The Le Mouvement socialiste (French pronunciation: [lə muvmɑ̃ sɔsjalist], lit.
'The Socialist Movement') was a revolutionary syndicalist journal in France founded in 1899 by Hubert Lagardelle and dissolved in 1914.
[1] Other key founders included Karl Marx's grandson Jean Longuet and Émile Durkheim's nephew Marcel Mauss.
[2] It advocated segregation of social classes; opposed bourgeois life, democracy, universal suffrage, and parliamentarism; and supported a society led by "conscious, rebellious" men that would develop a disciplined bold new man as part of a "worker's army".
[3] The journal was popular and attracted an international audience in its examination of Marxism and revolutionary syndicalism, with well-known revolutionary syndicalists contributing to it, such as Georges Sorel and Victor Griffuelhes.