot and Delesalle thus became the effective leaders of the syndicalist movement in France in the following decade, forming the revolutionary faction of the union's leadership.[4][5][6]

 
1906 logo of the General Confederation of Labor (CGT)

Tensions came to the fore between reformist and revolutionary wings of the CGT in 1903. Pouget emerged as the leading polemicist in defense of the leading revolutionary faction, opposed by the reformist Auguste Keufer. The two exchanged views in two articles regarding the theme of reform or revolution in 1903, where Pouget argued that their methods were not necessarily opposed to one another.[38] His position was that the struggle for immediate reforms, if done through direct action, was not only an end in itself, but also an evolutionary moment in a process of social change which would gradually intensify to the point of revolution and the overthrow of wage labor. Therefore, he argued, individual reforms served to build a mass social movement with sufficient strength and consciousness to challenge and ultimately end capitalism.[39] For Pouget, direct action meant the activity of trade unions, undertaken without reliance on political actors.[40] However, he did not discount the potential utility of individual political action taken outside of the union. Keufer's proposals were in the end heavily defeated at the 1904 Congress of Bourges and the incumbent CGT leadership secured an easy victory.[38]

The issue reappeared at the Congress of Amiens in October 1906. Here, the two factions agreed on the Charter of Amiens, co-drafted by Pouget, which codified the union's revolutionary syndicalism. The charter announced the complete autonomy of the syndicalist movement and denied all political allegiances, and was the result of a political compromise that both factions could interpret to their advantage.[38] Namely, for the revolutionary faction, this affirmed its stance against compromise with political parties and thus against parliamentarism, whereas for the reformist faction, this meant an aversion to all forms of politics including anarchism.[24][6][1]

In 1908, violent strikes erupted in Draveil and Villeneuve-Saint-Georges, where strikers clashed with the army resulting in two deaths.[41] Following the strikes, the leaders of the CGT, including Pouget, were arrested in early August 1908.[42] The union convened in Marseille and reaffirmed its tactical position, however the reformist faction started blaming the leadership for the deaths due to their "reckless tactics". On 2 February 1909, Griffuelhes resigned and the CGT elected reformist Louis Niel to the position of general secretary.[38]

After his release from prison, Pouget did not return to his position in the CGT or in La Voix du peuple. According to Pierre Monatte, he increasingly started to view Griffuelhes as arrogant and autocratic. In February 1909, he and other members of the revolutionary faction launched the newspaper La Révolution. It was badly financed and a commercial failure, and ran only until March of that same year. After the failure of this newspaper, Pouget became disillusioned and ceased his participation in the syndicalist movement.[43]

Later years and death edit

Following the failure of La Révolution in March of the same year, Pouget transitioned to become a regular columnist in Gustave Hervé's insurrectionist La Guerre sociale in late 1909, signaling a shift away from his involvement in syndicalism. Nonetheless, he maintained his advocacy for syndicalist tactics such as the general strike and sabotage until the outbreak of World War I. Additionally, he authored several stories in Jean Jaurès' L'Humanité in 1913.[43] From July until 6 September 1914, Pouget unexpectedly lent his unequivocal support to France against Germany. The following year, in L'Humanité, he authored a daily serial titled Vieille Alsace (Old Alsace), a patriotic story concerning the lives of French Alsatians living under German rule.[44]

By 1920, Pouget was no longer involved in activism. He spent his final years living a quiet life in the southern outskirts of Paris, earning a modest living compiling artists' catalogues.[45]

Pouget died on 21 July 1931, in Lozère, a neighborhood of Palaiseau.[46] He was interred at the cemetery of Palaiseau.[47]

