ABSTRACT

Eurocommunism constitutes a "moment" of great transformation connecting the past and the present of the European Left, a political project by means of which left-wing politics in Europe effected a definitive transition to a thoroughly different paradigm. It rose in the wake of 1968 – that pivotal year of social revolt and rethinking that caused a divide between radical, progressive and socialist thinking in western and southern Europe and the Soviet model. Communist parties in Italy, France, Spain and Greece changed tack, drew on the dynamics of social radicalism of the time and came to be associated with political moderation, liberal democracy and negotiation rather than contentious politics forging a movement that would hold influence until the early 1980s. Eurocommunism thus wove an original political synthesis delineated against both the revolutionary Left and the social democracy: "party of struggle and party of governance".

chapter 1|18 pages

Introduction

Eurocommunism in a comparative historical perspective

part I|1 pages

Eurocommunism in its time

chapter 2|18 pages

One window closing and one opening

From the popular fronts to de-Stalinization

chapter 3|20 pages

1968

The rift

chapter 4|22 pages

Variations of Eurocommunism

1973–1979

chapter 5|15 pages

Disengagement from the communist identity

part II|1 pages

The Eurocommunist transformation

chapter 6|31 pages

Opportunities and adaptations

chapter 7|14 pages

State, liberalism, democracy

chapter 8|17 pages

Revolution, protest, governance

chapter 9|20 pages

Eurocommunism and social democracy

part III|1 pages

Eurocommunism between national and supranational politics

chapter 10|19 pages

Collapse or transformation of global capitalism?

The Eurocommunist response

part IV|1 pages

Conclusions

chapter 12|16 pages

Traces of the Eurocommunist inheritance