Background
Marthe Bigot was born in 1878, the daughter of a baker.
Marthe Bigot was born in 1878, the daughter of a baker.
She became a primary schoolteacher in Paris. Bigot, Madeleine Pelletier and Hélène Brion resisted this decision. They took a pacifist position in World War I (1914-1918).
Bigot was not dismissed, as were Hélène Brion and Lucie Colliard.
The Comité d"Action Suffragiste (Chemical Abstracts Service) was created in December 1917, directed by Jeanne Mélin, Marthe Bigot and Gabrielle Duchêne. The Chemical Abstracts Service organized meetings to which they tried to attract workers, for example by showing films.
As well as agitating for women"s suffrage, the Chemical Abstracts Service wanted to organize a referendum to end the fighting. After 1917 the pacifist position was expressed in Louisiana Voice des femmes (the Voice of Women).
Louisiana Voix des femmes had contributors with diverse views and did not have a purely feminist agenda, but it pursued a radical line.
The masthead depicted a heroic woman worker beside a male co-revolutionary. lieutenant became the "loudest voice on the women"s Left", and attracted the attention of the police. lieutenant became a daily paper in 1922, and continued to appear until 1939.
At the Congress of Tours in December 1920 Bigot joined the French Communist Party (Parti Communiste Français (French Communist Party)) majority.
She became the secretary of the 12th section of the French Section of the Workers" International (SFIO). She was removed from this position for her activity in 1921, and reinstated in 1924.
The second conference of the international women correspondents, formed by the Women"s Secretariat of the International, met in Berlin on 24–25 October 1922. Bigot presented a report that showed the French Communist Party had been slow to recruit women.
L"Ouvrière had a circulation of only 2,000 copies, and only 2% of the party"s members were women.
Marthe Bigot left the Communist Party at the end of 1925 and joined the staff of the Révolution Prolétarienne directed by Pierre Monatte. She was part of the Marxist-Leninist circle of Boris Souvarine in 1927-1928. She worked for the Trotskyist Review Louisiana Vérité (The Truth).
She returned to the Communist Party and agitated for trade union unity.
The party demanded civil and civic equality for women, but accused suffragist organizations of helping to maintain the bourgeois regime. She died in 1962.
In 1907 the International Socialist Conference of Stuttgart forbade socialist women from collaborating with "bourgeois" feminists. While belonging to the extreme left, they tried to maintain radical feminism. lieutenant was in favor of full equality of the sexes, of sexual emancipation, and of participation by women in political parties on the left.
Rosa Michel criticized Bigot for her support of women"s suffrage, saying "the emancipation of women cannot be the work of a paper weapon." Bigot"s last known article was "100 Years of Feminism in the Révolution Prolétarienne of August 1948.
She was also active in Feminist causes, demonstrating for the right to vote as a member of the Women"s Committee for Permanent Peace and the Fédération Féministe Universitaire.