Saturday 8 September 2012

1960s 1970s

http://www.ghi-dc.org/files/publications/bu_supp/supp006/bus6_005.pdf

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Italy

http://libcom.org/history/states-emergency-cultures-revolt-italy-1968-1978


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Germany

http://www.germanculture.com.ua/library/history/bl_student_movement_terrorism.htm

http://www.germanculture.com.ua/library/weekly/aa060499.htm

http://www.baader-meinhof.com/tag/rudi-dutschke/

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rudi_Dutschke  ---


Dutschke also advocated that the transformation of Western societies should go hand in hand with Third World liberation movements and with democratization in communist countries of Central and Eastern Europe. His socialism had strongly Christian roots; he called Jesus Christ the "greatest revolutionary", and in Easter 1963, he wrote that "Jesus is risen. The decisive revolution in world history has happened — a revolution of all-conquering love. If people would fully receive this revealed love into their own existence, into the reality of the 'now', then the logic of insanity could no longer continue."[7]
Benno Ohnesorg's death in 1967 at the hands of German police pushed some in the student movement toward increasingly extremist violence and the formation of the Red Army Faction. The violence against Dutschke further radicalised parts of the student movement into committing several bombings and murders. Dutschke rejected this direction and feared that it would harm or cause the dissolution of the student movement. Instead he advocated a 'long march through the institutions' of power to create radical change from within government and society by becoming an integral part of the machinery.[1] The meaning of Dutschke's idea of a 'long march through the institutions' is in fact highly contested: most historians[8] of '68 in West Germany understand it to mean advocating setting up an alternative society and recreating the institutions which were seen by Dutschke as beyond reform in their current state. It is highly unlikely Dutschke would have promoted change from within the parliamentary and judicial system, which were populated by former Nazis and political conservatives. This is made clear in the SDS reaction to the Kiesinger-led CDU-SPD grand coalition and the authoritarian Emergency Laws they passed.

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