Podcasts about communard

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Best podcasts about communard

Latest podcast episodes about communard

Les Nuits de France Culture
Jean Allemane, ouvrier typographe, communard, socialiste 3/3 : Jean Allemane, une idée du socialisme

Les Nuits de France Culture

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2025 69:55


durée : 01:09:55 - Les Nuits de France Culture - par : Mathilde Wagman - Dans ce dernier volet des "Inconnus de l'histoire" en 1983, on apprend comment, enfin libéré après huit longues années de détention, Jean Allemane devint l'un des fondateurs de la Fédération des travailleurs du livre et incarna un courant original du socialisme français, l'allemanisme. - réalisation : Virginie Mourthé - invités : Madeleine Rebérioux

Les Nuits de France Culture
Jean Allemane, ouvrier typographe, communard, socialiste 2/3 : Jean Allemane, de la Commune de Paris au bagne de l'île Nou

Les Nuits de France Culture

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2025 64:54


durée : 01:04:54 - Les Nuits de France Culture - par : Mathilde Wagman - A la chute de la Commune, Jean Allemane est arrêté et déporté en Nouvelle-Calédonie. C'est son parcours, de la "Semaine sanglante" à sa détention au bagne de l'île Nou, que retrace ce deuxième volet de la série que lui consacre "Les inconnus de l'histoire" en 1983. - réalisation : Virginie Mourthé - invités : Madeleine Rebérioux

Les Nuits de France Culture
Jean Allemane, ouvrier typographe, communard, socialiste 1/3 : Jean Allemane, un ouvrier sur les barricades de la Commune

Les Nuits de France Culture

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2025 64:55


durée : 01:04:55 - Les Nuits de France Culture - par : Mathilde Wagman - Mort à 91 ans en 1935, Jean Allemane est une figure du socialisme ouvrier français. C'est son parcours, d'ouvrier typographe à 12 ans jusqu'à son rôle dans la Commune de Paris, que retrace ce premier volet d'une série qui lui est consacrée dans l'émission "Les inconnus de l'Histoire" en 1983. - réalisation : Virginie Mourthé - invités : Madeleine Rebérioux

Venezuelanalysis
The Communard Union and the Socialist Horizon

Venezuelanalysis

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2024 63:05


The brutal US-led sanctions campaign has led grassroots socialist organizations to reinvent themselves and come together to survive the conditions created by the economic blockade. In our latest podcast episode, we go deep into communes and the socialist project in Venezuela, discussing the challenges in building a communal economy, political autonomy and lots more. Host José Luis Granados Ceja is joined by Venezuelanalysis' Cira Pascual Marquina who shares her experiences documenting the efforts of communards to build their productive capacity and end their isolation. We also speak with Juan “Juancho” Lenzo, co-founder of Tatuy Televisión and the Communard Union's communications coordinator, to discuss the genesis of the Communard Union and its role in defending socialism as the strategic horizon of the Bolivarian Revolution.Music: Embandolaos - Los Caimanes NegrosDionis Bahamonde Alan Gonzalez Eli Rondon y Truk - Comuna o Nada

Le Cours de l'histoire
La Commune, 150 ans 2/4 : Léo Frankel, trajectoires d'un communard

Le Cours de l'histoire

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2024 51:49


durée : 00:51:49 - Le Cours de l'histoire - par : Xavier Mauduit - Léo Frankel, jeune homme d'origine hongroise, défenseur obstiné de la cause des travailleurs, joue un rôle politique de premier plan durant la Commune de Paris. Retour sur un parcours militant et sur une pensée aux dimensions transnationales. - invités : Julien Chuzeville Historien, spécialiste de l'histoire du socialisme et du communisme.

Las Joyas de la Castafiore
Las Joyas de la Castafiore: Dos mejor que uno (07/05/22)

Las Joyas de la Castafiore

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2022


Estamos hartos de repetirlo, cuando dos artistas unen sus fuerzas el resultado siempre es más especial. Hoy dúos nacionales e internacionales con Pet Shop Boys, El Último de la Fila, Obk, Roxette, The White Stripes, Amistades Peligrosas, The Communard o los extremeños Fonal entre otr@s. Con Enrique Falcó.

