Portugal: The Impossible Revolution?

Author:   Phil Mailer
Publisher:   PM Press
ISBN:  

9781604863369


Pages:   300
Publication Date:   22 March 2012
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained
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Portugal: The Impossible Revolution?


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Full Product Details

Author:   Phil Mailer
Publisher:   PM Press
Imprint:   PM Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.408kg
ISBN:  

9781604863369


ISBN 10:   1604863366
Pages:   300
Publication Date:   22 March 2012
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   No Longer Our Product
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained
The supplier is currently out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out for you.

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Reviews

What comes through is the joy, enthusiasm, and realism which contrast with the irrelevant manoeuvring of various political factions One could quote endlessly from this interesting book. I hope much of the revolutionary left will read it. Many anarchists could also think about many of its implications. For people need to eat, to have shelter, before, after and during a revolution and you cannot eat slogans or wear ideologies. Alan Albon, Freedom


A thorough delight as it moves from first person accounts of street demonstrations through intricate analyses of political movements. Mailer has handled masterfully the enormous cast of politicians, officers of the military peasant and workers councils, and a myriad of splinter parties, movements and caucuses. --Choice Affords a good view of the mood of the time, of the multiplicity of leftist factions, and of the social problems that bedeviled the revolution. --Fritz Stern, Foreign Affairs Magazine Mailer portrays history with the enthusiasm of a cheerleader, the 'home team' in this case being libertarian communism. Official documents, position papers and the pronouncements of the protagonists of this drama are mostly relegated to the appendices. The text itself recounts the activities of a host of worker, tenant, soldier and student committees as well as the author's personal experiences. --Ian Wallace, Library Journal What comes through is the joy, enthusiasm, and realism which contrast with the irrelevant manoeuvring of various political factions... One could quote endlessly from this interesting book. I hope much of the revolutionary left will read it. Many anarchists could also think about many of its implications. For people need to eat, to have shelter, before, after and during a revolution and you cannot eat slogans or wear ideologies. --Alan Albon, Freedom What did it all add up to? Was the 'Lisbon Commune' the real thing: a popular revolution arising from the masses without leaders or parties or vanguards? Phil Mailer claims that it was, or could have been. In a vigorous book that is part blow by blow account, part vivid eye-witness reporting and part unashamedly polemical analysis, he stresses what he sees as the revolution's most important feature--ordinary people spontaneously taking power for themselves. He presents a wealth of fascinating detail about workers' committees and peasant cooperatives which is a welcome antidote to the tiresome journalistic assumption of the time that without a tank, a bomb, or a dispossessed British businessman what happened in Portugal wasn't worth talking about. --Ben Pimlott, New Society


A thorough delight as it moves from first person accounts of street demonstrations through intricate analyses of political movements. Mailer has handled masterfully the enormous cast of politicians, officers of the military peasant and workers councils, and a myriad of splinter parties, movements and caucuses. --Choice What comes through is the joy, enthusiasm, and realism which contrast with the irrelevant manoeuvring of various political factions... One could quote endlessly from this interesting book. I hope much of the revolutionary left will read it. Many anarchists could also think about many of its implications. For people need to eat, to have shelter, before, after and during a revolution and you cannot eat slogans or wear ideologies. --Alan Albon, Freedom What did it all add up to? Was the 'Lisbon Commune' the real thing: a popular revolution arising from the masses without leaders or parties or vanguards? Phil Mailer claims that it was, or could have been. In a vigorous book that is part blow by blow account, part vivid eye-witness reporting and part unashamedly polemical analysis, he stresses what he sees as the revolution's most important feature--ordinary people spontaneously taking power for themselves. He presents a wealth of fascinating detail about workers' committees and peasant cooperatives which is a welcome antidote to the tiresome journalistic assumption of the time that without a tank, a bomb, or a dispossessed British businessman what happened in Portugal wasn't worth talking about. --Ben Pimlott, New Society Mailer portrays history with the enthusiasm of a cheerleader, the 'home team' in this case being libertarian communism. Official documents, position papers and the pronouncements of the protagonists of this drama are mostly relegated to the appendices. The text itself recounts the activities of a host of worker, tenant, soldier and student committees as well as the author's personal experiences. --Ian Wallace, Library Journal Affords a good view of the mood of the time, of the multiplicity of leftist factions, and of the social problems that bedeviled the revolution. --Fritz Stern, Foreign Affairs Magazine


