{{Ideology
|themecolor=#ed1c24
|textcolor=#191919
|title= Insurrectionary Communism
|image= ICom.png
|caption= "We are bounty hunters of the rotten, living corpse of civilization, of society, we are thirsty for glorious destruction and chaos. This is what our our communism represents, what our anarchy represents. I am my own master, and I desire to drink the fumes of rage and chaos, to intoxicate myself with my own sadism, my own destructiveness."
|aliases=
Post-Left Communism
|alignments=
LibLeft
Communists
|influences=
Accelerationism
Acid Communism
Anarcho-Egoism
Autonomism
Batailleanism
Council Communism
Dark Deleuzianism
Insurrection
Nietzscheanism
Nomadology
Post-Anarchism
Post-Marxism
Postmodernism
Poststructuralism
Proletarian Suicide
Sadism
Situationism
Sorelianism
Spinozism
|influenced=
|sub=
|variants=
|regional=
|song=
|theorists=
Antonin Dailleau
Noel Marxgrave
Jefferson Bolcheque
Meadow Vitale
Lucy Hood
[[Situationism|Nathanael Munday]
|ideas=
|examples=
|likes=
|dislikes=
}}
Insurrectionary Communism, is a
Communist tendency that seeks to achieve
communism through
insurrection.
Insurrectionary Communism is quite different from most
communist tendencies, and can be differentiated through its refusal of the very concept of
revolution. Rather than attempting to dismantle the
present state and construct a
new one, it seeks to abolish all
repressive social relations of power and
free desire through a process of
insurrection. This process, distinct from the naive petit bourgeois utopianism of
anarcho-communism, is inherently a process; it is not
some ideal that is immediately realized. To insurrectionary communists, communism can only exist as a
lived process rather than a heaven to be brought into existence.
Insurrectionary Communism views itself as a
movement to abolish the present state of things, rather than
the proletarian movement. It is not a
proletarian movement simply because it seeks to dissolve rather than affirm
the proletarian condition, and subjectivity at large.
Insurrectionary Communism is also unique in its approach to
violence, differentiating between
"anarchic violence" (violence/imposition against power at large) and both
disciplinary (violence utilized by the state for disciplinary and biopolitical purposes fueled by the co-opted insurrection of the war machine) and
revolutionary (violence for the purposes of establishing ideals and fixed systems) forms of violence.