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May 68 information


May 1968 events in France
Part of the Protests of 1968 and the Cold War
Barricades in Bordeaux in May 1968
Date2 May – 23 June 1968
(1 month and 3 weeks)
Location
France
MethodsOccupations, wildcat strikes, general strikes
Resulted inSnap legislative election
Parties

France Opposition:

  • Anarchists
  • French Communist Party
  • Situationist International
  • Council for Maintaining the Occupations
  • Federation of the Democratic and Socialist Left

Students:

  • Union Nationale des Étudiants de France
  • Sorbonne Occupation Committee

Unions:

  • CGT
  • FO

France Government

  • Ministry of the Interior
    • Police nationale
    • Compagnies Républicaines de Sécurité
  • French Armed Forces
  • Gaullist Party
Lead figures

France Non-centralised leadership
Some notable people participating:
France François Mitterrand
France Pierre Mendès France

France Charles de Gaulle
(President of France)
France Georges Pompidou
(Prime Minister of France)

Casualties
Death(s)2 (only 25 May)[1]
Injuries887+ (only 25 May)[1]
Arrested1,000+ (only 25 May)[1]

Beginning in May 1968, a period of civil unrest occurred throughout France, lasting seven weeks and punctuated by demonstrations, general strikes, and the occupation of universities and factories. At the height of events, which have since become known as May 68 (French: Mai 68), the economy of France came to a halt.[2] The protests reached a point that made political leaders fear civil war or revolution; the national government briefly ceased to function after President Charles de Gaulle secretly fled France to West Germany on the 29th. The protests are sometimes linked to similar movements around the same time worldwide[3] that inspired a generation of protest art in the form of songs, imaginative graffiti, posters, and slogans.[4][5]

The unrest began with a series of far-left student occupation protests against capitalism, consumerism, American imperialism and traditional institutions. Heavy police repression of the protesters led France's trade union confederations to call for sympathy strikes, which spread far more quickly than expected to involve 11 million workers, more than 22% of France's population at the time.[2] The movement was characterized by spontaneous and decentralized wildcat disposition; this created contrast and at times even conflict among the trade unions and leftist parties.[2] It was the largest general strike ever attempted in France, and the first nationwide wildcat general strike.[2]

The student occupations and general strikes across France met with forceful confrontation by university administrators and police. The de Gaulle administration's attempts to quell the strikes by police action only inflamed the situation, leading to street battles with the police in Paris's Latin Quarter.

By late May the flow of events had changed. The Grenelle accords, concluded on 27 May between the government, trade unions and employers, won significant wage gains for workers. A counter-demonstration organised by the Gaullist party on 29 May in central Paris gave De Gaulle the confidence to dissolve the National Assembly and call parliamentary elections for 23 June 1968. Violence evaporated almost as quickly as it arose. Workers returned to their jobs, and after the June elections, the Gaullists emerged stronger than before.

The events of May 1968 continue to influence French society. The period is considered a cultural, social and moral turning point in the nation's history. Alain Geismar, who was one of the student leaders at the time, later said the movement had succeeded "as a social revolution, not as a political one".[6]

  1. ^ a b c "France Feared On Brink of Civil War". The Register-Guard. Vol. 101, no. 124. Eugene, Oregon. 25 May 1968 – via Google News Archive. Two persons were reported killed in the fighting Friday night and early today, more than 1,000 injured and more than 1,000 arrested.
    Police said in Paris battles alone 795 persons were arrested and that the hospitals and the Red Cross treated 447 wounded civilians, 176 of whom were hospitalized. The University of Paris estimated another 400 injuries were not reported.
  2. ^ a b c d "The Beginning of an Era". Internationale Situationniste. Translated by Knabb, Ken. September 1969.
  3. ^ "1968 was no mere year". The Economist. 5 April 2018. ISSN 0013-0613. Retrieved 29 June 2021.
  4. ^ "Mai 68 – 40 ans déjà". Archived from the original on 25 November 2016. Retrieved 28 May 2014.
  5. ^ DeRoo, Rebecca J. (2014). The Museum Establishment and Contemporary Art: The Politics of Artistic Display in France after 1968. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781107656918.
  6. ^ Cite error: The named reference Erlanger 2008 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

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