Original Black & Red Introduction
The essays included in the present work first appeared in the journal Invariance (Année 6, Série II No. 3, 1973) with the titles, "Errance
de l'humanité; Conscience repressive; Communisme," and "Declin du mode
de production capitaliste ou declin de l'humanité?" The author of
these essays, Jacques Camatte, worked with Amadeo Bordiga and the group
of Marxist theoreticians who were known as the Italian communist left.
After the events which took place in France in May of 1968, Camatte,
together with his comrades on Invariance, began a critical
analysis of the activities of the Italian communist left, the work of
Bordiga as well as the work of Marx. The title of the journal
originally referred to "the invariance of the theory of the
proletariat," the theory of the League of Communists and the First
International. By 1973 critics said of this journal that "nothing
varies more than Invariance." Camatte and his comrades,
pursuing the critical analysis they had begun, were led to conclude
that "what is invariant is the aspiration to rediscover the lost human
community, and this cannot take place through a reestablishment of the
past, but only through new creation." Their theoretical quest led them
to a complete rejection of the theory of revolutionary parties and
organizations, the theory of revolutionary consciousness, the theory of
the progressive development of productive forces. "The French May
movement showed that what is needed is a new mode of living, a new
life." (The above quotations are from the last article in Invariance No. 3, 1973.)
(...) The essays in the present work were translated from
French by Fredy Perlman with assistance from Camatte; the illustrations
were selected and prepared by Allan Foster; Lorraine Perlman and Judy
Campbell participated in the photography, printing and binding.
(...)
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