Las Joyas de la Castafiore
Las Joyas de la Castafiore: Dos mejor que uno (07/05/22)

Las Joyas de la Castafiore

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2022


Estamos hartos de repetirlo, cuando dos artistas unen sus fuerzas el resultado siempre es más especial. Hoy dúos nacionales e internacionales con Pet Shop Boys, El Último de la Fila, Obk, Roxette, The White Stripes, Amistades Peligrosas, The Communard o los extremeños Fonal entre otr@s. Con Enrique Falcó.

Manatomy with Danny Wallace & Phil Hilton
REVEREND RICHARD COLES: “I used to long to be a brain in a jar.”

Manatomy with Danny Wallace & Phil Hilton

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2021 55:34


Legendary pop star. Local vicar. The Reverend Richard Coles is our guest this week and it is fantastic. Warm, wise and remarkably candid, the former Communard turned vicar, turned TV and radio star talks about body hatred, dodgy teeth, amphetamines, and the discovery he made in a tent in 1976 that radically changed his summer. As ever, email us on hello@assemblehere.co.uk, find us on Twitter @assemblehere and if you review us, let us know the thing about your body you’d give five stars! Don’t forget you can subscribe to our twice-weekly newsletter, packed with stories and useful stuff, at assemblehere.co.uk.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Midwestern Marx Podcast
Midwestern Marx Podcast #5 The Communard Chandler teaches us about Huey P. Newton

Midwestern Marx Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2021 79:28


Graduate Philosophy student Carlos Garrido, and the world's shortest political commentator Eddie Liger Smith discuss Huey P. Newton, and the Black Panther Party, with Chandler AKA The Communard!Follow Chandler on Tik Tok @TheCommunard

Radio AlterNantes FM
La chronique de Patsy (29) : Julien Chuzeville, Léo Frankel. Communard sans frontière,

Radio AlterNantes FM

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2021 3:59


Vu sur La chronique de Patsy (29) : Julien Chuzeville, Léo Frankel. Communard sans frontière,  «  Mon enterrement doit être aussi simple que celui des derniers crève-la-faim. La seule différence que je demande, c’est d’envelopper mon cercueil dans un drapeau rouge, le drapeau du prolétariat de tous les pays pour l’émancipation duquel j’ai donné la meilleure part de ma vie. » L’homme qui couche ces mots dans son testament se nomme […] Cet article provient de Radio AlterNantes FM

War Studies
Revolutionary thought after the Paris Commune with Julia Nicholls

War Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2021 41:18


Marx called it the 'glorious harbinger of a new society’, the Bolsheviks shrouded Lenin’s body in a Communard flag, and Mao Zedong claimed the events partly inspired the Cultural Revolution. The Paris Commune 1871 was one of the most significant revolutionary uprisings of the 19th century and after, and has captured imaginations for the last 150 years, inspiring communist leaders to the recent Gilet Jaune protests in France to a French fashion brand.   In this special episode marking 150 years since the Paris Commune, guest presenter and War Studies historian, Dr Mark Condos, speaks to Dr Julia Nicholls, Lecturer in French & European Studies at King’s, about the events of the Commune, its aftermath and its enduring legacy.   Julia discusses her book 'Revolutionary Thought after the Paris Commune, 1871 – 1885', exploring what happened to the revolutionaries exiled from France post-Commune, how they kept their revolutionary ideas alive, once scattered around the globe, and what this means for understanding French politics during this period and beyond. This podcast is part of our activities marking 150 years since the Franco-Prussian War. We’ll also be hosting a two-day conference, 6-7 May 2021, to interrogate the significance of some of the key political, social, cultural, and military transformations brought about by this crucial turning point in both European and world history. Sign up online - www.kcl.ac.uk/events/reassessing-the-franco-prussian-war-150-years-on-1

Highlights from The Hard Shoulder
Reverend Richard Coles

Highlights from The Hard Shoulder

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2020 10:00


Broadcaster and former Communard, Reverend Richard Coles joined Mark Cagney to discuss what life is like as a vicar in the age of Covid 19.     

