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Luise Kautskys Wirken wird meistens von der Bekanntheit ihres Mannes Karl Kautsky und ihrer Vertrauten Rosa Luxemburg überschattet. Doch ohne sie wäre die frühe sozialistische Bewegung undenkbar gewesen. Artikel vom 17. April 2025: https://jacobin.de/artikel/luise-kautsky-karl-kautsky-rosa-luxemburg-internationalismus-sozialistin Seit 2011 veröffentlicht JACOBIN täglich Kommentare und Analysen zu Politik und Gesellschaft, seit 2020 auch in deutscher Sprache. Die besten Beiträge gibt es als Audioformat zum Nachhören. Nur dank der Unterstützung von Magazin-Abonnentinnen und Abonnenten können wir unsere Arbeit machen, mehr Menschen erreichen und kostenlose Audio-Inhalte wie diesen produzieren. Und wenn Du schon ein Abo hast und mehr tun möchtest, kannst Du gerne auch etwas regelmäßig an uns spenden via www.jacobin.de/podcast. Zu unseren anderen Kanälen: Instagram: www.instagram.com/jacobinmag_de X: www.twitter.com/jacobinmag_de YouTube: www.youtube.com/c/JacobinMagazin Webseite: www.jacobin.de
Im Kampf um eine gesellschaftliche Mehrheit ist die parlamentarische Arbeit für Sozialisten unverzichtbar. Doch wie der »Papst des Marxismus« schon 1904 schrieb: Parlamentarier dürfen nie von Dienenden zu Herrschenden werden. Artikel vom 04. April 2025: https://jacobin.de/artikel/kautsky-parlament-sozialismus-parlamentarismus-strategie-parteidisziplin-sozialdemokratie-abstimmung Seit 2011 veröffentlicht JACOBIN täglich Kommentare und Analysen zu Politik und Gesellschaft, seit 2020 auch in deutscher Sprache. Die besten Beiträge gibt es als Audioformat zum Nachhören. Nur dank der Unterstützung von Magazin-Abonnentinnen und Abonnenten können wir unsere Arbeit machen, mehr Menschen erreichen und kostenlose Audio-Inhalte wie diesen produzieren. Und wenn Du schon ein Abo hast und mehr tun möchtest, kannst Du gerne auch etwas regelmäßig an uns spenden via www.jacobin.de/podcast. Zu unseren anderen Kanälen: Instagram: www.instagram.com/jacobinmag_de X: www.twitter.com/jacobinmag_de YouTube: www.youtube.com/c/JacobinMagazin Webseite: www.jacobin.de
Send us a textPhilosopher Daniel Tutt is with us, offering a unique lens through which to view the crossroads of psychoanalytic theory and Marxism. Ever wondered how intellectuals can navigate a depoliticized public sphere? We promise you'll leave this episode armed with strategies to engage meaningfully on compromised platforms and foster a vibrant counterpublic sphere. Join us as we explore the insightful works of Étienne Balibar and Hal Draper, dissecting their contributions to Marxist discourse amidst the tumult of the late 1960s.Our conversation maps the historical development and philosophical layers of the dictatorship of the proletariat within Marxist thought. Discover how figures like Lenin, Marx, and Engels shaped this concept and how the Paris Commune played into these revolutionary ideas. We'll guide you through the debates of Lenin and Kautsky, illustrating the intense class dynamics that shaped key revolutionary moments, and explore how revisionist Marxist theories influence our understanding of state power and class struggle.Intellectuals play a crucial role in Marxist theory, and we delve into their impact on societal structures, from traditional 'master intellectuals' to more organic forms. Shifting academic values and austerity have shaped theoretical struggles; we reflect on these changes while examining the interplay between dictatorship and democracy. Engage with us as we consider the adaptability of Marxist theory, analyzing varied interpretations and the continued quest for intellectual integrity in an ever-evolving world. Support the showCrew:Host: C. Derick VarnIntro and Outro Music by Bitter Lake.Intro Video Design: Jason MylesArt Design: Corn and C. Derick VarnLinks and Social Media:twitter: @varnvlogblue sky: @varnvlog.bsky.socialYou can find the additional streams on YoutubeCurrent Patreon at the Sponsor Tier: Jordan Sheldon, Mark J. Matthews, Lindsay Kimbrough, RedWolf
Schon vor der Entstehung des Kapitalismus ersehnten Menschen eine Welt frei von Unterdrückung und Ausbeutung. Warum ihnen das Christentum dazu als Inspiration galt, erklärt uns Karl Kautsky. Artikel vom 24. Dezember 2024: https://jacobin.de/artikel/wie-karl-kautsky-den-kommunismus-im-christentum-entdeckte-reformation-vorlaeufer-des-neueren-sozialismus-urchristentum Seit 2011 veröffentlicht JACOBIN täglich Kommentare und Analysen zu Politik und Gesellschaft, seit 2020 auch in deutscher Sprache. Die besten Beiträge gibt es als Audioformat zum Nachhören. Nur dank der Unterstützung von Magazin-Abonnentinnen und Abonnenten können wir unsere Arbeit machen, mehr Menschen erreichen und kostenlose Audio-Inhalte wie diesen produzieren. Und wenn Du schon ein Abo hast und mehr tun möchtest, kannst Du gerne auch etwas regelmäßig an uns spenden via www.jacobin.de/podcast. Zu unseren anderen Kanälen: Instagram: www.instagram.com/jacobinmag_de X: www.twitter.com/jacobinmag_de YouTube: www.youtube.com/c/JacobinMagazin Webseite: www.jacobin.de
Vem äger tonårsrummet? Behöver vi tonårsavdelningar? Vad hände med livet när man som tonåring blir drabbat av cancer? Hur mycket kan man bestämma då? Idag kommer Siri Kautsky och Maria Olsson att hjälpa oss att navigera cancervården för tonåringar. Vill du veta mer om Ungcancer? Gå in och utforska deras hemsida! Här kommer ni direkt till deras aktuellt sida. Eller här får ni läsa om MinKod. Skriv till redaktion@barnonkologipodden.se, så får jag höra vad jag kan göra bättre till nästa gång! Eller fyll i en miniformulär. Glöm inte att kika in på Barncancerfondens hemsida
In this episode, Oden interviews author and independent Marxist historian Doug Greene about his book "The New Reformism and the Revival of Karl Kautsky: Renegade's Revenge." They discuss how Kautsky's reformism led to repeated defeats, and why there is renewed — but misguided — interest in Kautskyism on the left. Importantly, Doug explains the relevance of Kautskyism to the present day, and why we need to leave Kautsky's ideas and politics in the dustbin of history if we're serious about fighting capitalism. Learn More:- Why Kautsky Was Wrong (And Why You Should Care)- Karl Kautsky: From Pope to Renegade- An Introduction to the Kautsky Debate- Kautsky, Luxemburg, and Lenin in Light of the German RevolutionListen to our previous interviews with Doug on Michael Harrington and Democratic Socialism and on Stalinism, Anti-Communism, and the Fate of the Soviet UnionRead more of Doug's work: https://blanquist.blogspot.com/https://www.patreon.com/enaa_doug_blanquiFollow Doug on Twitter: @DougGreene1917 Check out Doug's book: https://www.routledge.com/The-New-Reformism-and-the-Revival-of-Karl-Kautsky-The-Renegades-Revenge/Greene/p/book/9781032758787Support this podcast on Patreon Follow us on social media! We're on Instagram, Twitter, and TikTok as @left_voice, on Facebook as @leftvoice, and Bluesky at leftvoice.bsky.social.
Linke leben seit über einhundert Jahren im politischen Schatten der Russischen Revolution. Beseelt vom Vorbild des Jahres 1917 versuchte jede Generation von Sozialistinnen und Sozialisten das umzusetzen, was ihr als zentrale politische Lehre der Bolschewiki erschien. Artikel vom 08. August 2022: https://jacobin.de/artikel/was-wir-wirklich-aus-der-russischen-revolution-lernen-konnen-leninismus-lenin-kautsky-trotzki-spd-sozialdemokratie Seit 2011 veröffentlicht JACOBIN täglich Kommentare und Analysen zu Politik und Gesellschaft, seit 2020 auch in deutscher Sprache. Ab sofort gibt es die besten Beiträge als Audioformat zum Nachhören. Nur dank der Unterstützung von Magazin-Abonnentinnen und Abonnenten können wir unsere Arbeit machen, mehr Menschen erreichen und kostenlose Audio-Inhalte wie diesen produzieren. Und wenn Du schon ein Abo hast und mehr tun möchtest, kannst Du gerne auch etwas regelmäßig an uns spenden via www.jacobin.de/podcast. Zu unseren anderen Kanälen: Instagram: www.instagram.com/jacobinmag_de X: www.twitter.com/jacobinmag_de YouTube: www.youtube.com/c/JacobinMagazin Webseite: www.jacobin.de
Returning to the New Books Network is Doug Greene, here to discuss his book The New Reformism and the Revival of Karl Kautsky (Routledge, 2024). Split into three main parts, the book first surveys Kautsky's own life and thought, starting with his early interest in socialist politics and turn towards Marxism, followed by a slow but steady turn away from revolution and towards reform, believing parliamentary procedures were the best road to social transformation. The second part looks at the works of Rosa Luxemburg, Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky, all of whom offer critical responses to Kautsky's reformism, and the reassertion of the importance of revolutionary thought to any Marxist project. The third and final part looks at the contemporary works of Lars Lih, Eric Blanc and Mike Macnair and their attempts to make Kautsky's reformist practice the central pillar of the contemporary left. Throughout, Greene argues that the real lesson Kautsky offers is the dead-end of reformism to any revolutionary project. Some other relevant readings on this topic include Doug Greene | Why Kautsky Was Wrong (and Why You Should Care) Doug Greene | Why Kautsky Was Wrong (LeftVoice interview) Harrison Fluss | The Prophet Avec Lacan Douglas Greene is a historian in Boston. He is also the author of the books A Failure of Vision: Michael Harrington and the Limits of Democratic Socialism and Stalinism and the Dialectics of Saturn: Anticommunism, Marxism, and the Fate of the Soviet Union. His writing has appeared in a number of outlets. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Returning to the New Books Network is Doug Greene, here to discuss his book The New Reformism and the Revival of Karl Kautsky (Routledge, 2024). Split into three main parts, the book first surveys Kautsky's own life and thought, starting with his early interest in socialist politics and turn towards Marxism, followed by a slow but steady turn away from revolution and towards reform, believing parliamentary procedures were the best road to social transformation. The second part looks at the works of Rosa Luxemburg, Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky, all of whom offer critical responses to Kautsky's reformism, and the reassertion of the importance of revolutionary thought to any Marxist project. The third and final part looks at the contemporary works of Lars Lih, Eric Blanc and Mike Macnair and their attempts to make Kautsky's reformist practice the central pillar of the contemporary left. Throughout, Greene argues that the real lesson Kautsky offers is the dead-end of reformism to any revolutionary project. Some other relevant readings on this topic include Doug Greene | Why Kautsky Was Wrong (and Why You Should Care) Doug Greene | Why Kautsky Was Wrong (LeftVoice interview) Harrison Fluss | The Prophet Avec Lacan Douglas Greene is a historian in Boston. He is also the author of the books A Failure of Vision: Michael Harrington and the Limits of Democratic Socialism and Stalinism and the Dialectics of Saturn: Anticommunism, Marxism, and the Fate of the Soviet Union. His writing has appeared in a number of outlets. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/history
Returning to the New Books Network is Doug Greene, here to discuss his book The New Reformism and the Revival of Karl Kautsky (Routledge, 2024). Split into three main parts, the book first surveys Kautsky's own life and thought, starting with his early interest in socialist politics and turn towards Marxism, followed by a slow but steady turn away from revolution and towards reform, believing parliamentary procedures were the best road to social transformation. The second part looks at the works of Rosa Luxemburg, Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky, all of whom offer critical responses to Kautsky's reformism, and the reassertion of the importance of revolutionary thought to any Marxist project. The third and final part looks at the contemporary works of Lars Lih, Eric Blanc and Mike Macnair and their attempts to make Kautsky's reformist practice the central pillar of the contemporary left. Throughout, Greene argues that the real lesson Kautsky offers is the dead-end of reformism to any revolutionary project. Some other relevant readings on this topic include Doug Greene | Why Kautsky Was Wrong (and Why You Should Care) Doug Greene | Why Kautsky Was Wrong (LeftVoice interview) Harrison Fluss | The Prophet Avec Lacan Douglas Greene is a historian in Boston. He is also the author of the books A Failure of Vision: Michael Harrington and the Limits of Democratic Socialism and Stalinism and the Dialectics of Saturn: Anticommunism, Marxism, and the Fate of the Soviet Union. His writing has appeared in a number of outlets. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/german-studies
