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Love Quote by Raoul Vaneigem

"People who talk about revolution and class struggle without referring explicitly to everyday life, without understanding what is subversive about love and what is positive in the refusal of constraints, such people have a corpse in their mouth"

About this Quote

A corpse in the mouth is Vaneigem at his most Situationist: an insult that doubles as diagnosis. He’s not merely calling certain leftists boring; he’s accusing them of ventriloquism, mouthing dead language borrowed from institutions that have already neutralized revolt. The image is bodily and obscene on purpose. If your politics can’t touch appetite, sex, tenderness, friendship, boredom, the little humiliations of wage time, then it’s not emancipatory speech at all - it’s decomposing rhetoric, a kind of ideological halitosis.

The intent is to drag “revolution” down from the podium and back into the street, the bedroom, the workplace, the rhythm of a day. Written in the wake of postwar consumer capitalism and crystallized around May ’68, Vaneigem’s target is orthodox Marxism’s tendency to treat daily life as secondary, a mere surface over the “real” struggle. Situationists argued the opposite: the spectacle colonizes desire, leisure, and selfhood; any politics that ignores that terrain becomes another managerial script.

The subtext is a demand for a revolution of sensibility, not just ownership. “What is subversive about love” isn’t romantic fluff; it’s a provocation: love, freely chosen and freely lived, refuses the market’s logic of exchange and the state’s logic of discipline. “Refusal of constraints” is framed as productive - a generative no that clears space for new forms of living. Vaneigem’s cynicism cuts both ways: he doesn’t sentimentalize everyday life; he weaponizes it, making pleasure and refusal into tests of whether your radicalism is alive.

Quote Details

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Source
Verified source: The Revolution of Everyday Life (Raoul Vaneigem, 1983)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
“People who talk about revolution and class struggle without referring explicitly to everyday life, without understanding what is subversive about love and what is positive in the refusal of constraints, such people have a corpse in their mouth.” (Page 15). I was able to verify the quote text verbatim in a secondary scholarly book chapter that provides a specific primary-source citation: Raoul Vaneigem, The Revolution of Everyday Life (London: Left Bank Books and Rebel Books, 1983), p. 15. This confirms the quote appears in Vaneigem’s book (primary source), at least in that 1983 English edition/printing. However, I did NOT locate, in the material I could access via web search during this check, a scan/snippet of the earliest French edition (or an earlier English edition) showing the line and page, so I cannot conclusively state the *first* publication instance/date (likely an earlier French publication) from direct primary-text evidence here. If your goal is ‘FIRST published’, the next step is to verify the quote in the original French text (commonly associated online with Vaneigem’s work, often cited in French as “Les gens qui parlent…”), then identify the earliest edition/printing that contains that sentence.
Other candidates (1)
Activism, Identity, and Social Theory in the 1960s (Shaun Best, 2026) compilation97.1%
... People who talk about revolution and class struggle without referring explicitly to everyday life, without unders...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Vaneigem, Raoul. (2026, February 22). People who talk about revolution and class struggle without referring explicitly to everyday life, without understanding what is subversive about love and what is positive in the refusal of constraints, such people have a corpse in their mouth. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/people-who-talk-about-revolution-and-class-105760/

Chicago Style
Vaneigem, Raoul. "People who talk about revolution and class struggle without referring explicitly to everyday life, without understanding what is subversive about love and what is positive in the refusal of constraints, such people have a corpse in their mouth." FixQuotes. February 22, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/people-who-talk-about-revolution-and-class-105760/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"People who talk about revolution and class struggle without referring explicitly to everyday life, without understanding what is subversive about love and what is positive in the refusal of constraints, such people have a corpse in their mouth." FixQuotes, 22 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/people-who-talk-about-revolution-and-class-105760/. Accessed 26 Feb. 2026.

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Vaneigem on Revolution, Everyday Life, and Love
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About the Author

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Raoul Vaneigem (born March 21, 1934) is a Philosopher from Belgium.

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