RHLSTP with Richard Herring
RHLSTP 271 - Rev. Richard Coles

RHLSTP with Richard Herring

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2020 67:01


#271 Cadging Fags Off The Homeless - Richard is at the Northampton Deco and amazed by the local news headlines and tourists’ Lady Diana disappointments. His guest is Communard turned Communion-giver, the Reverend Richard Coles. They discuss the terrifying streets of Northampton, the Bay City Rollers in a carpet shop, forgetting you had a speed boat, being the only priest to have tried non-recreational drugs, whether it’s possible to be a better Christian than Jesus, the post-traumatic stress of HIV, what it’s like when the Prime Minister votes for you and inspiring two fictional characters. Richard forgot to ask Richard if he’d ever seen a Holy Ghost and will never forgive himself.SUPPORT THE SHOW!Watch our TWITCH CHANNELBecome a badger and see extra content at our WEBSITESee details of the RHLSTP TOUR DATESBuy DVDs and Books from GO FASTER STRIPE See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Resonance: An Anarchist Audio Distro
The Communard – Audio Zine

Resonance: An Anarchist Audio Distro

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 21, 2019


The Olympia Communard: Dispatches from the Olympia Rail Blockade – By Various Authors – MP3 – PDF – Torrent – Archive – YouTube For seven days during the winter of 2016, radicals, revolutionaries and ne’er-do-wells – inspired by the then unfolding revolt at Standing Rock – built a blockade encampment on the train tracks in downtown … Continue reading The Communard – Audio Zine

New Books in History
Kristin Ross, “Communal Luxury: The Political Imaginary of the Paris Commune” (Verso, 2015)

New Books in History

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2016 60:43


One hundred and forty-five years ago this week, the French state massacred thousands of its own people during the semaine sanglante (bloody week) of the Paris Commune. Kristin Ross’ Communal Luxury: The Political Imaginary of the Paris Commune (Verso Books, 2015) pushes readers to consider Communard thought and actions in a frame that moves beyond the 72 days that traditionally define (and confine) the Commune as an event. This is a Commune that begins with the meetings and reunions of the 1860s rather than the states attempted seizure of the cannons protecting the capital in March 1871. Extending the spatial and temporal bounds of the Commune to include the lifetime of its participants and supporters within and beyond Paris, Communal Luxury opens up new possibilities for our historical understanding of 1871. It also renders visible and analyzes a neglected archive of Communard thought as a resource for contemporary political struggles and activisms in the 21st century. Liberating the Commune from both the French national republican histories that have attempted to incorporate it, and histories of state communism that have cast the Commune as the failed precursor to 1917, Ross pursues the lived and conceived history of a set of events that have gained mythological status in the century and a half since their unfolding. The book directs our attention to the ideas and perspectives of a range of actors and thinkers: Elisabeth Dmitrieff, Eugene Poittier, Elisee Reclus, Peter Kropotkin, William Morris, and Karl Marx. From the Communard call for a Universal Republic, to new programs for education and the arts (including an aspiration to the public beauty of communal luxury), to shifting visions of the possibilities of revolution and solidarity into the future, the book explores what Marx referred to as the working existence of the Commune. More a study of the theory and political praxis of the movement than a history of the Paris Commune in a traditional sense, the book illuminates the past while speaking to the present in profound ways. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books Network
Kristin Ross, “Communal Luxury: The Political Imaginary of the Paris Commune” (Verso, 2015)

New Books Network

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2016 60:18


One hundred and forty-five years ago this week, the French state massacred thousands of its own people during the semaine sanglante (bloody week) of the Paris Commune. Kristin Ross’ Communal Luxury: The Political Imaginary of the Paris Commune (Verso Books, 2015) pushes readers to consider Communard thought and actions in a frame that moves beyond the 72 days that traditionally define (and confine) the Commune as an event. This is a Commune that begins with the meetings and reunions of the 1860s rather than the states attempted seizure of the cannons protecting the capital in March 1871. Extending the spatial and temporal bounds of the Commune to include the lifetime of its participants and supporters within and beyond Paris, Communal Luxury opens up new possibilities for our historical understanding of 1871. It also renders visible and analyzes a neglected archive of Communard thought as a resource for contemporary political struggles and activisms in the 21st century. Liberating the Commune from both the French national republican histories that have attempted to incorporate it, and histories of state communism that have cast the Commune as the failed precursor to 1917, Ross pursues the lived and conceived history of a set of events that have gained mythological status in the century and a half since their unfolding. The book directs our attention to the ideas and perspectives of a range of actors and thinkers: Elisabeth Dmitrieff, Eugene Poittier, Elisee Reclus, Peter Kropotkin, William Morris, and Karl Marx. From the Communard call for a Universal Republic, to new programs for education and the arts (including an aspiration to the public beauty of communal luxury), to shifting visions of the possibilities of revolution and solidarity into the future, the book explores what Marx referred to as the working existence of the Commune. More a study of the theory and political praxis of the movement than a history of the Paris Commune in a traditional sense, the book illuminates the past while speaking to the present in profound ways. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in European Studies
Kristin Ross, “Communal Luxury: The Political Imaginary of the Paris Commune” (Verso, 2015)

