170 lines
9.6 KiB
Markdown
170 lines
9.6 KiB
Markdown
**Antoinette Cauvin** or '''Madame Sorgue '''(1864 - 1924) was an
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[anarcho-syndicalist](Anarcho-Syndicalism "wikilink") activist and
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organizer, considered the 'the most dangerous woman in Europe'.\[1\]
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## Life
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### Family
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Antoinette's family was very wealthy and members of the aristocracy, her
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grandfather was the Russian general Piotr Chripcov, military attaché to
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the Russian embassy in Washington DC, and her father was a
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[Fourierist](Charles_Fourier "wikilink") doctor named Joseph-Pierre
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Durand de Gros.
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She had a key role in founding several socialist groups in the
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department of the Aveyron, where she was brought up (her name Madame
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Sorgue derives from the name of the river that runs through the
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department but may also involve an anagram of her surname Gros and
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sorge, ta German word for trouble)). A gifted orator, she was also a
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journalist, working first on the daily the Journal des Débats. She
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married a journalist Auguste Cauvin, another journalist ( who also used
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a pseudonym-D’Arsac- after the estate owned by the Durand de Gros
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family) who also had similar ideas to her. In 1884 they attempted to set
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up a Fourierist colony in Brazil but this turned out to be a total
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failure and they were forced to return to France after several months.
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She tried, like her grandfather and father, to put her ideas into
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practice at Arsac, but again this proved to be a failure and the land
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had to be sold. Local inhabitants recalled her haranguing the workers of
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the estate on socialism during their breaks and singing the
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International. She was known by local peasants as the “femno del diaples
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( local dialect for the devil’s woman).
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She joined the Blanquist Parti Socialiste Revolutionnaire (PSR) of
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Edouard Vaillant and represented three of its Aveyron groups at the
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general socialist congresses of Paris in 1889 and 1900. She took most of
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the Aveyron groups with her into the Parti Socialiste de France after
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the Millerand affair (Millerand was a socialist who had joined a
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non-socialist government). She represented them at the socialist unity
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congress of Paris in April 1905 which led to the formation of the SFIO
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(French Section of the Workers International) . She was a delegate to
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the congress at Nancy in 1907. Here she supported Madeline Pelletier
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over the right to the vote for women. Pelletier agreed that the working
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class would gain nothing from the ballot box, but working class women
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should be accorded the same rights as their male counterparts, having
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then the choice of rejecting the vote. Sorgue declared : “ I do not
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believe that woman can emancipate herself by voting slip. I believe that
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the woman who interests us, which is the proletarian woman, can only
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emancipate herself through the syndical struggle, that is to say the
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economic struggle”. She allied herself with the “insurrectionalist” wing
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of the SFIO around Gustav Hervé, which was strongly anti-electoral,
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anti-parliamentarian and anti-militarist, and influenced by the ideas of
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syndicalism and anarchism.
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In 1905 she supported the strike of textile workers in Limoges where the
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droit de cuissage ( sexual harassment of women workers by bosses and
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foremen) was one of the main causes of the strike. It was only she and
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the anarchists who really highlighted the problems this posed. She
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praised the courage of the women workers, adding that “Wherever I go, in
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the North, in the Midi, in the East,in the West, in the Centre, in
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France and abroad, it is the same indignant protest I gather from the
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mouths of the wives and daughters of workers: we are the victims of the
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lubricity of the males of the bourgeoisie and of the foremen”.
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Breaking with bourgeois feminism, she attacked the institutions of
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marriage and the family. In March 1906 the Courrieres Colliery disaster
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in northern France claimed the lives of one thousand, one hundred and
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one miners. In the outbreak of protest and the strike that followed,
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2,000 anarchists and syndicalists led by the anarchist miner Benoit
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Broutchoux and by Sorgue converged on the town hall and attempted to
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storm it, but were beaten back by the police.
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In 1907 she was deeply involved in the strike of the women cheesemakers
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at Roquefort. This not only involved the appalling conditions that these
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women had to suffer, but the same sexual harassment that the women
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workers of Limoges had protested against.
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In 1908 she remained seated when King Carlos of Portugal entered the
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Lisbon International Peace Conference. He had her imprisoned at Oporto
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as a result. Thousands of workers demonstrated in Lisbon against this
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and the authorities then decided to expel her, sending her down the
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Tagus accompanied by a gunboat because a demonstration in her support
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was taking place in Lisbon. In 1907 and 1908 she took part in the mass
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movements in Northern Italy in Genoa, Milan, and Turin. She was invited
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to speak to a demonstration to be followed by a party for children of
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strikers in Milan. As a result of this she was arrested for apologising
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for regicide for calling for the assassination of Victor Emmanuel (
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which she denied). She was acquitted but still had to serve a long
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prison sentence on the charge of anti-militarism\!
