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In the spring of 1848, Paris became the center of the socialist imagination.
After the fall of the July Monarchy, a new republic promised liberty, equality, and fraternity, but what would those words actually mean for workers, women, and the poor? In this episode, we follow the rise—and violent suppression—of socialism’s first mass political experiment.
Through the lives and ideas of Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, Jeanne Deroin, Louis Blanc, Eugénie Niboyet, Auguste Blanqui, and a young Karl Marx, we explore how competing visions of socialism collided inside the revolutionary republic. Reformers sought to harness the state. Anarchists rejected it outright. Feminists demanded a social republic that extended equality into the home as well as the workshop.
These debates would not remain theoretical for long.
By June, the promises of February were answered with barricades, artillery, and mass repression in the working-class neighborhoods of Paris. The June Days Uprising would mark the first open class war of modern Europe—and leave an entire generation of socialists politically transformed.
Paris 1848 was not a story of triumph. It was a story of fracture, betrayal, and awakening. But from its ashes emerged a new conviction: that socialism could not survive within a single nation alone.
This is Season One—The Origins of Socialism: Paris and the Making of Modern Revolution
Next: What is Internationalism? The Dream of a Global Working Class
Written and produced by Matt Payne.
Support, Subscribe, Read on Substack: https://ismhistorypodcast.substack.com/
Original Musical Compositions by Ian Payne: https://www.jamesianpayne.com/
Support the Show: PayPal
Contact: [email protected]
By Narrative history of ideologies & movementsIn the spring of 1848, Paris became the center of the socialist imagination.
After the fall of the July Monarchy, a new republic promised liberty, equality, and fraternity, but what would those words actually mean for workers, women, and the poor? In this episode, we follow the rise—and violent suppression—of socialism’s first mass political experiment.
Through the lives and ideas of Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, Jeanne Deroin, Louis Blanc, Eugénie Niboyet, Auguste Blanqui, and a young Karl Marx, we explore how competing visions of socialism collided inside the revolutionary republic. Reformers sought to harness the state. Anarchists rejected it outright. Feminists demanded a social republic that extended equality into the home as well as the workshop.
These debates would not remain theoretical for long.
By June, the promises of February were answered with barricades, artillery, and mass repression in the working-class neighborhoods of Paris. The June Days Uprising would mark the first open class war of modern Europe—and leave an entire generation of socialists politically transformed.
Paris 1848 was not a story of triumph. It was a story of fracture, betrayal, and awakening. But from its ashes emerged a new conviction: that socialism could not survive within a single nation alone.
This is Season One—The Origins of Socialism: Paris and the Making of Modern Revolution
Next: What is Internationalism? The Dream of a Global Working Class
Written and produced by Matt Payne.
Support, Subscribe, Read on Substack: https://ismhistorypodcast.substack.com/
Original Musical Compositions by Ian Payne: https://www.jamesianpayne.com/
Support the Show: PayPal
Contact: [email protected]