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Terms: Marx

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  • File Name: SQ19.html
    Modified: 1 October 2003
    Title: In the Servants' Quarters
  • 2 Occurence(s) of the search term MarxDescription:
    To defend tbe "ideological bonds" of the reformists and revolutionaries today is tantamount to giving support to such hangmen of working-class origin as Noske and Scheidemann, who helped the bourgeoisie murder Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht and kill thousands of workers for their revolutionary struggle against the bourgeoisi.   From Marx to Mao Lenin Collection ReadingGuide Notes on the Text Below page 586 NOTES   [89] Judas Golovlyov -- nickname of Porfiry Golovlyov, a serf-owner, hypocrite and blood-sucker in The Golovlyov Family, a novel by M. Y. Saltykov-Shchedrin    [.543] From Marx to Mao Lenin Collection Reading Guide

  • File Name: SR05.html
    Modified: 20 August 2002
    Title: Socialism and Religion
  • 2 Occurence(s) of the search term MarxDescription:
    And in this political system, cleansed of medieval mildew, the proletariat will wage a broad and open struggle for the elimination of economic slavery, the true source of the religious humbugging of mankin. From Marx to Mao Lenin Collection ReadingGuide Notes on the Text Below page 527 NOTES   [36] See Frederick Engels, "Flüchtlings-Literatur", Volksstaat, N.73 vom 22.6.1874.    [p.86] From Marx to Mao Lenin Collection Reading Guide

  • File Name: SR11.html
    Modified: 20 August 2002
    Title: Stolypin and the Revolution
  • 2 Occurence(s) of the search term MarxDescription:
    Stolypin helped the Russian people to learn a useful lesson: either march to freedom by overthrowing the tsarist monarchy, under the leadership of the proletariat; or sink deeper into slavery and submit to the Purishkeviches, Markovs and Tolmachovs, under the ideological and political leadership of the Milyukovs and Guchkov. From Marx to Mao Lenin Collection ReadingGuide Notes on the Text Below page 606 NOTES   [129] Marshal of the Nobility -- the representative of the nobility of a gubernia or uyezd in tsarist Russia, elected by the local nobility for each uyezd and guberni.The Marshal of the Nobility was in page 607 charge of all the affairs of the nobility, held an influential post in the administration and took the chair at the Zemstvo meeting

  • File Name: SR13.html
    Modified: 20 August 2002
    Title: Strikes in Russia
  • 2 Occurence(s) of the search term MarxDescription:
        In conclusion we give brief data on the distribution of strikes according to the size of the enterprise and according to the location of the enterprise:  page 538 Number of strikers per 100 in each category Category of enterprise Total for 10 years -- 1895-1904   In 1905   20 workers or less .  .  .  .  .  21 to   50 workers  .  .  .  51 to  100   "       .  .  . 101 to  500   "       .  .  . 501 to 1,000   "       .  .  . Over   1,000   "       .  .  .  2.7  7.5  9.4 21.5 49.9 89.7 47  89.4 108.9 160.2 163.8 231.9 Percentage of strikes in towns outside towns 1895-1904 .  .  . 1905 .  .  .  .  .  . 75.1 85  24.9 15      The dominance of the workers of big industrial establishments in the strike movement and the relative backwardness of rural factories are quite clear from these figure.   From Marx to Mao Lenin Collection ReadingGuide Notes on the Text Below page 587 NOTES   [151] Lenin wrote this article for the pocket calendar Sputnik Rabochego (Worker's Handbook ) for 1914, issued by the Priboi Party Publishing House in December 1913. It contained essential information on labour legislation in Russia, the Russian and international working-class movement, political parties, associations and unions, the press, et.The Worker's Handbook was sequestered but the issue was sold in one day before the police could confiscate i