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She headed the women's hunger march on Tower Hill in London during the
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1912 dockers' strike. She also took part in the agitation during the
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Tonypandy strike. Many times she had to escape from hostile mobs. She
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was the only woman present at the 1910 Seamen's conference in Antwerp,
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speaking there for the French dockers. In 1911 she spent some time in
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Hull, during and perhaps after the June dockers’ strike, where she did
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much agitational work, endearing herself to many workers in Hull. There
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she was under considerable pressure from the ship-owners, merchants and
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the authorities. In this period she did much to popularise the new ideas
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of French syndicalism, speaking in Scotland, England and south Wales and
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supplementing the work of Tom Mann and the Industrial Syndicalist
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Education League. She visited Glasgow on several occasions where she
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addressed mass meetings.
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In 1914 she spoke at Ardrossan in Scotland alongside Ben Tillett and Joe
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Houghton during the dockers’ strike. With the outbreak of the First
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World War, she rejected internationalist positions and took one of
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“national defence”. In fact , from ferociously denouncing capitalist
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wars just a few months before, she like most of the insurrectionalists,
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including her husband and Hervé, transformed themselves into the worst
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ultra-patriots. This ruined her revolutionary reputation in the long
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run. The “Louise Michel Aveyronnaise” ( another of her nicknames) gave a
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speech on 18th June 1921 calling for the need to rebuild a bloc of the
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Left at Rodez in the Aveyron. The audience was not impressed. As one of
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them wrote, “Alas, everyone remarked that this was not our Louise. She
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much wanted to declare herself a socialist and syndicalist, very proud
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of carrying the flag of the miners’ federation but dropped a depth
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charge against the Russian Revolution”.
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She now spent most of her time in London and died there on 18th February
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1924. She was found dead in bed at the Bonnington Hotel on Southampton
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Row, apparently of a heart attack. She had come on behalf of the Belgian
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paper L'Indépendance Belge to interview J. R. Clynes and Lloyd George.
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Antoinette Cauvin (1864 - 18 February 1924), known by the pseudonym of
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Madame Sorgue and Madame Trouble1, was a French anarcho-syndicalist. The
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name of Sorgue comes from the German "Sorge" meaning "worries, problem",
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being the one that brings them1, this explaining its anglicized version:
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Madame Trouble. Another interpretation as to the origin of her name
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comes from the Sorgues, an Aveyron river to which she borrowed her
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name2. Having participated in a large number of strikes in Europe, she
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traveled extensively in France, Portugal, Italy, Wales, England3 and
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Scotland (notably during the dockers' strike in Leith in 1913 4).
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Biography
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Madame Sorgue was born in 1864, daughter of the Fourierist physician and
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philosopher Joseph-Pierre Durand de Gros, whose name comes from the
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domain of Gros, located in Arsac, now in the agglomeration ruthénoise,
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in the Aveyron where she is from2 .
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After having played a predominant role in the creation of several
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socialist groups in Aveyron, and joining the Blanquist Party of
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Revolutionary Socialist Party, she represented three of these groups in
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1889 and 1890 at the International Socialist Congress in Paris2. She is
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still their representative in 1905, at the Congress of the Globe, in
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Paris, which will see the appearance of the SFIO2.
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In 1905, she participated in the strike of textile workers in Limoges,
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whose main claim was against the right of cuissage in force for women
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workers2. In 1907, it is in Roquefort, beside the workers of the cheese
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factories of the city that she is present. They protested less for
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better working conditions than for the sexual abuse they suffered2.
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She was reputed to be "the most dangerous woman in Europe" 1, because of
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her role in spreading French syndicalist ideas and methods in Britain.
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Feminist, Ms. Sorgue is in opposition to anti-parliamentarians and
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anarchists on the issue of the right to vote of women, and is strongly
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critical of the dominant family model and marriage. Speaker and
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journalist, she wrote for the Journal des débats.
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In 1914, during the First World War, she was one of the few anarchists
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to be in favor of war.
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She died of a heart attack on February 18, 1924 in London, at the
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Bonnington Hotel on Southamton Row2,1,5,6.
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<https://libcom.org/history/cauvin-nee-durand-de-gros-antoinette-aka-madame-sorgue-1864-1924>
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<https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madame_Sorgue>
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1. <https://libcom.org/history/cauvin-nee-durand-de-gros-antoinette-aka-madame-sorgue-1864-1924> |