Mao-spontex was inspired by both the spontaneous action of the Movement of March 22 in France and subsequent protest movement and the Cultural Revolution in China,[1] and came to represent an ideology promoting some aspects of Maoism, Marxism, and Leninism, but rejecting the total idea of Marxism–Leninism.[5] The idea of democratic centralism was supported as a way to organize a party, but only if it stays in constant contact with a mass worker's movement to remain revolutionary.[1] The main party vehicles for Mao-spontex were the French political party Gauche prolétarienne and the group Vive la révolution.[2]
The tendency falls under the wider current of Western Maoism[6][7][8] that existed after the emergence of the New Left.
^Bourg, Julian (2017-11-28). From Revolution to Ethics, Second Edition. McGill-Queen's University Press. p. 86. doi:10.1515/9780773552463. ISBN978-0-7735-5246-3. It did not take long for the GP-ists to become known as 'Mao-spontex', or Maoist-spontaneists. The name was originally an insult—Spontex was the brand name of a cleaning sponge—intended to belittle the group's embrace of anti-authoritarianism as an element of revolutionary contestation. The marxisant tradition had long criticized spontaneism as an anarchistic error.
Cordoba, Cyril (2022). "What did Swiss Maoism stand for? The loyalty of the KPS(ML) to Beijing in question". Twentieth Century Communism. 22 (22): 47–70. doi:10.3898/175864322835917856.
Dutton, Michael; Healy, Paul (1985). "Marxist Theory and Socialist Transition: The Construction of an Epistemological Relation". In Brugger, Bill (ed.). Chinese Marxism in Flux, 1978-84: Essays on Epistemology, Ideology, and Political Economy. Routledge. doi:10.4324/9781315495170-2. ISBN9781315495170.
Idier, Antoine (2018). "A Genealogy of a Politics of Subjectivity: Guy Hocquenghem, Homosexuality, and the Radical Left in Post- 1968 France". In Häberlen, Joachim C.; Keck-Szajbel, Mark; Mahoney, Kate (eds.). The Politics of Authenticity: Countercultures and Radical Movements across the Iron Curtain, 1968-1989. Berghahn Books. pp. 89–109. doi:10.1515/9781789200003-006.
Lee, Joseph Tse-Hei; Nedilsky, Lida V. (2012). "Appeal and Discontent: The Yin and Yang of China's Rise to Power". In Lee, Joseph Tse-Hei; Nedilsky, Lida V.; Cheung, Siu-Keung (eds.). China’s Rise to Power. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 1–29. doi:10.1057/9781137276742_1.
McGrogan, Manus (2010). "Vive La Révolution and the Example of Lotta Continua: The Circulation of Ideas and Practices Between the Left Militant Worlds of France and Italy Following May '68". Modern & Contemporary France. 18 (3): 309–328. doi:10.1080/09639489.2010.493931.
McGrogan, Manus (2014). "Militants sans frontières? Fusions and frictions of US movements in Paris, 1970". Contemporary French Civilization. 39 (2). doi:10.3828/cfc.2014.12.
Piotrowski, Grzegorz (2024). "Insurrectionary Anarchism in Poland: The Case of the People's Liberation Front". Anarchist Studies. 32 (2): 75–102. doi:10.3898/AS.32.2.04.