Mailer portrays history with the enthusiasm of a cheerleader, the 'home team' in this case being libertarian communism. Official documents, position papers and the pronouncements of the protagonists of this drama are mostly relegated to the appendices. The text itself recounts the activities of a host of worker, tenant, soldier and student committees as well as the author's personal experiences. --Ian Wallace, Library Journal


What did it all add up to? Was the 'Lisbon Commune' the real thing: a popular revolution arising from the masses without leaders or parties or vanguards? Phil Mailer claims that it was, or could have been. In a vigorous book that is part blow by blow account, part vivid eye-witness reporting and part unashamedly polemical analysis, he stresses what he sees as the revolution's most important feature--ordinary people spontaneously taking power for themselves. He presents a wealth of fascinating detail about workers' committees and peasant cooperatives which is a welcome antidote to the tiresome journalistic assumption of the time that without a tank, a bomb, or a dispossessed British businessman what happened in Portugal wasn't worth talking about. --Ben Pimlott, New Society What comes through is the joy, enthusiasm, and realism which contrast with the irrelevant manoeuvring of various political factions... One could quote endlessly from this interesting book. I hope much of the revolutionary left will read it. Many anarchists could also think about many of its implications. For people need to eat, to have shelter, before, after and during a revolution and you cannot eat slogans or wear ideologies. --Alan Albon, Freedom Mailer portrays history with the enthusiasm of a cheerleader, the 'home team' in this case being libertarian communism. Official documents, position papers and the pronouncements of the protagonists of this drama are mostly relegated to the appendices. The text itself recounts the activities of a host of worker, tenant, soldier and student committees as well as the author's personal experiences. --Ian Wallace, Library Journal A thorough delight as it moves from first person accounts of street demonstrations through intricate analyses of political movements. Mailer has handled masterfully the enormous cast of politicians, officers of the military peasant and workers councils, and a myriad of splinter parties, movements and caucuses. Choice Affords a good view of the mood of the time, of the multiplicity of leftist factions, and of the social problems that bedeviled the revolution. Fritz Stern, Foreign Affairs Magazine Mailer portrays history with the enthusiasm of a cheerleader, the 'home team' in this case being libertarian communism. Official documents, position papers and the pronouncements of the protagonists of this drama are mostly relegated to the appendices. The text itself recounts the activities of a host of worker, tenant, soldier and student committees as well as the author s personal experiences. Ian Wallace, Library Journal What did it all add up to? Was the 'Lisbon Commune' the real thing: a popular revolution arising from the masses without leaders or parties or vanguards? Phil Mailer claims that it was, or could have been. In a vigorous book that is part blow by blow account, part vivid eye-witness reporting and part unashamedly polemical analysis, he stresses what he sees as the revolution s most important featureordinary people spontaneously taking power for themselves. He presents a wealth of fascinating detail about workers committees and peasant cooperatives which is a welcome antidote to the tiresome journalistic assumption of the time that without a tank, a bomb, or a dispossessed British businessman what happened in Portugal wasn t worth talking about. Ben Pimlott, New Society What comes through is the joy, enthusiasm, and realism which contrast with the irrelevant manoeuvring of various political factions One could quote endlessly from this interesting book. I hope much of the revolutionary left will read it. Many anarchists could also think about many of its implications. For people need to eat, to have shelter, before, after and during a revolution and you cannot eat slogans or wear ideologies. Alan Albon, Freedom


Author Information

Phil Mailer is a political activist and the former editor of Combate. He lives in Lisbon, Portugal. Maurice Brinton was the pen name under which Chris Pallis wrote and translated for the British libertarian socialist group, Solidarity.

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