Returning to the New Books Network is Doug Greene, here to discuss his book The New Reformism and the Revival of Karl Kautsky (Routledge, 2024). Split into three main parts, the book first surveys Kautsky's own life and thought, starting with his early interest in socialist politics and turn towards Marxism, followed by a slow but steady turn away from revolution and towards reform, believing parliamentary procedures were the best road to social transformation. The second part looks at the works of Rosa Luxemburg, Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky, all of whom offer critical responses to Kautsky's reformism, and the reassertion of the importance of revolutionary thought to any Marxist project. The third and final part looks at the contemporary works of Lars Lih, Eric Blanc and Mike Macnair and their attempts to make Kautsky's reformist practice the central pillar of the contemporary left. Throughout, Greene argues that the real lesson Kautsky offers is the dead-end of reformism to any revolutionary project. Some other relevant readings on this topic include Doug Greene | Why Kautsky Was Wrong (and Why You Should Care) Doug Greene | Why Kautsky Was Wrong (LeftVoice interview) Harrison Fluss | The Prophet Avec Lacan Douglas Greene is a historian in Boston. He is also the author of the books A Failure of Vision: Michael Harrington and the Limits of Democratic Socialism and Stalinism and the Dialectics of Saturn: Anticommunism, Marxism, and the Fate of the Soviet Union. His writing has appeared in a number of outlets. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/critical-theory
Returning to the New Books Network is Doug Greene, here to discuss his book The New Reformism and the Revival of Karl Kautsky (Routledge, 2024). Split into three main parts, the book first surveys Kautsky's own life and thought, starting with his early interest in socialist politics and turn towards Marxism, followed by a slow but steady turn away from revolution and towards reform, believing parliamentary procedures were the best road to social transformation. The second part looks at the works of Rosa Luxemburg, Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky, all of whom offer critical responses to Kautsky's reformism, and the reassertion of the importance of revolutionary thought to any Marxist project. The third and final part looks at the contemporary works of Lars Lih, Eric Blanc and Mike Macnair and their attempts to make Kautsky's reformist practice the central pillar of the contemporary left. Throughout, Greene argues that the real lesson Kautsky offers is the dead-end of reformism to any revolutionary project. Some other relevant readings on this topic include Doug Greene | Why Kautsky Was Wrong (and Why You Should Care) Doug Greene | Why Kautsky Was Wrong (LeftVoice interview) Harrison Fluss | The Prophet Avec Lacan Douglas Greene is a historian in Boston. He is also the author of the books A Failure of Vision: Michael Harrington and the Limits of Democratic Socialism and Stalinism and the Dialectics of Saturn: Anticommunism, Marxism, and the Fate of the Soviet Union. His writing has appeared in a number of outlets. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/biography
Returning to the New Books Network is Doug Greene, here to discuss his book The New Reformism and the Revival of Karl Kautsky (Routledge, 2024). Split into three main parts, the book first surveys Kautsky's own life and thought, starting with his early interest in socialist politics and turn towards Marxism, followed by a slow but steady turn away from revolution and towards reform, believing parliamentary procedures were the best road to social transformation. The second part looks at the works of Rosa Luxemburg, Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky, all of whom offer critical responses to Kautsky's reformism, and the reassertion of the importance of revolutionary thought to any Marxist project. The third and final part looks at the contemporary works of Lars Lih, Eric Blanc and Mike Macnair and their attempts to make Kautsky's reformist practice the central pillar of the contemporary left. Throughout, Greene argues that the real lesson Kautsky offers is the dead-end of reformism to any revolutionary project. Some other relevant readings on this topic include Doug Greene | Why Kautsky Was Wrong (and Why You Should Care) Doug Greene | Why Kautsky Was Wrong (LeftVoice interview) Harrison Fluss | The Prophet Avec Lacan Douglas Greene is a historian in Boston. He is also the author of the books A Failure of Vision: Michael Harrington and the Limits of Democratic Socialism and Stalinism and the Dialectics of Saturn: Anticommunism, Marxism, and the Fate of the Soviet Union. His writing has appeared in a number of outlets. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/intellectual-history
Returning to the New Books Network is Doug Greene, here to discuss his book The New Reformism and the Revival of Karl Kautsky (Routledge, 2024). Split into three main parts, the book first surveys Kautsky's own life and thought, starting with his early interest in socialist politics and turn towards Marxism, followed by a slow but steady turn away from revolution and towards reform, believing parliamentary procedures were the best road to social transformation. The second part looks at the works of Rosa Luxemburg, Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky, all of whom offer critical responses to Kautsky's reformism, and the reassertion of the importance of revolutionary thought to any Marxist project. The third and final part looks at the contemporary works of Lars Lih, Eric Blanc and Mike Macnair and their attempts to make Kautsky's reformist practice the central pillar of the contemporary left. Throughout, Greene argues that the real lesson Kautsky offers is the dead-end of reformism to any revolutionary project. Some other relevant readings on this topic include Doug Greene | Why Kautsky Was Wrong (and Why You Should Care) Doug Greene | Why Kautsky Was Wrong (LeftVoice interview) Harrison Fluss | The Prophet Avec Lacan Douglas Greene is a historian in Boston. He is also the author of the books A Failure of Vision: Michael Harrington and the Limits of Democratic Socialism and Stalinism and the Dialectics of Saturn: Anticommunism, Marxism, and the Fate of the Soviet Union. His writing has appeared in a number of outlets. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/european-studies
Returning to the New Books Network is Doug Greene, here to discuss his book The New Reformism and the Revival of Karl Kautsky (Routledge, 2024). Split into three main parts, the book first surveys Kautsky's own life and thought, starting with his early interest in socialist politics and turn towards Marxism, followed by a slow but steady turn away from revolution and towards reform, believing parliamentary procedures were the best road to social transformation. The second part looks at the works of Rosa Luxemburg, Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky, all of whom offer critical responses to Kautsky's reformism, and the reassertion of the importance of revolutionary thought to any Marxist project. The third and final part looks at the contemporary works of Lars Lih, Eric Blanc and Mike Macnair and their attempts to make Kautsky's reformist practice the central pillar of the contemporary left. Throughout, Greene argues that the real lesson Kautsky offers is the dead-end of reformism to any revolutionary project. Some other relevant readings on this topic include Doug Greene | Why Kautsky Was Wrong (and Why You Should Care) Doug Greene | Why Kautsky Was Wrong (LeftVoice interview) Harrison Fluss | The Prophet Avec Lacan Douglas Greene is a historian in Boston. He is also the author of the books A Failure of Vision: Michael Harrington and the Limits of Democratic Socialism and Stalinism and the Dialectics of Saturn: Anticommunism, Marxism, and the Fate of the Soviet Union. His writing has appeared in a number of outlets. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/politics-and-polemics
Returning to the New Books Network is Doug Greene, here to discuss his book The New Reformism and the Revival of Karl Kautsky (Routledge, 2024). Split into three main parts, the book first surveys Kautsky's own life and thought, starting with his early interest in socialist politics and turn towards Marxism, followed by a slow but steady turn away from revolution and towards reform, believing parliamentary procedures were the best road to social transformation. The second part looks at the works of Rosa Luxemburg, Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky, all of whom offer critical responses to Kautsky's reformism, and the reassertion of the importance of revolutionary thought to any Marxist project. The third and final part looks at the contemporary works of Lars Lih, Eric Blanc and Mike Macnair and their attempts to make Kautsky's reformist practice the central pillar of the contemporary left. Throughout, Greene argues that the real lesson Kautsky offers is the dead-end of reformism to any revolutionary project. Some other relevant readings on this topic include Doug Greene | Why Kautsky Was Wrong (and Why You Should Care) Doug Greene | Why Kautsky Was Wrong (LeftVoice interview) Harrison Fluss | The Prophet Avec Lacan Douglas Greene is a historian in Boston. He is also the author of the books A Failure of Vision: Michael Harrington and the Limits of Democratic Socialism and Stalinism and the Dialectics of Saturn: Anticommunism, Marxism, and the Fate of the Soviet Union. His writing has appeared in a number of outlets. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/book-of-the-day
Get access to Part 2 (the backroom) and other exclusive episodes on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/OneDime In this episode of the 1Dime Radio podcast, I am joined by Chris Cutrone, the provocative Marxist intellectual and founder of the Platypus Affiliated Society, to discuss his older essay titled "Lenin's Liberalism." and the history of the relationship between Marxism and Liberalism more broadly. 0:00 Intro 7:44 A Brief History of Liberalism 26:38 Marx on Liberalism 34:08 Bourgeois society in Crisis 1:00:10 Liberal Ideology vs Capitalism 1:23:29 Lenin on the State 1:41:08 Kautsky, Lenin, and Bernstein Read more with Speechify: https://speechify.com/?source=fb-for-mobile&via=1Dime Follow me on Twitter: https://twitter.com/1DimeOfficial Support 1Dime on Patreon to get extra exclusive content. Be sure to give 1Dime Radio a 5-star rating if you get value out of these podcasts!
Get access to Part 2 and exclusive episodes on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/OneDime In this episode of the 1Dime Radio podcast, I am joined by James Vaughn, a Marxist historian at the University of Chicago, to discuss the history of the American Revolution and what people on the left tend to get wrong about it. James explains how the "progressive" narrative of the American Revolution differs from the classical Marxist position on the American Revolution and the history of bourgeois revolutions in general. We will see how the ways in which Marx, Engels, Lenin, Kautsky, and Rosa Luxembourg viewed the American Revolution were radically different from the ways in which the contemporary left (both in Academia and in the activist world) viewed the American Revolution. Follow me on Twitter: https://twitter.com/1DimeOfficial?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor Read more with Speechify: https://speechify.com/?source=fb-for-mobile&via=1Dime Be sure to give 1Dime Radio a 5-star rating if you get value out of these podcasts!
Sean and Andy are joined by Mike Macnair, member of the Provisional Central Committee of the Communist Party of Great Britain, columnist at Weekly Worker and author of Revolutionary Strategy (2008) and many other works.We discuss the legacy of Marxist political movements of the 19th and 20th centuries, the role of the party, the importance of patience and republicanism to the working class struggle and what might be salvaged from the thought of great historical Marxists including... the renegade Kautsky.This is part I of an extended discussion on theory and history. To hear the paywalled fireworks, become a patron at www.patreon.com/theantifada Sign up or upgrade your membership at the discounted $10/month annual membership and DM your mailing address on Patreon for a free postage paid copy of the PM Press George Floyd Uprising book, with contributions by Andy and many past and future friends of the show!Song: Whirlwinds of Danger by Monsieur Jack
Interpreting Stalin's fledgling revolutionary career through his later status as a brutal labor dictator obscures an early whole-hearted admiration for the works of Kautsky and Lenin. By Lawrence Parker. Read By Luke Pickrell Intro Music: ворожное озеро Гроза vwqp remix Outro Music: We are Friends Forever performed by Felix Dzerzhinsky Guards Regiment.
Luise Kautsky berichtet aus einer anderen Zeit, in der in Wien der Hoffnungsstern des Sozialismus glühte. Seit 2011 veröffentlicht JACOBIN täglich Kommentare und Analysen zu Politik und Gesellschaft, seit 2020 auch in deutscher Sprache. Ab sofort gibt es die besten Beiträge als Audioformat zum Nachhören. Nur dank der Unterstützung von Magazin-Abonnentinnen und Abonnenten können wir unsere Arbeit machen, mehr Menschen erreichen und kostenlose Audio-Inhalte wie diesen produzieren. Und wenn Du schon ein Abo hast und mehr tun möchtest, kannst Du gerne auch etwas regelmäßig an uns spenden via www.jacobin.de/podcast. Zu unseren anderen Kanälen: Instagram: www.instagram.com/jacobinmag_de X: www.twitter.com/jacobinmag_de YouTube: www.youtube.com/c/JacobinMagazin Webseite: www.jacobin.de
Ben Lewis is the author of "Oswald Spengler and the Politics of Decline" and the primary translator at Marxism Translated ). We discuss his recent book on Spengler and Spengler's complicated legacy. Are you ready to unlock the enigmatic mind of Oswald Spengler and his intriguing theories that have influenced modern discourse? Our esteemed guest, Ben Lewis of Marxism Translated, guides us through the intellectual labyrinth of Spengler's ideas, his surprising relevance in the 21st century, and his seismic impact on the conservative revolutionary movement. We peel back the layers of Spengler's admiration for August Babel, his complex relationship with National Socialism, and his critique of Marxism as well as his unique theories of utility and the marginist theory.Delving deeper into the perplexing world of Spengler, we take a magnifying glass to his controversial views on democracy and civilization and his idiosyncratic take on the relationship between Prussian socialism and his own work. Relying on Lewis's expert analysis, the twists and turns of Spingler's reception in Europe and the U.S are unraveled along with the ideological factors behind the works of Kautsky and Bernstein. Get ready for a deep dive into the ways in which Spingler's thought has influenced the likes of Nietzsche, Hegel, and others.To conclude this intriguing exploration, we'll shine a light on the challenges of interpreting historical figures, the ripple effect of Spengler's theories on American socialism, and the significance of accurate translations of German works. Delve into the fascinating role of hindsight in understanding history, and the multi-layered complexities of the SPD's relationship to Marxism. Whether you're a seasoned scholar or a curious newcomer, this conversation offers fresh insights into the life and work of a lesser-known but influential figure in contemporary discourse. Get ready for an intellectual voyage that's bound to ignite thought and stir curiosity. Support the showCrew:Host: C. Derick VarnAudio Producer: Paul Channel Strip ( @aufhebenkultur )Intro and Outro Music by Bitter Lake.Intro Video Design: Jason MylesArt Design: Corn and C. Derick VarnLinks and Social Media:twitter: @skepoetYou can find the additional streams on Youtube
What impact did the first revisionism controversy within the Second International have on the socialist movement? Join me and James from Prolekult Films as we untangle the complexities of this historical debate and uncover the lasting consequences it had on the socialist movement. We'll explore the origins of the controversy, the social and political conditions in Germany during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and the positions of key figures like Bernstein and Kautsky.Together, we'll navigate the twists and turns of this significant debate and its implications on the development of socialist thought. We'll examine the challenges faced by the socialist movement in both Britain and the US, discussing the dissolution of social democracy in the Labour Party, the rise of apologists for Bidenism, and the increasingly concerning migrant situation in Britain. James and I will also compare the debates and tensions in Marxist theory and the contradictions between the scientific method of inquiry and its mass ideological project.This insightful conversation will leave you with a deeper understanding of the first revisionism controversy and its lasting impact on the socialist movement. We'll also touch on the importance of building Marxist education and support in today's world, sharing our thoughts on reading groups, grassroots campaigns, and potential resources to help spread Marxist thought. Don't miss out on this unique and thought-provoking episode as we delve into the intricacies of socialist history and its modern implications.James of Prolekult films and I talk about the context of the Revisionist controversy and its long-term effects on socialist understanding. You can support James' work here. Support the showCrew:Host: C. Derick VarnAudio Producer: Paul Channel Strip ( @aufhebenkultur )Intro and Outro Music by Bitter Lake.Intro Video Design: Jason MylesArt Design: Corn and C. Derick VarnLinks and Social Media:twitter: @skepoetYou can find the additional streams on Youtube
In this HCI Podcast episode, Dr. Jonathan H. Westover talks with Maura Kautsky about how leaders of sales teams should approach retention differently amidst changing employee expectations. Maura Kautsky (https://www.linkedin.com/in/maurakautsky/) is the president of Sales Xceleration. She has 20 years of experience in the marketing industry and has helped companies build and grow their brands, created meaningful customer relationships, and implemented practices that have resulted in increased client retention. Part of the LinkedIn Podcast Network #LinkedInPresents Further explore the topics discussed in this episode with the new HCIConsulting Chatbot: https://poe.com/HCIConsulting. Please consider supporting the podcast on Patreon and leaving a review wherever you listen to your podcasts! Go to HelloFresh.com/hci50 and use code hci50 for 50% off, plus your first box ships free! Check out CrowdHealth and start your free trial at joincrowdhealth.com and use promo code HCI. Check out the HCI Academy: Courses, Micro-Credentials, and Certificates to Upskill and Reskill for the Future of Work! Check out the LinkedIn Alchemizing Human Capital Newsletter. Check out Dr. Westover's book, The Future Leader. Check out Dr. Westover's book, 'Bluer than Indigo' Leadership. Check out Dr. Westover's book, The Alchemy of Truly Remarkable Leadership. Check out the latest issue of the Human Capital Leadership magazine. Each HCI Podcast episode (Program, ID No. 627454) has been approved for 0.50 HR (General) recertification credit hours toward aPHR™, aPHRi™, PHR®, PHRca®, SPHR®, GPHR®, PHRi™ and SPHRi™ recertification through HR Certification Institute® (HRCI®). Each HCI Podcast episode (Program ID: 24-DP529) has been approved for 0.50 HR (General) SHRM Professional Development Credits (PDCs) for SHRM-CP and SHRM-SCPHR recertification through SHRM, as part of the knowledge and competency programs related to the SHRM Body of Applied Skills and Knowledge™ (the SHRM BASK™). Human Capital Innovations has been pre-approved by the ATD Certification Institute to offer educational programs that can be used towards initial eligibility and recertification of the Certified Professional in Talent Development (CPTD) and Associate Professional in Talent Development (APTD) credentials. Each HCI Podcast episode qualifies for a maximum of 0.50 points. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
DISCORD: https://discord.gg/wMYg8TWhWu LINKTREE: linktr.ee/AuxiliaryStatementsPodcast Well we held off as long as we could, but now we're back on our leftcom bs. What do socdems and fascists have in common? Well, yeah. A lot in fact. Reading: "Worker's Control" "Revolutionary Marxism" and "Karl Kautsky: From Marx to Hitler" by Paul Mattick Sr. (all from the Council Communist Reader)
For March, we read State and Revolution by Vladimir Lenin! We discussed our history with him, Kautsky, opportunists and what their goals are, how we can/cannot wither away the state, the problem with the dictatorship step and Sonic the hedgehog! Liberation School Questions - https://www.liberationschool.org/study-guide-the-state-and-revolution/ April - Rules for Radicals by Saul D. Alinsky May - Jesus and John Wayne by Kristen Kobes Du Mez June - Blood in my Eye by George Jackson
Elin Enfors-Kautsky är grundare och vd på Prosperous Planet, en konsultbyrå som hjälper företag driva hållbar transformation i Antropocen. Det låter tjusigt, men Elin berättar pedagogiskt för oss hur hon ser att näringslivet kan ta ledningen i den stora omställningen samhället står inför - i alla fall om man börjar med en gedigen grundförståelse för planetens förändrade förutsättningar under den tidsålder vi nu lever i. Heja Framtiden träffade henne under Nordic Sustainability Expo 2022 på Stockholmsmässan. // Programledare: Christian von Essen // Läs mer på hejaframtiden.se och framtidenshallbara.se
In this episode we talk about the most important Marxist thinker during the time of the Second International, Karl Kautsky. We talk about his infamous claim that the breakdown of capitalism is historically inevitable, what he thinks socialist praxis should look like in a liberal democracy, and what the concentration of large-scale capital means for your small business. Plus at some point we realize that almost all anti-socialist arguments are actually just confused anti-capitalist ones, which we find irresistibly delightful. We're in old-school classical Marxist territory for this one, folks! leftofphilosophy.com | @leftofphil References: Karl Kautsky, “The Commonwealth of the Future,” in The Class Struggle (Erfurt Program), translated by William E. Bohn (Chicago: Charles H. Kerr, 1910). Music: Vintage Memories by Schematist | schematist.bandcamp.com
Sesli Köşe-Mehmet Ali Güller-'Neo-Kautsky: Zizek ve NATO solculuğu'
Parker, James, Rudy and Cliff join for a discussion on the context of Lenin's State and Revolution, and how those ideas were applied in the early years of the Soviet government. We start by discussing the context of the book, especially in relationship with the recent audiobook by Kautsky on Democracy and Republicanism. We continue by discussing the debates in the Second International around the Paris Commune, the Immediate Genesis of the Book during the First World War, the text itself and its surrounding context, the ways in which the principles of the book were implemented after 1917, and why the early RSFSR government gave way to the dictatorship of the politburo. References:Étienne Balibar - On the Dictatorship of the ProletariatLara Douds - Inside Lenin's Government Ideology, Power and Practice in the Early Soviet State Shiela Fitzpatrick - The Russian Revolution Neil Harding - Lenin's Political Thought Alexander Rabinowitch - The Bolsheviks in Power: The first year of Soviet rule in Petrograd S. A. Smith - Red Petrograd: Revolution in the Factories, 1917-1918 Mark von Hagen - Soldiers in the Proletarian Dictatorship: The Red Army and the Soviet Socialist State, 1917-1930
Professor Inderjeet Parmar discusses U.S. Empire and how America is on the brink of a serious abyss, though it still remains very powerful. On one level there is a resurgent triumphalism in the West, and on another there are a deep series of crises both in Washington and of the globalized order. We see a rise of the Global South and "in-system powers"which are not part of the West. He discusses the consensus building project of the core elites and knowledge network or "empire of the mind," the U.S.-China relationship, how U.S. Empire has viewed China as a great asset to the Western world since the 1950s and how Beijing has emerged as a major power under the auspices of the West. Ruling classes of different countries get together as cartels due to shared interests. Multipolarity is messy but has had a democratizing effect. Watch On BitChute / Brighteon / Rokfin / Rumble Geopolitics & Empire · Inderjeet Parmar: America on Brink of Abyss, Western Global Order Faces Deep Crisis #300 *Support Geopolitics & Empire! Become a Member https://geopoliticsandempire.substack.comDonate https://geopoliticsandempire.com/donationsConsult https://geopoliticsandempire.com/consultation **Visit Our Affiliates & Sponsors! Above Phone https://abovephone.com/?above=geopoliticseasyDNS (use code GEOPOLITICS for 15% off!) https://easydns.comEscape The Technocracy course (15% discount using link) https://escapethetechnocracy.com/geopoliticsPassVult https://passvult.comSociatates Civis (CitizenHR, CitizenIT, CitizenPL) https://societates-civis.comWise Wolf Gold https://www.wolfpack.gold/?ref=geopolitics Websites Professor Inderjeet Parmar https://www.city.ac.uk/about/people/academics/inderjeet-parmar#about-link Global Webinar Series https://mediaspace.city.ac.uk/playlist/details/1_rga6fgkw Twitter https://twitter.com/USEmpire Foundations of the American Century: The Ford, Carnegie, and Rockefeller Foundations in the Rise of American Power https://www.amazon.com/Foundations-American-Century-Carnegie-Rockefeller/dp/0231146299 'A new type of great power relationship'? Gramsci, Kautsky and the role of the Ford Foundation'stransformational elite knowledge networks in China. https://openaccess.city.ac.uk/id/eprint/23576/1/ANON%203%20FINAL%20FINALarticle.docx%EF%BC%88%E6%9C%80%E7%BB%88%E7%89%88%E7%9A%84%E4%B8%89%E6%AC%A1%E4%BF%AE%E6%94%B9.pdf About Inderjeet Parmar Professor Inderjeet Parmar read Sociology at the London School of Economics, and Political Sociology at the University of London. His doctorate, from the University of Manchester, was in the fields of political science and international relations. Prior to appointment at City, University of London in 2012, he taught at the University of Manchester (1991-2012), mainly in its Department of Government which, between 2006-09, he served as Head of Department. Professor Inderjeet Parmar is past president, chair and vice chair of the British International Studies Association. He is currently Visiting Professor at LSE (2019-2022) and a Visiting Research Fellow at the Rothermere American Institute, Oxford. 2013 – 2014 he was Visiting Research Scholar at the Empires Research Community, Princeton UniversityHe held visiting fellowships at Princeton and Oxford (1998, 1999, 2010). He is co-editor of a book series, Routledge Studies in US Foreign Policy. He served as Principal Investigator and co-ordinator of the AHRC Research Network on the Presidency of Barack Obama. He is currently working with colleagues to establish the Trump Project: http://ucdclinton.ie/trump-project/ Professor Parmar was a member of the Working Group on Think Tanks of the Social Science Research Council, New York, 2007, and co-convenor of the BISA Working Group on US Foreign Policy, 2005-09. Professor Parmar appears regularly on numerous TV and radio stations, including Al Jazeera, CNN, BBC, RT,
This is a narration of chapters 9-13 of Karl Kautsky's Parliamentarism and Democracy (1893-1911), from Karl Kautsky on Democracy & Republicanism by Ben Lewis. The full audiobook is currently in production by the team at Cosmonaut Magazine. A copy of the book itself can be purchased at Haymarket Books. Narration and editing by Myk Labas, with apologies for the microphone difficulties. Music: 'Red Sleeping Beauty' by McCarthy
Whether we're talking about reformist or revolutionary Marxist tendencies of The Second International or those outside the tradition who attempted to debunk Marx's critique of political economy, nobody took him seriously on the most important aspect of the project until Grossman came along. If you don't know about Grossman, it's because all these other Frankfurt School thinkers took the spotlight. Did they deserve it? Come find out. Ted Reese is going to tell us why and you'll learn about the thing everyone keeps getting wrong, from Kautsky and Hilferding to Rosa and Lenin; von Böhm-Bawerk through Schumpeter to Keynes; much less the MMT econ nerds of today. Whether you think Marx's critique or proposed solutions are important or not, you need to at least know what everyone else kept getting wrong.All of Pleeb's work has been de-monetized and self-funded for over a year. If you want to give back in any way you can support #FreeMikey at www.Patreon.com/TheDangerousMaybe. Tell him Pleeb sent you.Follow pleeb on Duolingo and use this link so pleeb gets a week of free Plus https://invite.duolingo.com/BDHTZTB5CWWKTP747NSNMAOYEIGet Pleeb's updates and thoughts here https://nspleeb.substack.com/Make sure to follow https://www.instagram.com/pleebmemes/ for memes related to pleeb's work and communityReferenced materials:Ted's book on Grossman: https://www.amazon.com/End-Capitalism-Thought-Henryk-Grossman/dp/1789047730Grossman's book The Law of Accumulation and Breakdown of the Capitalist System: https://www.amazon.com/Law-Accumulation-Breakdown-Capitalist-System/dp/0745304583How to enjoy the end of the world: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5WPB2u8EzL8Davos 2020: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZLuQF6nyckY&t=65sRe-Think X: https://www.youtube.com/c/RethinkXPLAYLISTS YOU SHOULD KNOW:Pleeb 'n Mikey Lecture-Interviewshttps://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlcbaQ1cp2TLvXtp5bYnmCjf_otZw0M2NPleeb interviews and gets schooled by amazing peoplehttps://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlcbaQ1cp2TKo5_C6vyIphjsMD7c_fbMwProfessor Pleeb Lectureshttps://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlcbaQ1cp2TISAuNvqAdpOexm08Gc8yVhPleeb's old video essayshttps://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlcbaQ1cp2TJpzDw4TRjnW3zR9Al-3_JxPleeb's Assisted Readings https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlcbaQ1cp2TKnWyq5fxA5pMTAMtxGzuExMUSIC CREDITSRoyalty Free Planet - EVA - Rear ViewLicense:Creative Commons Attribution 3.0http://bit.ly/RFP_CClicenseMike Chino – Demigods: https://youtu.be/M6wruxDngOkLicense: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 - http://bit.ly/RFP_CClicense
In this exciting conclusion to our series on State and Revolution, the ELC crew engages with Chapter 6, which is Lenin's summary of different arguments had by his contemporaries. Lenin dissects arguments made by reformist Marxists like Georgi Plekhanov and Karl Kautsky, contemporary anarchist thought, and "left Radicals" like Antonie Pannekoek. He simultaneously attacks those he calls opportunists like Kautsky, while distinguishing his position from those of Anarchists. What is the difference between Marxism and Anarchism? Why did Lenin leave State and Revolution unfinished? Jamie, Jorge, and Aaron discuss. Chapter 6: https://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1917/staterev/ch06.htm Epilogue: https://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1917/staterev/postscpt.htm Sign up as a "fan" on here or a patron at patreon.com/everybodylovescommunism to unlock bonus content and our Discord community, and to support the show!
This is a narration of chapters 4-8 of Karl Kautsky's Parliamentarism and Democracy (1893-1911), from Karl Kautsky on Democracy & Republicanism by Ben Lewis. The full audiobook is currently in production by the team at Cosmonaut Magazine. A copy of the book itself can be purchased at Haymarket Books. Narration and editing by Myk Labas.
This is a narration of the two prefaces, introduction, and chapters 1-3 of Karl Kautsky's Parliamentarism and Democracy (1893-1911), from Karl Kautsky on Democracy & Republicanism by Ben Lewis. The full audiobook is currently in production by the team at Cosmonaut Magazine. A copy of the book itself can be purchased at Haymarket Books. Narration and editing by Myk Labas.
Wir sprechen in unserer zweiten Folge zur Geschichte des Alkoholismus über die Zeit des Nationalsozialismus; über den Mythos von Adolf Hitler als abstinenten Führer und die Verfolgung suchtkranker Menschen durch das Regime. Dabei geht es auch um die Rolle der Suchthilfe und wie sie aktiv an der Ausmerzung von “erbbiologisch minderwertigen” Suchtkranken mitgewirkt hat. Doch hat all das dazu geführt, dass die Menschen weniger tranken? Ne. Polykratie-Begriff: [Hachtmann 2018]Hitler Mythos und Alkohol: Anhänger-Zitat [Ohler 2017: 33, nach Wellersdorf 1995]Hitler-Zitat [Völkischer Beobachter, 31.3.1926, nach Holzer 2007: 84]Hitlers Drogenabhängigkeit: [Ohler 2017: 145ff] Siehe auch: DLF “War Hitler ein Junkie”Gleichschaltung Deutscher Verein gegen den Missbrauch geistiger Getränke: [Holzer 2007: 102f]Zitate zitiert nach Holzer: [BArch-Berlin/ R 1501 / 126373, Bl. 294, Gonser an Frick, 1.6. 1933] [BArch-Berlin/ R 1501 / 126373, Bl. 297, Denkschrift des Deutschen Vereins, 1.6.1933]Ausscheiden des Deutschen Vereins: [Holzer: 123]Gleichschaltung der Guttempler: [Holzer: 105ff]Zitate zitiert nach Holzer aus diversen Schriftwechseln: [BArch-Berlin/ R 1501 / 126376]Widerstand: [Dede 1995: 262-264 zitiert nach Holzer]Guttempler Theo Gläß in den 70ern: [Gläss, Biel und Klewitz, 1981: 5, 156]Drogenpolitisch Epochale Zäsur: [Holzer 117] / Rauschmittel: [Siehe auch Pieper: S. 165]Als ‘asozial' Verfolgte: Kennzeichnungen in KZs [WikiCommons]Lager-Hierarchie: [Ayaß 1995: 169]Bewertung durch andere Insassen: [Erlebnisbericht von Zahnwetzer 1949: 18f, nach Ayaß: 166] [Kautsky 1961: 145, nach Ayaß: 168]. Gesetz zur Verhütung erbkranken Nachwuchses (1933 beschlossen, 1934 in Kraft getreten):Gesetz im WortlautZur Bewertung, siehe Holzer: 134 ffUnterstützung durch die Guttempler: [Neuland Nr. 15/16, 1934, S.114 nach Hauschildt 1995: 119]Alkoholiker einer “betreuenden oder ausmerzenden Fürsorge zuzuführen” [Thode 1941: 3, nach Holzer: 126]Alkohol in der Gesamtgesellschaft: Anstieg des Alkoholkonsums [Frevert, Nation in Barracks: 175ff, nach Westermann: 14]Alkohol und Männlichkeit [vgl. Westermann 2021]Devianz-Problematik in der Wehrmacht: [Steinkamp 2008: 5, 387]Reemtsma-Zitat: Hässliche Wirklichkeit und liebgewordene Illusionen. In: Süddeutsche Zeitung, 25.1.2008.Weinpropaganda: Zitate [Krieger 2018: 38, 82]Handgranaten als Zahlungsmittel fürs FinanzamtGermanischer Wein [DDW Nr. 20 v. 21.10.1934, nach Krieger: 75]Deutsche Weinwerbung GmbH [ebd.: 461] See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This is a narration of the preface and introduction for Karl Kautsky on Democracy & Republicanism by Ben Lewis, who has also provided a preface to the audiobook. The full audiobook is currently in production by the team at Cosmonaut Magazine. A copy of the book itself can be purchased at Haymarket Books. Narration and editing by Myk Labas.
Mia hat Corona und kann nicht so viel reden - ein guter Anlass, damit Mika richtig hart über die Geschichte des Alkoholismus abnerden kann. In dieser Folge erfahrt ihr, ab wann Suchterkrankungen als medizinisches Problem gesehen wurden, ab wann man überhaupt von “Alkoholismus” sprach und was die ideologischen Wurzeln der Anti-Alkoholbewegung sind. Wir beginnen unsere Geschichte im 19. Jahrhundert (da ging so richtig die Post ab) und sind am Ende der Folge in der Weimarer Republik. Nächste Woche geht es dann weiter mit der Zeit von 1933 bis 1945 (und mit einer hoffentlich gesunden Mia, denn wir werden starke Nerven brauchen).Quellen nach Themenblöcken:Thematisierungskonjunkturen: [Spode 1993: 269ff; Spode 2010: 180ff]Suchtbegriff: [Schabdach 2010: 56; zur Konstruktion von Sucht vgl. Nolte 2019: 131] Degenerationslehre und Alkohol als Keimgift: [Spode 1993: 135ff; Kraeplin 1899]Heilstätten: [Schabdach 2010: 113f; Aßfalg 2003: 94f]Kneipe als Schutzraum der Arbeiter*innenschaft siehe Kautsky, K. Der Alkoholismus und seine Bekämpfung. In: Neue Zeit 9.2 (1890/1891) “Ohne das Wirtshaus gibt es für den deutschen Proletarier nicht bloß kein geselliges, sondern auch kein politisches Leben”Guttempler & Deutscher Verein gegen den Mißbrauch geistiger Getränke: [Spode 1993: 204ff]Rollenbilder und weibliches Trinken: [Schaller 2014: 24, 39, 50]Weimarer Republik, Deutschland als größter Drogendealer: [Ohler 2017: 27f]Die drei wichtigen medizinischen Werke:Brühl-Cramer, Constantin von. 1819. „Trunksucht und eine rationelle Heilmethoden derselben".Huss, Magnus. 1850. Chronische Alkoholskrankheit oder Alcoholismus Chronicus. Ein Beitrag zur Kenntniss der Vergiftungs-Krankheiten, Nach Eigener und anderer Erfahrung.Baer, A. 1878. Die Trunksucht in ihrer Bedeutung für die Gesundheit und die Gesundheitspflege. Berlin. [Spode datiert dass Werk auf 1878, Schabdach auf 1881]Quellenverzeichnis:Aßfalg, R. 2003. Von der Bekämpfung des Lasters zur Behandlung des Kranken. 100 Jahre Arbeit mit Suchtkranken. Eine Chronik. Landsberg/Lech.Kloppe, Sylvia. 2004. Die Gesellschaftliche Konstruktion Der Suchtkrankheit: Soziologische Und Philosophische Aspekte Der Genese Vom Traditionellen Drogengebrauch in Der Vormoderne Bis Zum Konstrukt Des Krankhaften Drogenmissbrauchs in Der Moderne. Peter Lang Gmbh, Internationaler Verlag Der Wissenschaften.Kraeplin, E.: Psychiatrie. Ein Lehrbuch für Studierende und Aerzte, Bd. 1-2, 6.Aufl., Leipzig 1899.Ohler, Norman. 2017. Der totale Rausch: Drogen im Dritten Reich. Köln: Kiepenheuer & Witsch.Schabdach, Michael. 2010. Soziale Konstruktionen des Drogenkonsums und Soziale Arbeit: Historische Dimensionen und aktuelle Entwicklungen. 2009. Aufl. Wiesbaden: VS Verlag fur Sozialwissenschaften.Schaller, Sabine. 2014. Blaukreuzmänner, Guttemplergeschwister und abstinente Frauen: Vereinsbasierte Alkoholprävention in Magdeburg vom ausgehenden 19. Jahrhundert bis 1933. 1. Aufl. Halle: Mitteldeutscher Verlag.Spode, Hasso. 1993. Die Macht der Trunkenheit. Wiesbaden: VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften.Spode, Hasso. 2010. „‚Extrem hoher Alkoholkonsum‘ - Thematisierungskonjunkturen des sozialen Problems Alkohol“. In Der Geist der deutschen Mäßigungsbewegung. Debatten um Alkohol und Trinken in Vergangenheit und Gegenwart, herausgegeben von Sabine Schaller Karl Wassenberg, 180–210. Halle: Mitteldeutscher Verlag. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Die Neigung der politischen Linken zu Schismen und Sezessionen war bekanntlich auch schon in den 1920er Jahren voll ausgeprägt. Die Unabhängige Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands (USPD), eben noch aus den Reichstagswahlen 1920 nur gut vier Prozentpunkte hinter den Mehrheitssozialisten als drittstärkste Kraft hervorgegangen, war im Frühjahr 1922 im Begriff, zwischen SPD und KPD zerrieben zu werden und stritt inbrünstig darüber, ob der Ausweg aus diesem Dilemma in einer immer schärferen Abgrenzung zur SPD oder aber, im Gegenteil, in einer Wiederannäherung zu ihr zu finden sei. Gegen die Mehrheit des Parteivorstands vertrat die Parteizeitung Freiheit lange die letztere Linie, weswegen die alte Redaktion Ende März geschasst wurde. Karl Kautsky, ebenfalls Befürworter einer Rückkehr in den Schoß der SPD, konnte seinen Brief zur „Krise der Unabhängigen“ am 28.3. deshalb bereits nicht mehr in der Freiheit veröffentlichen – und fand mit ihm Asyl in der SPD-Parteizeitung Vorwärts. Es liest Frank Riede.
A more newsy, free-flowing episode. I see many socialists confused by paired spectacles of astroturfed extremism and carefully misdirected popular energy: caravans of hooting hollering settler hogs on the one side, caravans of moozlamic hispanic terrorists on the other. I'm pretty sure the plan is to numb you to the current violence of bio-gladio, and the climate massacres to come, by convincing you that any given authoritarian crackdown is only going to hit the invading “caravan” who fall on the “side” opposite you, not of the class divide but the partisan divide. But while you were cheering or jeering at the trucker-branded, spook-seeded rodeo clowns—indigenous organizers of the Gitxsan and Wet'suwet'en nations have had their accounts frozen. And when the “caravans” of climate refugees arrive, all the totalitarian measures you helped them pass will come mercilessly down on their heads and yours. We take up texts from Engels, Kautsky, and Lenin on the importance of civic freedoms not as the sole end in themselves but as strategic “light and air” for the proletarian struggle. We'll miss freedom of movement and freedom of assembly when they're gone. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This week's art is by Tom: https://www.instagram.com/thomasagreenwood/ Very special episode this week as we sat down with June Reith of General Intellect Unit to discuss systems theory, burning our Kautsky and left organization tactics! Reading: 'The Tree of Knowledge' by Maturana and Varela DISCORD: discord.gg/Ym8Bwmaz LINKTREE: linktr.ee/AuxiliaryStatementsPodcast
Questions of the bourgeois state, democracy, and the proletariat's conquest of state power were the subject of a number of debates and attempts at theoretical formulation in the Second International. In the aftermath of the 1917 Russian Revolution and the dissolving of the Constituent Assembly, the stakes of the debate became even more pronounced, with figures such as Lenin, Kautsky, and Luxemburg focusing especially on the concept of dictatorship of the proletariat.
Its the final instalment of the Revolutionary Strategy reading series! Jack and Dan finish the book and use Mike Macnair's 14 point outline of his strategic outlook as a frame for their discussion. Drawing on the contents of the book as a whole, and particularly the final three chapters, the lads outline the contents of the Kautskyism Plus strategy presented by Macnair. Macnair is broadly in alignment with Kautsky when it comes to his advocacy of a strategy of patience. Building a workers party and a broader workers movement is a process that cannot be rushed and that requires gradual and progressive work by committed activists. Where Macnair diverges from the ‘pope' of Marxism is over two questions: those of the state and internationalism. For Macnair, second international Marxism was a project far to committed to work within the bourgeois state rather than opposing it. Likewise it was far to centred on the national rather than the international fight for working class power. Marxism should be substantially internationalist. It was these two failings that lead to the catastrophe of 1914. The aim of Marxist strategy is to set the conditions necessary for the working class to challenge for state power. The workers party must be a party of opposition. Not a loyal opposition but a disloyal one. A party prepared not to take over the running of the state but to smash it and build anew in its own image.
Few figures stand as prominently in Marxist theory and history as V.I. Lenin. The revolutionary who played a pivotal role in one of the most important events in world history has received reverence, damnation, and everything in between, but much of that response depends on deep misunderstandings of both what he thought and what he did. This misunderstanding was deep enough that even he took notice of it at several points, remarking that readers tended to take his theories out of their context and misunderstanding the underlying points. Understanding Lenin, then, will not just mean rereading his work, but understanding the world Lenin was working in, the what's impossible to understand without considering the where's, when's and why's. To that effect, Alan Shandro has stepped in with a book that seeks to do just that. Lenin and the Logic of Hegemony: Political Practice and Theory in the Class Struggle (Haymarket Books, 2015) is a sustained attempt to reread Lenin in light of Gramsci's oft-ignored remark that Lenin was one of his biggest influences in developing his own theories of hegemony. The book spends the first couple chapters contextualizing Lenin by looking at some of his contemporaries, particularly Kautsky, Bernstein and Plekhanov, before turning to Lenin's own works, and reading through them slowly and meticulously. The result is a study that works its way from Lenin's writings in the 1890's all the way to the end of his life in the 1920's, giving us the ability to see Lenin's development of ontological and epistemological themes that run throughout his life and work. While Shandro is not always easy to read, the book has a number of crucial insights for political organizers, and will repay serious effort. Many books have been written on Lenin over the years, but few have bothered to study his own work so meticulously and thoroughly. Published as part of the Historical Materialism book series. Alan Shandro is a professor of political theory, previously at Laurentian University, and is currently a visiting professor at York. He is on the editorial board for Science & Society. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/intellectual-history
Few figures stand as prominently in Marxist theory and history as V.I. Lenin. The revolutionary who played a pivotal role in one of the most important events in world history has received reverence, damnation, and everything in between, but much of that response depends on deep misunderstandings of both what he thought and what he did. This misunderstanding was deep enough that even he took notice of it at several points, remarking that readers tended to take his theories out of their context and misunderstanding the underlying points. Understanding Lenin, then, will not just mean rereading his work, but understanding the world Lenin was working in, the what's impossible to understand without considering the where's, when's and why's. To that effect, Alan Shandro has stepped in with a book that seeks to do just that. Lenin and the Logic of Hegemony: Political Practice and Theory in the Class Struggle (Haymarket Books, 2015) is a sustained attempt to reread Lenin in light of Gramsci's oft-ignored remark that Lenin was one of his biggest influences in developing his own theories of hegemony. The book spends the first couple chapters contextualizing Lenin by looking at some of his contemporaries, particularly Kautsky, Bernstein and Plekhanov, before turning to Lenin's own works, and reading through them slowly and meticulously. The result is a study that works its way from Lenin's writings in the 1890's all the way to the end of his life in the 1920's, giving us the ability to see Lenin's development of ontological and epistemological themes that run throughout his life and work. While Shandro is not always easy to read, the book has a number of crucial insights for political organizers, and will repay serious effort. Many books have been written on Lenin over the years, but few have bothered to study his own work so meticulously and thoroughly. Published as part of the Historical Materialism book series. Alan Shandro is a professor of political theory, previously at Laurentian University, and is currently a visiting professor at York. He is on the editorial board for Science & Society. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/political-science
Few figures stand as prominently in Marxist theory and history as V.I. Lenin. The revolutionary who played a pivotal role in one of the most important events in world history has received reverence, damnation, and everything in between, but much of that response depends on deep misunderstandings of both what he thought and what he did. This misunderstanding was deep enough that even he took notice of it at several points, remarking that readers tended to take his theories out of their context and misunderstanding the underlying points. Understanding Lenin, then, will not just mean rereading his work, but understanding the world Lenin was working in, the what's impossible to understand without considering the where's, when's and why's. To that effect, Alan Shandro has stepped in with a book that seeks to do just that. Lenin and the Logic of Hegemony: Political Practice and Theory in the Class Struggle (Haymarket Books, 2015) is a sustained attempt to reread Lenin in light of Gramsci's oft-ignored remark that Lenin was one of his biggest influences in developing his own theories of hegemony. The book spends the first couple chapters contextualizing Lenin by looking at some of his contemporaries, particularly Kautsky, Bernstein and Plekhanov, before turning to Lenin's own works, and reading through them slowly and meticulously. The result is a study that works its way from Lenin's writings in the 1890's all the way to the end of his life in the 1920's, giving us the ability to see Lenin's development of ontological and epistemological themes that run throughout his life and work. While Shandro is not always easy to read, the book has a number of crucial insights for political organizers, and will repay serious effort. Many books have been written on Lenin over the years, but few have bothered to study his own work so meticulously and thoroughly. Published as part of the Historical Materialism book series. Alan Shandro is a professor of political theory, previously at Laurentian University, and is currently a visiting professor at York. He is on the editorial board for Science & Society. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/sociology
Few figures stand as prominently in Marxist theory and history as V.I. Lenin. The revolutionary who played a pivotal role in one of the most important events in world history has received reverence, damnation, and everything in between, but much of that response depends on deep misunderstandings of both what he thought and what he did. This misunderstanding was deep enough that even he took notice of it at several points, remarking that readers tended to take his theories out of their context and misunderstanding the underlying points. Understanding Lenin, then, will not just mean rereading his work, but understanding the world Lenin was working in, the what's impossible to understand without considering the where's, when's and why's. To that effect, Alan Shandro has stepped in with a book that seeks to do just that. Lenin and the Logic of Hegemony: Political Practice and Theory in the Class Struggle (Haymarket Books, 2015) is a sustained attempt to reread Lenin in light of Gramsci's oft-ignored remark that Lenin was one of his biggest influences in developing his own theories of hegemony. The book spends the first couple chapters contextualizing Lenin by looking at some of his contemporaries, particularly Kautsky, Bernstein and Plekhanov, before turning to Lenin's own works, and reading through them slowly and meticulously. The result is a study that works its way from Lenin's writings in the 1890's all the way to the end of his life in the 1920's, giving us the ability to see Lenin's development of ontological and epistemological themes that run throughout his life and work. While Shandro is not always easy to read, the book has a number of crucial insights for political organizers, and will repay serious effort. Many books have been written on Lenin over the years, but few have bothered to study his own work so meticulously and thoroughly. Published as part of the Historical Materialism book series. Alan Shandro is a professor of political theory, previously at Laurentian University, and is currently a visiting professor at York. He is on the editorial board for Science & Society. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/critical-theory
Few figures stand as prominently in Marxist theory and history as V.I. Lenin. The revolutionary who played a pivotal role in one of the most important events in world history has received reverence, damnation, and everything in between, but much of that response depends on deep misunderstandings of both what he thought and what he did. This misunderstanding was deep enough that even he took notice of it at several points, remarking that readers tended to take his theories out of their context and misunderstanding the underlying points. Understanding Lenin, then, will not just mean rereading his work, but understanding the world Lenin was working in, the what's impossible to understand without considering the where's, when's and why's. To that effect, Alan Shandro has stepped in with a book that seeks to do just that. Lenin and the Logic of Hegemony: Political Practice and Theory in the Class Struggle (Haymarket Books, 2015) is a sustained attempt to reread Lenin in light of Gramsci's oft-ignored remark that Lenin was one of his biggest influences in developing his own theories of hegemony. The book spends the first couple chapters contextualizing Lenin by looking at some of his contemporaries, particularly Kautsky, Bernstein and Plekhanov, before turning to Lenin's own works, and reading through them slowly and meticulously. The result is a study that works its way from Lenin's writings in the 1890's all the way to the end of his life in the 1920's, giving us the ability to see Lenin's development of ontological and epistemological themes that run throughout his life and work. While Shandro is not always easy to read, the book has a number of crucial insights for political organizers, and will repay serious effort. Many books have been written on Lenin over the years, but few have bothered to study his own work so meticulously and thoroughly. Published as part of the Historical Materialism book series. Alan Shandro is a professor of political theory, previously at Laurentian University, and is currently a visiting professor at York. He is on the editorial board for Science & Society. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Few figures stand as prominently in Marxist theory and history as V.I. Lenin. The revolutionary who played a pivotal role in one of the most important events in world history has received reverence, damnation, and everything in between, but much of that response depends on deep misunderstandings of both what he thought and what he did. This misunderstanding was deep enough that even he took notice of it at several points, remarking that readers tended to take his theories out of their context and misunderstanding the underlying points. Understanding Lenin, then, will not just mean rereading his work, but understanding the world Lenin was working in, the what's impossible to understand without considering the where's, when's and why's. To that effect, Alan Shandro has stepped in with a book that seeks to do just that. Lenin and the Logic of Hegemony: Political Practice and Theory in the Class Struggle (Haymarket Books, 2015) is a sustained attempt to reread Lenin in light of Gramsci's oft-ignored remark that Lenin was one of his biggest influences in developing his own theories of hegemony. The book spends the first couple chapters contextualizing Lenin by looking at some of his contemporaries, particularly Kautsky, Bernstein and Plekhanov, before turning to Lenin's own works, and reading through them slowly and meticulously. The result is a study that works its way from Lenin's writings in the 1890's all the way to the end of his life in the 1920's, giving us the ability to see Lenin's development of ontological and epistemological themes that run throughout his life and work. While Shandro is not always easy to read, the book has a number of crucial insights for political organizers, and will repay serious effort. Many books have been written on Lenin over the years, but few have bothered to study his own work so meticulously and thoroughly. Published as part of the Historical Materialism book series. Alan Shandro is a professor of political theory, previously at Laurentian University, and is currently a visiting professor at York. He is on the editorial board for Science & Society.
This week we would like to introduce to you to The Measures Taken. The Measures Taken is a podcast about the intellectual history of the key debates that occurred in Marxism and it also happens to be one of Jason's side projects. All of the contributors to the podcast come from different corners of the American left and believe that they have all been miseducated. This podcast is an attempt at self education and an encouragement for others to do the same. https://www.themeasurestaken.org/Support the show (http://patreon.com/theregrettablecentury)
The People's School for Marxist-Leninist Studies presents a class over the text "The Proletarian Revolution and the Renegade Kautsky," written in after the Great October Socialist Revolution in 1918. This work of Lenin's meticulously dissects the historical and ideological bankruptcy of social democracy and right-opportunism. We hope you learn something new! Interested in attending a class? Email info@psmls.org for more information Literature Used In This Class: The Proletarian Revolution and the Renegade Kautsky by V.I. Lenin (1918) https://www.marxists.org/archive/leni... Recommended Literature: Foundations of Leninism by J.V. Stalin (1924) https://www.lulu.com/en/us/shop/jv-st... Guidelines on the Organizational Structure of Communist Parties, on the Methods and Content of their Work by the Third Congress of the Communist International (1921) https://www.lulu.com/en/us/shop/third... "Left-Wing" Communism: An Infantile Disorder by V.I. Lenin (1920) https://www.lulu.com/en/us/shop/vi-le... Theory as a Guide to Action by Earl Browder (1939) https://www.marxists.org/archive/brow... The Bolsheviks in the Tsarist Duma by Aleksei Badayev (1929) https://www.marxists.org/archive/bada... Imperialism and the Split in Socialism by V.I. Lenin (1916) https://www.marxists.org/archive/leni... PSMLS Website: http://peoplesschool.org/contact/ Party of Communists USA Website https://partyofcommunistsusa.org/about/ Timecode Key: (Q&A) = Question & Answer / Response 0:00 Introduction 3:49 Reading 1 9:15 Eduard Bernstein? (Q&A) 10:32 Lenin's birthday 11:10 Lenin goes nuclear 11:44 Differences in the European Labor Movement 12:45 De-Stalinization 16:35 "Matured socialism?" (Q&A) 19:03 Left-opportunists 19:25 DotP & the Paris Commune 20:11 Reading 2 24:35 Combatting right-opportunism? (Q&A) 25:50 Dictatorship & democracy 30:21 Kautsky's fate? (Q&A) 31:14 Reading 3 36:04 "Left" anti-communists 37:28 Coalitions? (Q&A) 38:53 What is to Done? 39:03 Class democracy 40:46 Peaceful transition? (Q&A) 41:47 Warning against ultra-"leftists" 42:17 Reading 4 53:07 History of the 3 Internationals 53:52 Gus Hall books 54:22 Ebert & Scheidemann 55:09 More book recommendations 55:39 Left & right-opportunism? (Q&A) 57:13 CPUSA opportunism 57:45 State & Revolution 58:37 Right-opportunist emergence 59:07 Idealist democracy 59:32 More reading recommendations 1:00:01 Longuet & red diaper babies 1:01:36 More CPUSA opportunism 1:03:31 Langston Hughes poem 1:04:07 More on DotP 1:04:57 Concluding remarks & ending
The emergence of ‘Marxism' as a ‘worldview' and political tendency was not achieved during Marx's lifetime, but remains the achievement of his epigones. This episode establishes what was meant by ‘Marxism' when it forged its first orthodoxy by examining the popularizing works of Engels, Kautsky and Plekhanov.
In part 1 of a 2 part episode, we review the major theories of imperialism as derived by intellectuals including Hobson, Hilferding, Luxemburg, Bukharin, Lenin, Kautsky, Poulantzas and more. This episode is heavy on the theory, but we hope we've included enough humour and interesting historical tidbits to make it go down easier. The second part will be available for Patrons here: https://www.patreon.com/posts/what-is-part-2-2-52762824
We sat down with our old friend, comrade, and fellow veteran of Trotskist hyperactivsm to discuss the concept of the Republic and whether or not is still useful to Marxist organizing/theorizing. The era of the bourgeois republic has been a simultaneous process of creation and destruction, of liberation and enslavement. As the final epoch of human civilization reaches its nadir, do we still have any use for the republic?The Constitution & The Class Strugglehttps://socialistcall.com/2018/11/27/the-constitution-and-the-class-struggle/Looking at Chris Maisano's “The Constitution and the Class Struggle”https://cosmonaut.blog/2020/12/02/lenin-and-the-class-point-of-view-looking-at-chris-maisanos-the-constitution-and-the-class-struggle/ Fight The Constitution, Demand a New Republic!https://cosmonautmag.com/2021/03/fight-the-constitution-demand-a-new-republic/ Bill of Rights socialism and the future of the republichttps://www.cpusa.org/article/bill-of-rights-socialism-and-the-future-of-the-republic/Abolish The Stateshttps://www.jacobinmag.com/2014/08/abolish-the-states/Abolish The Senatehttps://www.jacobinmag.com/2014/12/abolish-the-senate/ Music: Paul Robeson- John Brown's BodyA Fine Old Conflict Podcasthttps://afineoldconflict.buzzsprout.com/Support the show (http://patreon.com/theregrettablecentury)
This is a narration of the first chapter of Lars Lih's excellent book Lenin Rediscovered: What Is to Be Done? In Context. In this chapter, Lih explains how the legacy of figures like Marx, Engels, Lassalle, Kautsky, and others influenced Lenin. There's also a wonderful exploration of how the pre-war SPD served as the original model for the "vanguard party" (though in a very different way from how the term is used today). The full audiobook is currently in production by the team at Cosmonaut Magazine. You can find more episodes (and other audio books) on our Youtube channel, and you can purchase a physical copy of the book itself at Haymarket books. Narration and editing by Cliff Connolly.
In de verkiezingscampagne van 2021 doet zich iets bijzonders voor. De vier partijen ter linkerzijde D66, GroenLinks, SP en PvdA kiezen allemaal een eigen positie en daardoor de facto geen van allen voor de vorming van een progressief blok tegenover met name de dominante liberale stroming en het premierschap van VVD-lijsttrekker Mark Rutte. Jaap Jansen en PG Kroeger analyseren de verschillende opstellingen in de actualiteit en leggen verbindingen met het verleden van de linkse en progressieve stroming in Nederland en verwante democratische landen.De opstelling ter linkerzijde is opmerkelijk. Sigrid Kaag van D66 wil ‘nieuw leiderschap’ in plaats van dat van Rutte, maar blokkeert een bundeling van centrumlinks waarin haar partij als in de peilingen nog net de grootste groepering Kaag zelf als kandidaat-premier zou kunnen presenteren. SP-lijsttrekker Lilian Marijnissen lonkt dan weer nadrukkelijk naar het CDA, net als haar vader Jan Marijnissen in juli 2012 tijdens een lange nachtelijke sessie met Pieter Omtzigt. PG onthult hoe in die hete, zomerse avond in een Haags steegje aan de tafel van een morsig eethuisje een regeerakkoord op hoofdlijnen voor een kabinet van SP en CDA geschetst werd en waarbij de chef van de socialisten best bereid was de VVD als ‘Dritte im Bunde’ te betrekken. Alles bleek bespreekbaar als de PvdA maar in de greppel gereden kon worden.Jesse Klaver van GroenLinks hoopt dan weer op een herneming van de pogingen tot een soort ‘Paars-plus’ waarover het heel even ging in de kabinetsformatie van 2010, toen uiteindelijk via een gedoogconstructie Geert Wilders op rechts een vinger in de pap kreeg. Klaver pleit voor 'Keerpunt 21' - naar het voorbeeld van Keerpunt 1972 van Joop den Uyl, Hans van Mierlo en Bas de Gaay Fortman - maar krijgt hierbij het lid op de neus van zowel de sociaal-liberalen als de socialisten. Opmerkelijk stil daarbij is de PvdA van de nieuwe leider Lilianne Ploumen, want die waagt het niet om de kiezer van 2021 ‘het eerlijke verhaal’ à la Dierderik Samsom te vertellen dat zij eigenlijk wel een nieuwe versie van Rutte II zouden willen.Jaap Jansen en PG Kroeger ter verklaring van deze opmerkelijke verwarring te verklaren in het verleden van de pogingen tot bundeling van partijen ter linkerzijde. Het ‘Morgenrood’ wilde maar zelden echt gaan gloren. Niet alleen in Nederland trouwens. De neiging tot theoretische en ideologische scherpslijperij zat er al vroeg in. Van Ferdinand Domela Nieuwenhuis en Pieter Jelles Troelstra tot Gramsci, Kautsky en Bernstein. De Weimar Republiek ging erdoor tenonder en de wederzijdse afkeer tussen PvdA en CPN en later ook de afsplitsing van de PSP was episch. Men schold bijna feller op elkaar dan op het grootkapitaal en de ‘Roomsche reactie’.Daaronder verscholen liggen dikke lagen van culturele, filosofische en politieke. Links heeft altijd innerlijke contradicties gekend die je in de actuele discussies weer boven ziet komen. Was men internationalistisch of vooral nationaal gericht? Was men van het volkse of van de volksverheffing? Was men voor de goed belegde boterham of voor de zuivere identiteit? Was links er voor de zekerheid van ‘de gewone man’ of voor innovatieve vernieuwingen in economie, cultuur en samenleving? Moest men Joop den Uyl volgen met zijn encyclopedische kennis van poëzie en letterkunde of moest men desnoods Job Cohen dwingen de polonaise te doen in een tv-show? Waren progressieven nu toch meer van ‘de Zaterdagmatinee’ of van André van Duin? Was het toeval dat de CPN zeezender Radio Veronica wel wilde helpen, terwijl de PvdA juist alles ondernam om de publieke omroep te beschermen door die ‘piraat’ de nek om te draaien?***Deze aflevering is mede mogelijk gemaakt door donaties van luisteraars via de site Vriend van de Show. Word ook vriend! (er komen ook steeds meer vriendinnen trouwens)Betrouwbare Bronnen wordt uitgegeven door Dag en Nacht Media. Heb je interesse om te adverteren in deze podcast? Neem dan contact op met Dag en Nacht Media via adverteren@dagennacht.nl***Verder lezenJesse Klaver - Keerpunt 21, pleidooi voor progressieve samenwerking (2021)Motie GroenLinks-congres 14 maart 2020Verkiezingsprogramma PvdA, D66 en PPR: Keerpunt ’72 (1972)Peter Kanne - Fusie tussen GroenLinks en PvdA kan sterke, brede partij opleveren (I & O Research, 2020)Matthijs Rooduijn - Wat wil de linkse kiezer? (Stuk Rood Vlees, 2015)Pieter Gerrit Kroeger - Tand des tijds, het CDA in de nieuwe eeuw (Prometheus, 2020)***Verder kijkenVerkiezingen 1972 met oa Hans van Mierlo en Joop den UylWilleke Alberti, Gerard Cox en anderen - Waarom stemmen wij Den Uyl? (1977) Den Uyl reciteert Bertolt Brecht in de Tweede Kamer (1986)Job Cohen in de polonaise (Koffietijd, 2010)Diederik Samsom over linkse samenwerking (2016)Tolhuistuin, 2020 - Aankondiging linkse samenwerking door Klaver, Marijnissen en Asscher***Verder luisteren167 - Lilian Marijnissen: 'Alleen met een grote SP verandert er echt wat'161 - Hans van Mierlo, een politieke popster157 - 2021: het jaar van bijzondere verkiezingen, een partijcoup en een opmerkelijke dame van adel (hierin wordt over het progressieve schaduwkabinet uit de jaren '70 gesproken)123 – Hoe de PvdA in de greep kwam van het neoliberalisme64 - Wim Kok, een leven op eigen kracht - gesprek met biograaf Marnix Krop34 - Lodewijk Asscher over zijn PvdA27 - Rob Jetten (D66) wil muren slopen09 - Special: leven en werk van Wim Kok. Met Jeltje van Nieuwenhoven, Joop van den Berg, Gijs van Dijk en PG KroegerNRC Haagse Zaken: Waarom het links niet lukt te groeien (februari 2021)Studio Tegengif #51 - Peter Kanne over een linkse fusiepartij***Tijdlijn00:00:00 – Intro00:02:14 – Deel 100:44:56 – Deel 201:29:01 – Uitro01:29:36 - Einde
Parker and Alex have a conversation with the editor and translator of Karl Kautsky on Democracy and Republicanism (Haymarket, 2020) on the legacy of Karl Kautsky before he turned renegade. They discuss the convergence of various conflicting political views, from 'Leninists' to Social Democrats and Cold War Warriors, into what Ben Lewis calls in his book a "peculiar consensus" that fundamentally misrepresents the historical figure of Kautsky. Please support Ben Lewis's work Marxism Translated on Patreon as he strives to bring classical texts of German Marxism to an English audience for a first time.
This week’s reading is Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism, part 7by Vladimir Ilyich LeninAvailable online here: https://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1916/imp-hsc/imperialism.pdf[Part 1]I. Concentration of Production and Monopolies[Part 2]II. Banks and Their New Role[Part 3]III. Finance Capital and the Financial Oligarchy[Part 4]IV. Export of CapitalV. Division of the World Among Capitalist Associations[Part 5]VI. Division of the World Among the Great Powers[Part 6]VII. Imperialism as a Special Stage of Capitalism[Part 7 – This Week]VIII. Parasitism and Decay of Capitalism[Part 8]IX. Critique of ImperialismX. The Place of Imperialism in HistoryFigures:1 – 15:22“Population in England and Wales, millions of workers in basic industries and percentage of the population that they make up.”Footnotes:1. 03:52Hobson, op. cit., pp. 59, 62. —Lenin2. 05:40Schulze-Gaevernitz, Britischer Imperialismus, S. 320 et seq. —Lenin3. 05:57Sartorius von Waltershausen, Das volkswirtschaftliche System, etc., Berlin, 1907, Buch IV. —Lenin4. 06:15Schilder, op. cit., S. 393. —Lenin5. 07:00Schulze-Gaevernitz, op. cit., S. 122. —Lenin6. 07:27Die Bank, 1911, 1, S. 10-11. —Lenin7. 12:14Hobson, op. cit., pp. 103, 205, 144, 335, 386. —Lenin8. 13:49Gerhard Hildebrand, Die Erschütterung der Industrieherrschaft und des Industriesozialismus, 1910, S. 229 et seq. —Lenin9. 16:40Schulze-Gaevernitz, Britischer Imperialismus S. 301. —Lenin10. 18:12Statistik des Deutschen Reichs, Bd. 211. —Lenin11. 18:28Henger, Die Kapitalsanlage der Franzosen, Stuttgart, 1913. —Lenin12. 18:42Hourwich, Immigralion and Labour, New York, 1913. —Lenin13. 20:46Briefwechsel von Marx und Engels, Bd. II, S. 290; 1V, 433—Karl Kautsky, Sozialismus und Kolonialpolitik, Berlin, 1907, S. 79; this pamphletwas written by Kautsky in those infinitely distant days when he was still a Marxist. —Lenin14. 23:21Russian social-chauvinism in its overt form, represented by the Potresovs, Chkenkelis, Maslovs, etc., and its covert form (Chkeidze, Skobelev, Axelrod, Martov, etc.) also emerged from the Russian variety of opportunism, namely, liquidationism. —Lenin
In this episode of SPS, Sophia and Pamela discuss the moral panic surrounding Netflix's new film, Cuties (2020), and take up the responses by Spiked Online and Jacobin magazine. Platypus members Marco Torres and David Faes join us to reflect on Polanski's critically-acclaimed J'Accuse (2019)and how it speaks to the present. In the final segment, Sophia interviews Jack Conrad from the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB). They consider how the 'Left' uses and abuses Karl Kautsky's legacy in order to avoid Kautsky's Marxism and discuss what the CPGB is up to. If you want to learn more about Platypus, and get involved, read the Platypus review, visit us on Facebook under the Platypus Affiliated Society or visit www.platypus1917.org. You can follow us on Instagram: ShitPlatypusSays, and on Twitter: @PlatypusSays. If you like the podcast, share it, rate it, and write us a review. Mentioned: (0) Theodor W. Adorno, "Sexual Taboos and the Law Today" (1963) https://platypus1917.org/wp-content/uploads/readings/adorno_sexualtaboostoday.pdf (1) Brendan O'Neill, Cuties Review https://www.spiked-online.com/2020/09/15/in-defence-of-cuties/ (2) Eileen Jones, Cuties Review https://www.jacobinmag.com/2020/09/cuties-scandal-netflix-controversy-french-movie (3) The Spartacist League on Polanski, “Stop the Puritan Witchhunt Against Roman Polanski!” printed in the Workers Vanguard, No. 192, 10 February 1978 https://www.icl-fi.org/english/wv/944/polanski.html (4) Platypus' 'Kautsky in the 21st Century' Panel (2020) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aL2TWNd1ntc (5) Communist Party of Great Britain's website https://communistparty.co.uk (6) The CPGB's Weekly Worker website https://weeklyworker.co.uk (7) The CPGB's Communist University 2020 https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOkaFWQNpCTrQfT65UszE4A Hosted by Pamela C., Sophia F., with editing assistance by Michael Woodson, Audrey Crescenti and music from Tamas Vilaghy.
On this episode, Pamela and Sophia discuss the destruction of statues depicting American Revolutionary figures. Our members James Vaughn and Spencer Leonard join us to discuss the legacy of the American Revolution and the repercussions of the 1619 project. And Sophia catches up with Rory Hannigan and Clint Montgomery in light of our Summer Reading group on Kautsky’s Marxism. We reflect on Karl Kautsky as a leading figure in Second International Marxism and how it might be important to consider Kautsky today. If you want to learn more about Platypus, and get involved, read the Platypus review or join the American Revolution lectures online, visit us on Facebook under the Platypus Affiliated Society or visit www.platypus1917.org. If you like the podcast, share it, rate it, and write us a review! (1) Trump’s address to the Young Conservatives of America: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jf8R3LTAarI (2) American Revolution Lecture Series: https://platypus1917.org/2020/06/06/the-legacy-of-the-american-revolution-a-platypus-lecture-series/ (3) Summer Reading Group on Kautsky’s Marxism: https://platypus1917.org/virtual/ Hosted by Pamela C., Sophia F., with editing assistance by Michael W.
Vandaag hebben we een uitgebreid interview met marxistisch historicus Ben Lewis, over zijn recente werk Karl Kautsky on Democracy and Republicanism. Hierin zijn een aantal centrale teksten van de zogenaamde paus van het marxisme voor het eerst vertaald uit het Duits in het Engels, die ingaan over een marxistische houding ten opzichte van het parlement en wat de democratische republiek eigenlijk betekent. Beide onderwerpen worden vaak verkeerd begrepen op marxistisch links, dus we staan er eens uitgebreid bij stil.
Neste episódio apresentaremos as contribuições de Lenin, Kautsky e Chayanov sobre o fim - ou não - do campesinato sob o capitalismo.
C Derick Varn and Douglas Lain continue their exploration of the history of socialism by discussing Karl Kautsky. From the Encyclopedia Britannica: Marxist theorist and a leader of the German Social Democratic Party. After the death of Friedrich Engels in 1895, Kautsky inherited the role of the intellectual and political conscience of German Marxism. If you enjoy this podcast, consider supporting us on Patreon. Patrons get access to Pop the Left every week.
Leninism, Social Democracy, and the State Juan Ferre Stephen Maher Jordan House Wladek Flakin Historical Materialism 2019 (NY): Socialism in Our Time Socialism & Marxism Socialists and elections: what way forward for the US left? - Juan Ferre, Left Voice 100 Years After the German Revolution: Luxemburg, Kautsky and Lenin - Wladek Flakin, Left Voice Toward a constructive antagonism: trade unions, social movements, political parties, and transforming the state - Stephen Maher and Jordan House
Leninism, Social Democracy, and the State Juan Ferre Stephen Maher Jordan House Wladek Flakin Historical Materialism 2019 (NY): Socialism in Our Time Socialism & Marxism Socialists and elections: what way forward for the US left? - Juan Ferre, Left Voice 100 Years After the German Revolution: Luxemburg, Kautsky and Lenin - Wladek Flakin, Left Voice Toward a constructive antagonism: trade unions, social movements, political parties, and transforming the state - Stephen Maher and Jordan House
We return with another chapter of State and Revolution while we prepare your next host-filled episode of the Plough and Stars.Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/ploughandstars)
We continue our reading of the State and Revolution with Chapter Three, read by Paymyrant.Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/ploughandstars)
Our reading of the State and Revolution continues with Catdad/the Angry Commie Lawyer's reading of Chapter Two.Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/ploughandstars)
Reading the State and Revolution while we plan for our next episode, this is the first of the six-chapter work by Lenin written in 1917 and revised slightly in 1918 but never appended with the planned addition.Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/ploughandstars)
Episode Notes Lenin never gets tired of dunking on Kautsky, and we discuss the ultra version of everything.This podcast is powered by Pinecast. Try Pinecast for free, forever, no credit card required. If you decide to upgrade, use coupon code r-b8b8a7 for 40% off for 4 months, and support Marx Madness.
We sat down with C. Derick Varn and solved all the problems that are currently ailing the left. We reconciled the divergent currents of Marxism and wove together the materialist and idealist dichotomy with resounding success, but then lost an hour and a half of audio and were forced to restart the recording; what resulted was a meandering, but entertaining, discussion about just about everything... and religion. Varn's Podcast "Symptomatic Redness"http://zero-books.net/blogs/zero/tag/symptomatic-redness/and his poetry.http://www.unlikelystories.org/unlikely-books/apocalypticsMusic:Des Geyers Schwarzer Haufen- Bauernkreig (German Peasant Revolt Anthem)Further Reading:MacIntyre, Alasdair C. Marxism and Christianity. Notre Dame, Ind: University of Notre Dame Press, 1984.Religion for radicals: An interview with Terry Eagletonhttps://www.dissentmagazine.org/article/the-gospel-according-to-terryRoland Boer on Marxism and Religionhttp://isj.org.uk/the-full-story-on-marxism-and-religion/Lenin: The Attitude of the Workers Party To Religionhttps://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1909/may/13.htmBoer, R. (2014). Religion and Socialism. Political Theology, 15(2), 188–209.Fitzpatrick, F. (1967). A. V. Lunacharsky: Recent Soviet Interpretations and Republications.Soviet Studies. Vol. 18. No. 3. pp 267-289Support the show (http://patreon.com/theregrettablecentury)
From Babeuf and Blanqui to Bakunin; from Karl Marx and Kautsky to Kropotkin, an ideological battle rages over the true nature of socialism! But why though?This week we discuss whether or not there really are only "Two Souls of Socialism" and if idea of "socialism from below" is a useful analytical framework around which to organize our politics. Hal Draper’s “Two Souls of Socialism”https://www.marxists.org/archive/draper/1966/twosouls/ Marxism, Anarchism, & the Genealogy of “Socialism From Below”https://uppingtheanti.org/journal/article/02-marxism-anarchism-the-genealogy-of-socialism-from-below Building Socialism From Below- Ben Tarnoffhttps://www.jacobinmag.com/2018/12/nicos-poulantzas-socialism-from-below-democratic-power Socialism From Below: A Delusion? -Mike McNairhttps://weeklyworker.co.uk/worker/1071/socialism-from-below-a-delusion/Music: Back in the USSR by Crisis Support the show (http://patreon.com/theregrettablecentury)
Episode Notes Happy May Day Comrades!We finish up just like we started, dunking on Kautsky.We will be coming at you next week with the begging of our third work Imperialism: The Highest Stage of CapitalismThis podcast is powered by Pinecast. Try Pinecast for free, forever, no credit card required. If you decide to upgrade, use coupon code r-b8b8a7 for 40% off for 4 months, and support Marx Madness.
Episode Notes Ever wonder what Lenin really thought about Kautsky? Because he’s more than happy to tell you.This podcast is powered by Pinecast. Try Pinecast for free, forever, no credit card required. If you decide to upgrade, use coupon code r-b8b8a7 for 40% off for 4 months, and support Marx Madness.
Comrade Courtney is on Red Library this week to discuss Adam Przeworski's book on socialism, capitalism, and electoral politics. This one is especially relevant for anyone active in organizations like the Democratic Socialists of America or interested in the relationship between socialist strategy and electoral politics in the U.S. We tackle some of the history of socialist parties engaging in electoral politics and the contradictions and still-open questions they faced in trying to organize for power and bring about the transition out of capitalism into a socialist future. Spoiler alert: it didn't really work out. Our hope is that this episode can give ourselves and our comrade-listeners out there some insight into why and how not to repeat history yet again. We start off discussing the Erfurt Program which could very well be new for listeners. The Erfurt Program was adopted by the Social Democratic Party of Germany during the SPD congress at Erfurt in 1891. Formulated under the political guidance of Eduard Bernstein, August Bebel, and Karl Kautsky, it superseded the earlier Gotha Program. The program declared the imminent death of capitalism and the necessity of socialist ownership of the means of production. The party intended to pursue these goals through legal political participation rather than by revolutionary activity. Kautsky argued that because capitalism, by its very nature, must collapse, the immediate task for socialists was to work for the improvement of workers' lives rather than for the revolution, which was inevitable. For a good summary and overview of Capitalism and Social Democracy, check out this link. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Click here to subscribe to Red Library on iTunes Click here to support Red Library on Patreon Click here to find the host's political theory blog, Capillaries: Theory at the Front
Today we continue our discussion of the 1st chapter - ‘Marxism as a Political Strategy’ of Mike MacNair's 'Revolutionary Strategy' book. This chapter lays out the traditional political strategy as laid out by Marx & Engels and refined by Bebel, Liebknecht and Kautsky.
Episode Notes We dive in to State and Rev where we find Lenin rather unhappy with the current state of Marxism in 1917, more specifically Lenin is rather unhappy with a Mr. Kautsky.This podcast is powered by Pinecast. Try Pinecast for free, forever, no credit card required. If you decide to upgrade, use coupon code r-b8b8a7 for 40% off for 4 months, and support Marx Madness.
Today we continue our reading of ‘Revolutionary Strategy - Marxism and the Challenge of Left Unity’ and grapple with the 1st chapter - ‘Marxism as a Political Strategy’ which lays out the traditional political strategy as laid out by Marx & Engels and refined by Kautsky. Panelists: Lexi & Donald - Swampside Chats C Derick Varn - Symptomatic Redness Emanuel - En Forlorad Sak Ian Szabo
Join the Proles as get super drunk and discuss the controversial topic of left terrorism, its history and how to interpret it. Also a raucous "Seeing Red" segment. Please subscribe on your favorite podcast apps and rate or review to help extend our reach. Like and rate our facebook page at facebook.com/proles pod and follow us on Twitter @prolespod. If you have any episode suggestions, or comments, DM us on either of those platforms or email us at prolesoftheroundtable@protonmail.com All episodes prior to episode 4 can be found on YouTube, so go check that out as well! Sources/Suggested Reading: "Why Marxists Oppose Individual Terrorism" by Trotsky; "Revolutionary Adventurism" by Lenin; Terrorism and Communism" by Kautsky; "Europe's Last Red Terrorists" by Kassemeris Listener submitted correction: "I'm writing you here because there are serious errors in accounting of "left terror" in this podcast. Most of them is ignoring that large amount of attack attributed to the leftist were actually work of Stay Behind Armies of right wing fascist units run by NATO forces. Specifically kidnapping and murder of Aldo Moro was exposed as work of Italian fascists directed by CIA that wanted to prevent formation of unified communist-socialist government under Alod Moro. Also you have some names of specific NATO / US intelligence operations mistaken. By operation you mistakenly call Paperclip you most likely mean Operation Gladio that is Italian branch of NATO run Stay Behind Armies operations. Operation Paperclip is entirely different operation conducted at very end of WW2 by US military intelligence to extract large number nazis and nazi collaborators from Germany in to US." As always we welcome corrections, as we realize that we, or our guests, can make mistakes.
This week we conclude our reading of the Communist Manifesto. We also take time to discuss Kautsky's 1901 essay "To What Extent is the Communist Manifesto Obsolete?"
Wenn man über den ‚Marxismus‘ spricht, denken viele sofort an Marx und Engels. Oder auch Lenin. Es gab aber nicht nur die Drei. Die Zeit um die Jahrhundertwende und danach war geprägt von einer breiteren marxistischen Debatte. In der Sendung beleuchten wir diese Theoretiker. Wer waren Mehring, Bernstein, Luxemburg und Gramsci? Wer war Kautsky? Und … Einführung in den Marxismus VI: Theoretische Denker neben Marx, Engels und Lenin weiterlesen
Oklippt intervju gjord på Askö 27/5 2009 av Johan Bergendorff
Oklippt intervju gjort 27/5 på Askö av Johan Bergendorff
PORTLAND, Ore - Notice to all track racers: you have just enough time to prepare for the May 12th Eric Kautsky Memorial race at the Alpenrose Velodrome. Races are scheduled for women and men in categories one through five and for masters and juniors. Proceeds benefit the Eric Kautsky Memorial Scholarship Fund at Tigard High School. Eric Kautsky was a dedicated husband, father, teacher, and coach who had his life cut short after being hit by a sleeping driver. Team Rose City, his cycling club, is sponsoring the event along with River City Bicycle, Veloforma Racing Bicycles, Hincapie Sportswear and CrankMyChain! Cycle TV. Please publicize this video. Get code here http://one.revver.com/watch/171611 or here http://www.blip.tv/file/148276/