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In 1944, Craipeau was the architect of unity between three of France's four
Trotskyist groups: the POI itself, the Comités Communistes Internationalistes and the Octobre group. They formed the
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By 1933, he was able to organise a meeting attended by 1000 members of the youth wings of the
Communist Party and the
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secretly. This was difficult, and following a series of setbacks, he turned instead to work influencing the
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190:(PSU). He remained a leading member of this party for many years, during which he wrote numerous books on
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246:, Merlin, London, 2013. Translation and introduction by David Broder, with a documentary appendix.
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In 1954, Craipeau returned to mainland France, where he participated in the creation of the
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was imminent, and soon after the POI sided with the
International, he was expelled.
145:. However, he could not agree with the International's perspective that a crisis in
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The former work, on the
Occupation period itself, was published in English in 2013.
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141:. In the same year, he was also elevated to the International Secretariat of the
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organisation while he was still in his teens. Expelled from school, he moved to
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Craipeau temporarily withdrew from politics, and in 1951, he moved to
95:. He concluded that it could not be defended, as Trotsky held, as a
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Swimming against the Tide: Trotskyists in German-occupied France
37:
Born in La Roche-sur-Yon, he helped found a local independent
240:
Mémoires d'un
Dinosaure Trotskyste, L'Harmattan, Paris, 1999
110:, he was pronounced unfit for duty, and attempted, with
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and became associated with the
Trotskyist group around
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Internationalist
Communist Party (France) politicians
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In 1936, Craipeau became a leading member of the new
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with the responsibility for developing a youth wing.
122:. He wrote an account of this activity in his books
85:(POI). The following year, in reaction to Trotsky's
186:(UGS) and, in 1960 with several groups to form the
103:system, an idea that he introduced to Trotskyism.
59:and so admitted current and former members of the
55:. It considered itself an external faction of the
280:Workers and Peasants' Socialist Party politicians
91:, he began a re-analysis of the nature of the
72:Section française de l'Internationale ouvrière
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295:Unified Socialist Party (France) politicians
275:Internationalist Workers Party politicians
222:Yvan Craipeau, un "dinosaurio trotskista"
290:Union of the Socialist Left politicians
180:Movement for the Liberation of the City
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137:, and in 1946, he was elected its
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51:. In 1930, the group founded the
30:– 13 December 2001) was a French
135:Internationalist Communist Party
83:Internationalist Workers Party
1:
166:National Education Federation
270:People from La Roche-sur-Yon
184:Union of the Socialist Left
160:, where he became a school
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231:The 'Third Camp' in France
164:and soon secretary of the
97:degenerated workers' state
16:French Trotskyist activist
208:Bureaucratic collectivism
128:La Libération Confisquée.
101:bureaucratic collectivist
57:Communist Party of France
188:Unified Socialist Party
88:The Revolution Betrayed
78:'s personal secretary.
178:. This fused with the
124:Contre vents et marées
61:French Communist Party
219:Patrick Silberstein,
236:Yvan Craipeau Papers
143:Fourth International
22:(24 September 1911,
65:executive committee
192:left-wing politics
99:but that it was a
74:. In 1933, he was
139:General Secretary
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53:Communist League
24:La Roche-sur-Yon
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226:(in Spanish)
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182:to form the
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108:World War II
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93:Soviet Union
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265:2001 deaths
260:1911 births
169:trade union
154:Basse-Terre
120:German Army
254:Categories
214:References
196:revolution
158:Guadeloupe
147:capitalism
112:Marcel Hic
34:activist.
32:Trotskyist
116:La Verité
48:La Verité
202:See also
176:New Left
162:teacher
106:During
76:Trotsky
39:Marxist
28:Vendée
43:Paris
194:and
126:and
156:in
256::
198:.
171:.
26:,
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