For a few weeks in November and December 1918, the German working class experimented with council democracy. In Living Democracy, historian and political theorist Gaard Kets examines the ideas, institutions and experiences of council rule that were developed during the German Revolution of 1918â1919. Analyzing the debates of workers and intellectuals in the councils in four major cities, this book provides unique insight into the work floor of the revolution. The fundamental democratic questions that these revolutionaries discussed, regarding the demos and institutions of proletarian democracy, are still relevant for workers, activists and radical democrats today.
Gaard Kets, Ph.D. (1987), is an Assistant Professor of Political Theory at Radboud University. With a background in both history and political science, his research interests include historical theories, institutions and experiences of radical politics. He has published on the ideas, experiences and afterlives of council politics in the German Revolution of 1918â1919 and the Paris Commune of 1871.
Acknowledgements Abbreviations Chronology
1 Introduction
â1.1âThe Foretold Revolution
â1.2âAn Overview of the Political Landscape
â1.3âThe Second International and the Roots of Council Theory
â1.4âHistoriography of the German Revolution
â1.5âResearch Questions
â1.6âThe Four Case Studies
â1.7âSource Material
â1.8âBook Outline
2 Understanding Revolutionary Thought
â2.1âWhat Are Revolutions?
â2.2âAn Ecological Approach to Social Movements
â2.3âScripts and Repertoires
â2.4âAgents of Revolutions
â2.5âStudying Concepts and Ideologies
â2.6âOn Intellectuals
3 Berlin: Councils in the Capital
â3.1âIntroduction
â3.2âPre-History of Revolutionary Berlin
â3.3âThe Revolution Arrives in Berlin
â3.4âThe First National Congress of Councils
â3.5âDemocratisation of the Army
â3.6âSocialising the Economy
â3.7âCouncils versus Parliament?
â3.8âActors and Ecology in the Berlin Councils
4 Munich: From Lively Democracy to the Council Republics
â4.1âIntroduction
â4.2âPre-Revolutionary Situation
â4.3âThe Revolutionâs Dress Rehearsal
â4.4âThe âShotgun Weddingâ of a Unified Left: Kurt Eisnerâs Free State
â4.5âA Tale of Three Drafts
â4.6âInclusive Democratic Politics: Constituting the Demos
â4.7âElecting a New Landtag
â4.8âPower Vacuum and Council Congress
â4.9âRevolutionary Right, Representation and Sovereignty
â4.10âCouncils or Parliament? â Revisited
â4.11âCreating a Council Belt from Rhine to Volga
â4.12âConclusions
5 Bremen: Working-Class Ideas in the Bremen Council Republic
â5.1âIntroduction
â5.2âHistorical Context
â5.3âThe Council and Other Institutions
â5.4âConstituting the Demos
â5.5âVisions of Post-Revolutionary Society
â5.6âConclusions
6 Hamburg: The Hamburg Workersâ and Soldiersâ Councils
â6.1âIntroduction
â6.2âThe Workersâ and Soldiersâ Council of Hamburg
â6.3âThe Revolution in Hamburg
â6.4âThe Councils and the Old Institutional Order
â6.5âPolitical Parties and Trade Unions
â6.6âMembership and Democratic Inclusion
â6.7âDemocratisation of the Army
â6.8âConclusions
7 Democratic Life and Thought
â7.1âIntroduction
â7.2âEstablishing Councils, Actors and Ideas
â7.3âConceptualisation and Contestation of the Councils
â7.4âDemocratic in- and Exclusion: Speaking Subalterns
â7.5âLiving Democratic Lives
Literature and Sources Index
This book is especially relevant to (postgraduate) students, researchers and other academics involved in social movements, revolution, the history of political thought, and the development of contemporary radical democratic theory.