  • File Name: SR17.html
    Modified: 20 August 2002
    Title: The State and Revolution
  • 232 Occurence(s) of the search term MarxDescription:
    ed., Foreign Languages Publishing House, Moscow, 1952, Vol II, Part I. The notes at the end of the book are based on those given in the Selected Works and in the Chinese edition published by the People's Publishing House, Peking, in September 1964. C O N T E N T S PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION 1 PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION 4 Chapter I CLASS SOCIETY AND THE STATE 5     1. 2. 3. 4. The State as the Product of the Irreconcilability of ClassAntagonisms Special Bodies of Armed Men, Prisons, et.The State as an Instrument for the Exploitation of the Oppressed Class The "Withering Away" of the State and Violent Revolution 5 9 13 17 Chapter II THE STATE AND REVOLUTION. THE EXPERIENCE OF 1848-51 26 1. 2. 3. The Eve of the Revolution The Revolution Summed Up The Presentation of the Question by Marx in 1852 26 31 39 Chapter III THE STATE AND REVOLUTION. EXPERIENCE OF THE PARIS   COMMUNE OF 1871. Marx'S ANALYSIS 42 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Wherein Lay the Heroism of the Communards' Attemp.With What Is the Smashed State Machine to Be Replaced Abolition of Parliamentarism Organization of the Unity of the Nation Abolition of the Parasite State 42 47 53 60 64 Chapter IV CONTINUATION. SUPPLEMENTARY EXPLANATIONS BY ENGELS 67 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. The Housing Question Controversy with the Anarchists Letter to Bebel Criticisms of the Draft of the Erfurt Program The 1891 Preface to the Civil War in France Engels on the Overcoming of Democracy 67 71 76 79 88 95 Chapter V ECONOMIC BASIS OF THE WITHERING AWAY OF THE STATE 99 1. 2. 3. 4. Presentation of the Question by Marx The Transition from Capitalism to Communism The First Phase of Communist Society The Highest Phase of Communist society 99 102 109 113 Chapter VI THE VULGARIZATION OF MARXISM BY THE OPPORTUNISTS 123 1. 2. 3. Plekhonov's Controversy with the Anarchists Kautsky's Controversy with the Opportunists Kautsky's Controversy with Pannekoek 124 125 134 POSTSCRIPT TO THE FIRST EDITION 145 NOTES 146 page 1 PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION[1]     The question of the state is now acquiring particular importance both in theory and in practical politic

  • File Name: SRM06.html
    Modified: 20 August 2002
    Title: Socialist-Revolutionary Mensheviks
  • 2 Occurence(s) of the search term MarxDescription:
    It would be very useful for these people to take a good look at the Peshekhonovs in all their "pristine beaut. From Marx to Mao Lenin Collection ReadingGuide Notes on the Text Below page 495 NOTES   [97] Narodism (from the word narod -- people) -- a petty-bourgeois trend in the Russian revolutionary movement, which arose in the sixties and seventies of the nineteenth centur.The Narodniks stood for the abolition of the autocracy and the transfer of the landlords' lands to the peasantr

  • File Name: SRSD16.html
    Modified: 20 August 2002
    Title: Socialist Revolution and Self-Determination
  • 23 Occurence(s) of the search term MarxDescription:
    One may be a determined opponent of that principle and a champion of democratic centralism but still prefer federation to national inequality as the only way to full democratic centralis.It was from this standpoint that Marx, who was a centralist, preferred even the federation of Ireland and England to the forcible subordination of Ireland to the English.[53]     The aim of socialism is not only to end the division of mankind into tiny states and the isolation of nations in any form, it is not only to bring the nations closer together but to integrate the.And it is precisely in order to achieve this aim that we must, on the one hand, explain to the masses the reactionary nature of Renner and Otto Bauer's idea of page 147 so-called "cultural and national autonomy"[54] and, on the other, demand the liberation of oppressed nations in a clearly and precisely formulated political programme that takes special account of the hypocrisy and cowardice of socialists in the oppressor nations, and not in general nebulous phrases, not in empty declamations and not by way of "relegating" the question until socialism has been achieve

  • File Name: SRSUR09.html
    Modified: 20 August 2002
    Title: How the S.R.s Sum Up the Revolution
  • 6 Occurence(s) of the search term MarxDescription:
    The labouring peasants, whom the Socialist-Revolutionaries lauded to the skies before the revolution, proved during the revolution to be such Trudoviks that the Socialist-Revolutionaries had to disown the.And we Social-Democrats can and must now prove that the peasantry is petty bourgeois not only by using the analysis given in Marx's Capital,[131] not only by quotations from the Erfurt Programme,[132] not only by facts and figures from the economic researches of the Narodniks and from Zemstvo statistics, but by the behaviour of the peasantry in the Russian revolution in general and the facts concerning the composition and activities of the Trudoviks in particula.     N

  • File Name: SSDSR07.html
    Modified: 20 August 2002
    Title: Struggle Between S.D.'s and S.R.'s in Elections
  • 1 Occurence(s) of the search term MarxDescription:
    A summary of this data will serve as a solid basis on which to judge the various aspects of Social-Democratic work and our possible gains or losses in the next election.   From Marx to Mao Lenin Collection Reading Guide .

  • File Name: SSPE12.html
    Modified: 20 August 2002
    Title: Significance of the St. Petersburg Elections
  • 2 Occurence(s) of the search term MarxDescription:
    Petersburg workers receive the most varied aid from all parts of Russia, they will be unable to overcome the "enemy" by themselve.   From Marx to Mao Lenin Collection ReadingGuide Notes on the Text Below page 537 NOTES   [89] Lenin is referring to the law of December 11 (24), 1905, on elections to the Dum.That law divided the electorate into four curias -- landowner (landlords), urban (the bourgeoisie), peasant and worke


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