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▒ Karl Marx's Theory of Revolution 3 |
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Hal Draper 지음 |
출판사 - aakar books |
초판일 - 2011-01-01 |
ISBN - 978935002138 |
조회수 : 2476 |
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● 목 차
Foreword = 1
PART 1:
DICTATORSHIP: ITS MEANING IN 1850
1. From Rome to Robespierre = 11
1. The Roman Dictatura (12)
2. Survival of the Dictatura (13)
3. Early Allusions (16)
4. The Great French Revolution (18)
5. Marat and Dictatorship (22)
6. The “Terrible Use" (25)
2. Socialism and Dictatorhip: The Beginning = 28
1. Testimony of Words (28)
2. The Beginning: Babeuf and Buonarroti (29)
3. The Blanquist Myth (34)
4. Utopians and Dictators (39)
5. Dezamy, Morrison, and Young Engels (42)
3. Dictatorship in 1848 = 45
1. Even Louis Blanc ... (45)
2. The Cavaignac Dictatorship (48)
3. Cavaignac as Prelude (51)
4. Weitling and Dictatorship (53)
5. Bakunin and Dictatorship in 1848 (55)
4. The Dictatorhip of the Democracy: Marx in 1848 = 58
1. The Case of Proudhon (58)
2. Toward the Rule of the Democracy (59)
3. What Marx Proposed (61)
4. Dictatorial Measures (65)
5. The "Dictatorship of the People": Conservative Version = 68
1. “Popular Despotism" and Guizot (68)
2. The “Fearful Word" of Donoso Cortes (70)
3. Stein’s “Social Dictatorship" (71)
PART II:
THE TERM ‘DICTATORSHIP' IN MARX AND ENGELS
6. The Spectrum of ‘Dictatorship’ = 77
1. ‘Despotism’ and ‘Class Despotism' (77)
2. The Dim Side of the Spectrum (80)
3. Military Dictators and Dictatorships (82)
4. Some Nondictatorial Dictators (84)
5. The "Dictators" of the Democracy (88)
7. Some Dictators over the Proletariat = 93
1. Bakunin and the “Secret Dictatorship" of Anarchy (93)
2. Marx on Bakunin’s Dictatorship (96)
3. Lassalle as “Workers’ Dictator" (98)
4. The Apprentice Dictators (101)
5. A Clutch of Dictators (104)
PART III:
PRELIMINARIES: THE “MARX-BLANQUIST" MYTH
8. Introduction to the Investigation = 111
1. Periodization (111)
2. The ‘Rule of the Proletariat’ (112)
3. The concept of Class Rule (115)
4. The Word in 1850: Cabet Again (117)
9. Marx and Blanqui = 120
1. Marx and Babouvism (120)
2. The Blanquist Tendency (124)
3. Marx and Blanqui: The Revolutionary (127)
4. Marx and Blanqui: The Defense Movement (131)
5. Marx and Blanqui: Personal Relations (133)
6. Marx and Blanqui: The United Front (140)
10. Marx Versus Blanquism = 145
1. Early Years (145)
2. Lessons of the Brussels Period (148)
3. The Question of Allies in the Manifesto (150)
4. Revolution and Restraint (153)
5. Retrospection in the Fifties (158)
6. Marx’s 1850 Attack on Blanquism (160)
7. The Rest of 1850 (163)
8. Through the Fifties (168)
PART IV:
‘DICTATORSHIP OF THE PROLETARIAT’ IN MARX AND ENGELS
11. Marx’s Class Struggles in France = 175
1. ‘Dictatorship’ Times Five (175)
2. Locus 1: Three Passages (178)
3. Blanqui as Bogey (181)
12. The SUCR Episode = 184
1. Locus 2: The SUCR Statutes and the Signers (184)
2. The Blanquist Refugees and the “Alliance" (188)
3. Why SUCR Collapsed (193)
4. The Trouble with Nicolaievsky’s Fabulation (199)
5. The Simple Solution (206)
6. Our Central Thesis (211)
13. Reverberations in 1850: The NDZ Exchange = 214
1. “Proletarian Ascendancy" (214)
2. Otto Luning and the NDZ (216)
3. Luning Lifts a Lance (219)
4. Locus 3: Luning Versus Marx (220)
5. Marx’s Equation (224)
14. More Reverberations = 227
1. Miquel's “Dictatorship" (227)
2. Enter Hooligan, Raving (229)
3. Willich’s “Dictatorship" (232)
4. Techow’s “Dictatorship" (236)
5. Eccarius, the “Vrai Peuple," and a Near-Locus (238)
15. From Weydemeyer to Vogt = 242
1. Introducing Weydemeyer (242)