New Books in European Studies

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2016 60:18


One hundred and forty-five years ago this week, the French state massacred thousands of its own people during the semaine sanglante (bloody week) of the Paris Commune. Kristin Ross’ Communal Luxury: The Political Imaginary of the Paris Commune (Verso Books, 2015) pushes readers to consider Communard thought and actions in a frame that moves beyond the 72 days that traditionally define (and confine) the Commune as an event. This is a Commune that begins with the meetings and reunions of the 1860s rather than the states attempted seizure of the cannons protecting the capital in March 1871. Extending the spatial and temporal bounds of the Commune to include the lifetime of its participants and supporters within and beyond Paris, Communal Luxury opens up new possibilities for our historical understanding of 1871. It also renders visible and analyzes a neglected archive of Communard thought as a resource for contemporary political struggles and activisms in the 21st century. Liberating the Commune from both the French national republican histories that have attempted to incorporate it, and histories of state communism that have cast the Commune as the failed precursor to 1917, Ross pursues the lived and conceived history of a set of events that have gained mythological status in the century and a half since their unfolding. The book directs our attention to the ideas and perspectives of a range of actors and thinkers: Elisabeth Dmitrieff, Eugene Poittier, Elisee Reclus, Peter Kropotkin, William Morris, and Karl Marx. From the Communard call for a Universal Republic, to new programs for education and the arts (including an aspiration to the public beauty of communal luxury), to shifting visions of the possibilities of revolution and solidarity into the future, the book explores what Marx referred to as the working existence of the Commune. More a study of the theory and political praxis of the movement than a history of the Paris Commune in a traditional sense, the book illuminates the past while speaking to the present in profound ways. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in French Studies
Kristin Ross, “Communal Luxury: The Political Imaginary of the Paris Commune” (Verso, 2015)

New Books in French Studies

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2016 60:18


One hundred and forty-five years ago this week, the French state massacred thousands of its own people during the semaine sanglante (bloody week) of the Paris Commune. Kristin Ross’ Communal Luxury: The Political Imaginary of the Paris Commune (Verso Books, 2015) pushes readers to consider Communard thought and actions in a frame that moves beyond the 72 days that traditionally define (and confine) the Commune as an event. This is a Commune that begins with the meetings and reunions of the 1860s rather than the states attempted seizure of the cannons protecting the capital in March 1871. Extending the spatial and temporal bounds of the Commune to include the lifetime of its participants and supporters within and beyond Paris, Communal Luxury opens up new possibilities for our historical understanding of 1871. It also renders visible and analyzes a neglected archive of Communard thought as a resource for contemporary political struggles and activisms in the 21st century. Liberating the Commune from both the French national republican histories that have attempted to incorporate it, and histories of state communism that have cast the Commune as the failed precursor to 1917, Ross pursues the lived and conceived history of a set of events that have gained mythological status in the century and a half since their unfolding. The book directs our attention to the ideas and perspectives of a range of actors and thinkers: Elisabeth Dmitrieff, Eugene Poittier, Elisee Reclus, Peter Kropotkin, William Morris, and Karl Marx. From the Communard call for a Universal Republic, to new programs for education and the arts (including an aspiration to the public beauty of communal luxury), to shifting visions of the possibilities of revolution and solidarity into the future, the book explores what Marx referred to as the working existence of the Commune. More a study of the theory and political praxis of the movement than a history of the Paris Commune in a traditional sense, the book illuminates the past while speaking to the present in profound ways. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices