Far-left
From Free net encyclopedia
The term far left refers to the relative position a person or group occupies within the political spectrum. Originally the term considered spacing in the French Revolution with the most radical of the Jacobins being viewed as the far-left. The term "Jacobin" for a kind of far-left person continued throughout much of the nineteenth century.
The far-left and the Radical Left often overlap in terms of belief, tactics, strategy and organizational affiliation, but the far-left is a more general term that can include groups and politics that the Radical Left in particular might explicitly oppose and denounce. The term ultra-left, meanwhile, is distinct from both of the aforementined classifications, and is a term more often used pejoratively than self-descriptively.
In modern times it is ideally used to describe persons or groups who hold radical egalitarian views thus supporting radical social and political change by taking over or overthrowing the existing order in society. It can also include an anarchistic hostility to most or all existing hierarchical organizations. Between groups on the far-left, depending on a group's militancy and the given political circumstances, revolutionary change may be achieved through democratic or authoritarian, violent or nonviolent means. Groups that advocate some form of revolution without being egalitarian, are generally not part of the far left, and may indeed be far right.
For much of the English speaking world, especially Australia and the United States, it is sometimes a pejorative term to indicate a person is extreme or fringe in their left-wing views (the synonym "hard left" is also used for this purpose). In France, the term extrême-gauche is normally only used for Trotskyists, Maoists or other New Leftists, or anarchist parties or groups, while the French Communist Party is not considered far left. The political difference seems to be that far-left groups do not actually wish to govern within the current institutional framework, while the Communist Party seeks to govern, possibly even in coalitions.
Although the modern term is ideally to be used for advocates of radical egalitarianism, internationalism, and social change, it is often used for something slightly different then that. To be precise, the modern use of the term far-left is often more to describe those seen as strongly opposed to globalization, capitalism, nationalism, and "family values."
In some nations it is defined as "to the Left of mainstream Communist parties" as communist parties are acceptable in quite a few nations. Hence it includes Trotskyism, Maoism, Anti-Revisionists, Anarcho-communism, Anarcho-syndicalism, and others strongly opposed to capitalist governments and institutions. Anarchism itself is not inherently left or right, but the forms that are "Leftist Anarchism" are often considered far-left.
In nations where Communist parties are not acceptable, like the United States, it can simply mean to the "Left of the most left-wing member of the legislature." "Far-Left" can also describe groups who support an intense "cultural revolution" on anti-traditional lines, like the most extreme thinkers in Radical Feminism. Sometimes the term "far left" is used pejoratively by those on the right wing to describe any view they perceive as hostile to capitalism. Others on the right-wing may use it to mean someone strongly antitheist even if their politics are otherwise centrist or even to the right.
The term "far-left" must be understood as relative to either the speaker or the context in which they are speaking. Two hundred years ago, for example, anyone who supported secularism and universal suffrage would be seen as a far-left extremist, but were often referred to as ultra-radicals at the time. Likewise, as mentioned, parties that'd be deemed "far-left" in one nation might be mainstream in another.
Some organizations belonging to the Far Left
- Anarchist Black Cross Federation
- Anti-Imperialist National Democratic Front (South Korea)
- Co-ed Revolutionary Anarchist Liberation Union (Poland)
- Communist Party (Sweden)(formerly Communist Party Marxist-Leninists (the revolutionaries))
- Industrial Workers of the World
- International Conference of Marxist-Leninist Parties and Organizations (Unity & Struggle)
- International Socialist Organization
- International Workers Association
- Maoist Internationalist Movement
- Melbourne Anarchist Communist Group
- National Democratic Front (Philippines)
- Organization for the Reconstruction of the Communist Party of Greece
- Peoples' Global Action
- Red and Anarchist Action Network
- Revolutionary Communist Party of Britain (Marxist-Leninist)
- Revolutionary Internationalist Movement
- Unity List(Denmark)
- Workers' Communist Party (Norway)
- Workers Solidarity Movement(Ireland)
See also
- Ultra-left
- Far-right
- Left-wing politics
- Liberal elite
- Ideology
- Left-Right politics
- Glossary of the French Revolution
- Political spectrum
- Political compass
- World's Smallest Political Quiz
- Words to avoidde:Linksextremismus
es:Extrema izquierda fr:Extrême gauche he:שמאל רדיקלי nl:Extreemlinks no:Venstreekstremisme pl:Skrajna lewica sv:Vänsterextremism