Латиноамериканский исторический альманах (Aug 2023)

From Bonapartism to populism Latin American readings of The l8 Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte

  • Horacio Tarcus

DOI
https://doi.org/10.32608/2305-8773-2023-39-1-164-202
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 39
pp. 164 – 202

Abstract

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The eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte was in 1852 a bumpy edition and a circulation limited to German emigrants in the United States, without the slightest direct impact on the events of contemporary France. The French public only knew a translation in 1891, when Louis Bonaparte's regime had collapsed two decades earlier. However, the work of Karl Marx became a classic in the first decades of the twentieth century, while the notion of Bonapartism transcended its national and epochal context, to become a category of modern political thought thought. With Trotsky's exile in Mexico in 1937, the notion was incorporated into the Latin American political vocabulary to account for Cardenismo and other national-popular regimes that emerged on this continent throughout the twentieth century. After intensive use, the term fell into disuse in the 1980s, being displaced by a surrogate notion, that of populism, elaborated by the Argentine political scientist Ernesto Laclau

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