Works edit

Articles edit

Almanacs edit

Brochures edit

Novels edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Woodcock 2011, p. 355.
  2. ^ Baker 2023, pp. 283–284.
  3. ^ Woodcock 2011, pp. 328–329.
  4. ^ a b Woodcock 2011, pp. 352–353.
  5. ^ a b c Jennings 1990, pp. 24–27.
  6. ^ a b c d Baker 2023, pp. 267–269.
  7. ^ a b Scalmer 2023, pp. 372–373.
  8. ^ a b de Goustine 1972, p. 13.
  9. ^ a b c d Guérin 2005, p. 419.
  10. ^ a b c d Bantman 2009, p. 274.
  11. ^ Bantman 2021, p. 5.
  12. ^ Tirand 2006, p. 183.
  13. ^ a b c Woodcock 2011, pp. 333–334.
  14. ^ Butterworth 2010, p. 44.
  15. ^ a b Guérin 2005, p. 420.
  16. ^ a b Langlais 1976, p. 328.
  17. ^ Berry & Bantman 2010, p. 129.
  18. ^ Butterworth 2010, p. 421.
  19. ^ Berry & Bantman 2010, pp. 130–131.
  20. ^ a b Guérin 2005, p. 423.
  21. ^ a b Bantman 2009, pp. 279–280.
  22. ^ a b c d Turcato 2012, pp. 134–135.
  23. ^ a b c Berry & Bantman 2010, p. 112.
  24. ^ a b Berry & Bantman 2010, pp. 133–136.
  25. ^ Woodcock 2011, p. 345.
  26. ^ Butterworth 2010, pp. 22–23.
  27. ^ a b c Bantman 2009, pp. 281–282.
  28. ^ a b Woodcock 2011, p. 348.
  29. ^ a b c Bantman 2021, pp. 7–8.
  30. ^ Langlais 1976, p. 329.
  31. ^ Berry & Bantman 2010, pp. 120–121.
  32. ^ Turcato 2012, pp. 145–146.
  33. ^ Berry & Bantman 2010, p. 122.
  34. ^ a b Guérin 2005, p. 424.
  35. ^ Jennings 1990, pp. 44–45.
  36. ^ Jennings 1990, pp. 34–35.
  37. ^ Bantman 2009, p. 278.
  38. ^ a b c d Jennings 1990, pp. 136–138.
  39. ^ Baker 2023, pp. 299–300.
  40. ^ Baker 2023, p. 135.
  41. ^ Jennings 1990, p. 38.
  42. ^ Bantman 2009, p. 284.
  43. ^ a b Jennings 1990, p. 145.
  44. ^ Jennings 1990, pp. 164–165.
  45. ^ Jennings 1990, p. 191.
  46. ^ Langlais 1976, p. 331.
  47. ^ de Goustine 1972, p. 27.

Bibliography edit

  • de Goustine, Christian (1972). Pouget ou les matins noirs du syndicalisme (in French). Paris: La Tête de Feuille.
  • Pouget, Émile (1976). Langlais, Robert (ed.). Le Père Peinard (in French). Paris: Éditions Galilée. ISBN 2-7186-0030-6. Retrieved 28 February 2024.
  • Jennings, Jeremy (1990). Syndicalism in France: A Study of Ideas. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-349-08878-2.
  • Guérin, Daniel, ed. (2005). No Gods, No Masters: An Anthology of Anarchism. Translated by Sharkey, Paul. Oakland: AK Press. ISBN 978-1-904859-25-3.
  • Tirand, Paul (2006). Émile Digeon, 1822-1894: l'itinéraire singulier d'un communard (in French). Paris: L'Harmattan. ISBN 9782296019201.
  • Bantman, Constance (2009). "The Militant Go-between: Émile Pouget's Transnational Propaganda (1880–1914)". Labour History Review. 74 (3): 274–287. doi:10.1179/096156509X12513818419619. Retrieved 27 January 2024.
  • Butterworth, Alex (2010). The World That Never Was: A True Story of Dreamers, Schemers, Anarchists, and Secret Agents (PDF). New York: Pantheon Books. ISBN 9780375425110.
  • Berry, David; Bantman, Constance, eds. (2010). New Perspectives on Anarchism, Labour, and Syndicalism: The Individual, the National and the Transnational. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
  • Woodcock, George (2011) [1962]. Anarchism: A History of Libertarian Ideas and Movements. Whitefish: Literary Licensing, LLC. ISBN 9781258115272.
  • Turcato, Davide (2012). Making Sense of Anarchism: Errico Malatesta's Experiments with Revolution, 1889–1900. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-349-33736-1.
  • Bantman, Constance (2021). "Emile Pouget: Proletarian Pamphleteer, Syndicalist Theorist and Organiser". Black Flag Anarchist Review. 1 (3). Retrieved 28 February 2024.
  • Baker, Zoe (2023). Means and Ends: The Revolutionary Practice of Anarchism in Europe and the United States. AK Press. ISBN 978-1-84935-498-1. OCLC 1345217229.
  • Scalmer, Sean (2023). "Direct Action: The Invention of a Transnational Concept". International Review of Social History. 68 (3): 357–387. doi:10.1017/S0020859023000391. Retrieved 27 January 2024.

Further reading edit

  • François Bott, « Le Père Peinard, ce drôle de Sioux », Le Monde, 30 January 1976.
  • Dominique Grisoni, « Le Père Peinard de la révolution », Le Magazine Littéraire, n°111, April 1976, 42-43.
  • Emmanuel de Waresquiel, Le Siècle rebelle, dictionnaire de la contestation au XXe siècle, Larousse, coll. « In Extenso », 1999.
  • Xose Ulla Quiben, Émile Pouget, la plume rouge et noire du Père Peinard, Éditions Libertaires, 2006.
  • Emile Pouget, Le Père Peinard, Journal espatrouillant. Articles choisis (1889–1900). Les Nuits rouges, 2006.

External links edit

Trade union offices
Preceded by
New position
Administrative Secretary of the General Confederation of Labour
1901–1902
Succeeded by
Jean Bousquet