![]() ![]() 1 During the first two years, Roth carried out an important and integrative role on the editorial board. This core was expanded by a number of people who joined in connection with a campaign for a suspended sentence for Karl Heinz Roth, a member of the board. The Hamburg editorial board was made up of a core of former members from the ‘Proletarische Front’ organisation. ![]() Alongside this theme, there was an article on ‘the moral economy’, which took up the British New Left’s writing on social history. This issue was devoted to the subject of regionalism. 12 of the old version of the journal was conceived in Hamburg and thus has been included in this digitised edition. It is now available here online for the first time. Between 19 the Hamburg group published Autonomie: Neue Folge (Autonomy: The New Edition). In 1979, the Frankfurt group issued the last journal (No. On the other hand, the Hamburg group in particular insisted on a ‘working-class standpoint’: for this group, relating to the subjectivity of the ‘class’ and building a social-revolutionary organisation should take priority over policies related to the individual. On the one hand, there was the ‘first-person politics’ proposed by those in Frankfurt. Two political lines soon developed within the editorial board. ![]() It emerged from the agitational newspaper Wir Wollen Alles (We Want it All), which was published by the Operaist-oriented groups ‘Arbeitersache’ (‘Workers’ Cause’) in Munich, ‘Revolutionärer Kampf’ (‘Revolutionary Struggle’) in Frankfurt and ‘Proletarische Front’ (‘The Proletarian Front’) in Hamburg. The journal Autonomie (Autonomy) was established in 1975. ![]()
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