Book Description
Pierre Monatte (1881-1960) was 29 years old when he met with a small group of French anarchists in a Paris apartment and decided to publish a bi-weekly magazine which he named La Vie Ouvriere. The year was 1909, and the anarcho-syndicalist labor movement was perceived as floundering in a quagmire of economic reformism and political opportunism. The revolutionary syndicalists who came thogether at the office of la Vie Ouvriere sought (1) to promote the anarchist doctrine of direct action; (2) to combat the effects of militarism, nationalism, and authoritarianism; and, (3) to ultimately replace the political economy of capitalism with a socialist economy governed by the producers themselves. The core members of La Vie Ouvriere found direction in the slogan of the First International Workingmen's Association, which was founded in London in 1864: The emancipation of the working class must be the work of the workers themselves. Until the outbreak of the First World War, this was the project of the French Anarchist Labor Movement and its organ, La Vie Ouvriere.