2. Weydemeyer’s Article on “Dictatorship" (244)
3. Locus 4: Marx’s Letter (246)
4. Echo in Herr Vogt (248)
5. More Echoes (251)
16. The Many Dictatorships of Moses Hess = 253
1. Introducing Hess (253)
2. Lassalle as Hess’ Dictator (256)
3. Messianic Interlude (259)
4. Hess in the International (260)
17. The Second Period of the ‘Dictatorship of the Proletariat’ = 264
1. Marx Versus Blanquism-Continued (264)
2. The Paris Commune (269)
3. Blanquists In the Commune (274)
18. Marx and the Blanquists After the Commune = 279
1. The Blanquists and the International (279)
2. Marx and the Emigrés (280)
3. The Blanquist Split (282)
4. The New Blanquist Formulations (284)
5. Delahaye’s Formulation (286)
19. Marx and Engels in the Second Period = 289
1. The Case of Vermersch (289)
2. Locus 5: Marx’s Banquet Speech (292)
3. Locus 6: Marx on Political Indifference (295)
4. Locus 7: Engels on the Housing Question (296)
5. Marx’s Notes on Bakunin’s Book (298)
6. Locus 8: Engels on the Blanquist Refugees (302)
7. Locus 9: Marx on the Gotha Program (303)
20. The Third Period of the Dictatorship of the Proletariat = 307
1. Lafargue’s Landmark (307)
2. Locus 10: Engels' Letter to Schmidt (309)
3. Second Round on the Gotha Program (310)
4. Rumpus in the Reichstag (312)
5. Locus 11: Engels on the Paris Commune (315)
6. Locus 12: Engels on the Erfurt Program (317)
7. Engels' Talk with Voden on Plekhanov (323)
SPECIAL NOTES
A. Marxologists at Work = 329
1. Surveys (329)
2. Marxological Mentions (332)
B. Fabrication of a Fable: The “Marx-Blanquist" Myth = 337
1. Bernstein’s Case (338)
2. Lichtheim’s Putsch Against Marx (343)
3. Decrying Wolfe (347)
4. Tarradiddles and Sciolists (353)
5. The Case of Ernst Schraepler (357)
C. The Meaning of ‘Terror’ and ‘Terrorism’ = 360
1. Marx on the Jacobin Terror (361)
2. Marx on ‘Revolutionary Terrorism’ (367)
3. Terrorism After 1848 (371)
D. Ghosts, Goblins, and Garbles = 375
1. Ghost-Locus: Feuer out of Mayer (375)
2. Ghost-Locus: Iring Fetscher (377)
3. Ghost-Locus: Georges Gurvitch (378)
4. Ghost-Locus: Easton-Guddat (378)
5. The Goblins of Locus le (379)
6. The Miquel Goblin (380)
7. Ectoplasmic Quotes: Dommanget (381)
8. Questions about MECW Translations (383)
E. Marx-Engels Loci: Summary List = 385
Reference Notes = 387
Bibliography (Works Cited) = 421
Index = 443
ⓕ
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● 책 소개
"This is a work of Marxology in the best sense of the term. I am convinced that it is and will remain an indispensable source for all serious students of Marxian ideas in the broad fìeld of politics and political science. There is nothing in the existing literature which is even remotely comparable to it" -- Paul M Sweezy
Volume 3: The “Dictatorship of the Proletariat”
Examines how Marx, and Marxists, have addressed the issue of dictatorships in relation to the revolutionary use of force and repression, particularly as this debate has centered on the use of the term “dictatorship of the proletariat.”
Hal Draper was an American socialist activist and author who played a significant role in the Berkeley, California, Free Speech Movement and is perhaps best known for his extensive scholarship on the history and meaning of the thought of Karl Marx.
Draper was a lifelong advocate of what he called "socialism from below,“ self-emancipation by the working class in opposition to capitalism and Stalinist bureaucracy, both of which, he held, practiced domination from above. He was one of the creators of the Third Camp tradition, a form - the form, according to its adherents – of Marxist socialism. ⓕ
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